Java Jive
I love java, sweet and hot
Whoops Mr. Moto, I'm a coffee pot
Shoot the pot and I'll pour me a shot
A cup, a cup, a cup, a cup, a cup
Whoops Mr. Moto, I'm a coffee pot
Shoot the pot and I'll pour me a shot
A cup, a cup, a cup, a cup, a cup
Sunday is coffee roasting day.
Rick has been roasting our coffee for 3 or 4 years and has it down to a science. As you'll see further down, he uses a souped up hot air corn popper as a roaster.
The picture above shows the green beans weighed out in 3 oz portions. These are Nicaraguan beans purchased online from Marlton Coffee.
This is the outdoor kitchen he built to have a good space to roast. It's quite a pungent process and roasting beans smell nothing like those ready to brew.
The beans are stirred almost continuously in the beginning because they are too heavy to be agitated by the hot air.
The beans just starting to turn. This is when you start to smell the roasting-something like burnt toast.
The white flakes seen outside the can is chaff-it flies around before first crack.
Then comes first crack....
and then second crack with the smoke rolling. We like a dark roast, somewhere between Vienna and Light French.
The finished product in the cooling pan. Now it smells good.
See the beautiful oiliness of the beans?
The roasted coffee then needs to sit for 4-12 hours in an open container to vent CO2. Then it's stored in an airtight ceramic canister on the counter-NOT in the fridge or freezer.
We grind the beans right before brewing. We brew by pouring hot water over the coffee in a cone filter (Melitta-type) which sits over a thermal carafe. We've had the same carafe set-up for about 12 years-it makes great coffee.
As I sit here typing I can smell the freshly roasted beans-
Mm-mmm good!
1 comment:
Very very cool. I didn't even realize that this could be done at home. Just goes to show you learn something new every day! Great post!
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