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| Moore Coffee & Tea : Retail Store & Moore : Coffee Bar : Roasting | text version |
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Roasting Coffee | ||
| The alchemy of blending heat and beans that creates coffee. | |||
| For, us truly great roasting is a science and an art. Precise control of heat and timing turns the hard, green beans into the wonderfully roasted coffee beans we all know and love. When roasting, all of your senses are engaged as you listen for the cracking, smell the developing bean, watch the color of the bean turn from green to yellow to brown, and finally taste the fully roasted bean, judging how well you did.
The environment that a coffee is grown in affects its final characteristics. Each type of coffee has its own unique flavor, aroma, and body. These characteristics can be developed in the roasting process. There is an optimum roast for every estate, region, or country. We roast our coffee in small batches, carefully bringing out the very best qualities of all of the beans that we sell. |
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The Roasting Process
The beans are poured into the funnel at the top prior to the actual roasting. The machine is then heated to an average 450°F. At this point, the lever is raised, dropping the beans into the inner drum where they are constantly rotated by large paddles. As the beans develop, their status can be easily ascertained by using the sampler, which "catches" the tumbling beans. By pulling regular samples, the roaster is able to see the color of the bean and smell the aromas. The beans go through two "cracks", so named because they start to emit audible cracking noises (of course). This cracking noise is not only an indication of the beans' readiness, but it is also an indication of their quality: generally, the stronger the crack, the higher the quality and the better the development. The first crack occurs when the beans expand, releasing most of their stored water. At this point they have gone from their initial, raw green to a pale yellow. As that color turns to a deeper brown, they begin to give off that familiar coffee smell. The second crack occurs at the moment when they are almost ready. They have reached that familiar reddish-brown color and are at a crucial point in the roasting cycle. Two to three seconds after the second crack, they are at what roasters call Full City; three to five seconds after and they reach French Roast; five to seven seconds and they have become Espresso; anything after seven seconds and you end up with charcoal. Not the desired outcome at all! At the precise time, the door to the inner drum is opened and the beans come cascading out, bringing the steam and aromatic coffee fumes with them. They are caught in the cooling pan underneath where paddles stir them. A vent under the pan allows air to circulate in and around the beans, cooling them. This is an especially crucial step: at this point in the roasting cycle, the heat from the beans themselves is enough to cause the beans to continue to roast!
Once the beans are cool enough to be handled, they are poured out through the bottom. From there they "rest" for almost 24 hours, allowing the gasses to escape and ending the roasting process. Then they are bagged and shipped out to insure that they reach their final destination, the customer, as fresh as possible. Mere words barely convey the wonder that is roasting. It is truly an art and an amazing spectacle to watch. If you are ever in Santa Barbara, give Gayla a call at (805) 963-8060: maybe you can arrange for a demonstration! |
| Six Degrees of Roasting
Each different varietal and each different blend will call for a different degree of roasting. Even roasting the same coffee to a different degree can make a drastic difference in what that coffee will taste like in the cup. And, to complicate matters even further, the same varietal may prefer a different roast from crop to crop or even from bag to bag. For us, therefore, roasting is a matter of using established standards as a guideline, and then modifying each roast depending on how the beans react. This is what we mean when we say that we "listen" to the beans. Unlike with cupping terminology, coffee roasters have a difficult time agreeing on what to call each degree of roasting. One roaster may call her darkest roast a "Vienna", while another calls the same roast an "Espresso". Here are the six traditional degrees to which we roast our coffee, in order from lightest to darkest. This list is by no means complete: there are regional descriptions like "New Orleans" (which tends to be a dark roast) and "American" (which is a lighter roast), but this is how we define the degrees of roasts at Moore Coffee & Tea. |
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Cinnamon
The lightest roast; the coffee is left almost in its green state. Having a very light brown color, this roast is almost exclusively used for cupping or in flavored coffees, where the flavors added to the bean will overpower the coffee's natural flavors. Full City Minus
Full City
Full City Plus
French Roast
Espresso Roast
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| Swiss Water Vs. Chemical Decaffeination |
| It is perhaps a debate that will continue on until some new way of removing the caffeine from coffee is developed. The major arguments against each are widely known: chemical decaffeination leaves harmful chemicals behind and Swiss Water removes all of the flavor. However, few people know the truth behind decaffeinated coffees.
Swiss Water Process
KVW (Kaffe Veredlvngs Werk) or European Water Process
Chemical Residues
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updated: 1 September 2007 Moore Coffee Tea and Spices, 1800 North Olive Street Ventura, CA 93001 (805)643-8060 / gayla@moorecoffee.com Terms & Conditions of Use, Copyright Information and Privacy Statement All material ©1997-2000, Honest Puck Productions. |