expat
New member
- May 1, 2012
- 430
- 3
I have a couple blends I roast and have always roasted them togehter. One is a Mocha-Java and the other is what I'd call an All Day Blend.
The MJ is beautiful and will continue to roast together.
But the ADB I finally took someone's advice on this forum and roasted separately. Glad I listened! In the past it was hard to tell where first crack ended and second began so timing the point to drop the beans was a continual frustration.
So finally I roasted the three beans separately. And the Brazil, which makes up the majority of the blend, I roasted in two batches, one dark, one light (another forum poster's suggestion). Oh, by doing that I also found out that the Brazil was the culprit in confusing us when to drop the beans because it got to second crack after the Ethiopia and Kenya. So what we were hearing was Ethiopia and Kenya first cracking and then maybe starting to lull and then the Brazil kicking in and overlapping the E & K and causing complete confusion as they batch moved to 2nd crack. This was causing us to over roast the E & K and underroast the Brazil. No wonder we were never completely happy with that blend.
Now roasting separately has made that blend a delight to drink. And much more manageable during the roast. And much more blending flexibility after the roast. And less frustration. And we learned a lot more about bean characteristics roasting separately. So if you are a blend roaster I encourage you to roast the beans separately. At the very least give it a try.
I know that all of YOU know all this but for a new roaster like me this is a revelation! A revolution of revelations! So if you're like me, and fairly new to roasting pay attention to what the folks are saying.
Whew, that feels better. Now, how 'bout you? What has your experience -- bad or good -- been roasting blends versus roasting separately?
The MJ is beautiful and will continue to roast together.
But the ADB I finally took someone's advice on this forum and roasted separately. Glad I listened! In the past it was hard to tell where first crack ended and second began so timing the point to drop the beans was a continual frustration.
So finally I roasted the three beans separately. And the Brazil, which makes up the majority of the blend, I roasted in two batches, one dark, one light (another forum poster's suggestion). Oh, by doing that I also found out that the Brazil was the culprit in confusing us when to drop the beans because it got to second crack after the Ethiopia and Kenya. So what we were hearing was Ethiopia and Kenya first cracking and then maybe starting to lull and then the Brazil kicking in and overlapping the E & K and causing complete confusion as they batch moved to 2nd crack. This was causing us to over roast the E & K and underroast the Brazil. No wonder we were never completely happy with that blend.
Now roasting separately has made that blend a delight to drink. And much more manageable during the roast. And much more blending flexibility after the roast. And less frustration. And we learned a lot more about bean characteristics roasting separately. So if you are a blend roaster I encourage you to roast the beans separately. At the very least give it a try.
I know that all of YOU know all this but for a new roaster like me this is a revelation! A revolution of revelations! So if you're like me, and fairly new to roasting pay attention to what the folks are saying.
Whew, that feels better. Now, how 'bout you? What has your experience -- bad or good -- been roasting blends versus roasting separately?
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