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Degree of Roast,
Temperature, Description
This coffee was roasted
on my Probat 12 kilo so I could take advantage of the sample trier,
which allows me to pull out and save a sample from the batch whenever
I want. The roast temperatures given are going to differ from any roaster
you might use, based on how the coffee is probed for temperature and
the type of device used. Mine is a calibrated thermocouple on an Extech
dual input thermometer, run through the front of the roaster, probing
the turning bean mass. The roast times noted are not of consequence
either... I was doing a faster roast in this case anyway, a bad roast
profile overall (don't emulate it), of an unintentional green coffee
blend we had made here a while back. Ignore the times, and take
the temperatures as a ballpark figure. The important thing
is here is to see the transformation the coffee goes through as it
roasts and what look, color, bean
size and surface texture, corresponds to the degree of
roast. ***(see note from home roaster George Steinert below).
This
coffee should give you a good, general idea of roast appearance but
every coffee type is different! Dry-processed coffees are
not sorted in the wet-mill process, it is done entirely by hand,
visually. So the coffee roasts more uneven from seed to seed. Even
color is NOT an indicator of roast quality, or coffee quality!
Roasting is something you learn by doing it. You can't pin it down to
a set of numbers. Roasting is more about exceptions than rules. So go
get to it...
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Picture of
Roast
(click on preview for
full size image)

Note: The above image is not the exact
same beans pictured below. If it helps. the gray strips on either side
of this image are a photographic 18% gray card, Click on any image for
the larger version)
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1. Green
unroasted coffee 0:00 - 75 f
This is an Organic coffee, a accidental blend I
have had sitting around a few months. Sadly, if we mess up coffee here,
there is nothing I can do with it, even though it is fine coffee involved.
I wanted to find a charity I could roast our mistake blends for... Anyway,
each photo here are different coffee seeds from the batch I roasted so
size and shape will vary seed to seed. I actually cannot remember
what exact coffees were in this mistake blend. I can say by appearance
it is not super high-grown coffee, and I suspect a portion of the blend
is actually Kona.
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Click on image for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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2. Starting
to pale 4:00 - 270 f
Odd looking seeds - the nearer might be a Kona
Typica and the farther is a rounded shape, perhaps the traditional Bourbon
cultivar or Mundo Novo. As you have figured out, I am not pulling samples
at regular intervals (no sense in that). I am pulling them when the coffee
has reached an identifiable and significant visual stage. Bigger drum
roasters take a long time to transfer heat to coffee so there is little
change in the first few minutes. Also, keep in mind I wasn't trying to
do a good roast on this batch, just trying to make it turn brown so I
could take pictures...
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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3. Early
yellow stage 6:00 - 327 f
At this point the coffee is still losing water
in the form of steam and no physical expansion of the bean has taken place.
In an air roaster coffee gets to this stage so much faster because of
the efficient heat transference of the rapid moving air stream. The coffee
has a very humid, hay-like smell at this point. All of these warm-up stages
leading up to first crack are part of an endothermic process, as the coffee
takes on heat, leading to the first audible roast reaction, the exothermic
1st crack.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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4. Yellow-Tan
stage 6:30 - 345 f
The roast is starting to assume a browner color,
and a marbling appearance is starting to emerge. No bean expansion yet.
The first "toasty" smells (toasted grain, bread) can be detected,
and a bit less wet, humid air coming off the coffee. Note that some coffees
turn a brighter and more distinct yellow at this time, such as Costa Rican
and Mexican coffees.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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5. Light
Brown stage 8:00 - 370 f
First crack is drawing near at this point. Some
bean expansion is visible as the central crack in the coffee has opened
slightly. This allows the coffee to release some of the silverskin in
the form of chaff that has been attached to the bean in the folds of the
crack.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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6. Brown
Stage 9:00 - 393 f
Now we are right at the door of first crack. In
a short time the coffee has browned considerably, which is partly due
to browning reactions from sugars, but largely due to another browning
reaction called the Maillard Reaction (which also is responsible for browning
of cooked beef!)
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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7. 1st crack
begins 9:20 - 401 f
At this point, the very first popping sounds of
the First Crack can be heard. This sound can be similar to popcorn pops,
in distinction to the sound of the Second Crack, which has a shallower
sound, more like a snap. Note that the temperatures I give are from a
thermocouple probing the coffee. That is a different measure from a probe
measuring the roast chamber "environment temperature" (probing
the air space in the drum), or probing the internal bean temperature.
The later is the most accurate measure, but is very hard to do. At the
point of first crack the internal bean temperature would be around 356
f.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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8. 1st crack
under way 10:00 - 415 f
As first crack continues the coffee still appears
mottled and uneven in color, as the coffee first starts its expansion
in size that is marked by the cracking of the seed. Moisture is being
liberated from the interior of the coffee and as it expands the crease
in the seed usually opens enough to allow much of the remaining chaff
to be released. Since first crack is an exothermic reaction, the beans
are giving off heat in first crack, but the quickly become endothermic,
meaning that a roaster that is not adding enough heat to the process will
stall the roast at this point ...not a good thing. Once caramelization
begins (340-400 degrees internal bean temperature) a roast that looses
heat will taste "baked", perhaps due to the disruption on long-chain
polymerization. The melting point of sucrose is 370 f and corresponds
to this window of temperatures when caramelization begins.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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9. 1st crack
finishes 10:40 - 426 f
This is considered a City Roast, a bean appearance
where the surface has smoothed somewhat from expansion but still has darker
marks in the coffee, like a finely etched pattern. At this point the coffee
has expanded due to the outgassing of First Crack, marking the point where
water and carbon dioxide go their separate ways.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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10. City+
roast 11:05 435f
The stage between the first and second crack is
a short period of further endothermy as the coffee gains heat once again
until it reaches the point where its woody cellulose matrix, the bean
structure itself, begins to fracture ... that is, the Second Crack. You
notice a darkening in a very short period of time and small change in
temperature between the #9 picture above and this one.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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11. Full
City roast 11:30 - 444 f
On the verge of 2nd crack
This image represents a lighter Full City roast. At this point, the coffee
is on the verge of 2nd crack. The internal bean temperature that second
crack normally occurs at is 446 degrees farenheit. But in fact second
crack is a little less predictable than first crack, in my experience.
Why? It could be explained as this: first crack is the physical expansion
of the coffee seed as water and carbon dioxide split and CO-2 outgassing
occurs. Second Crack is the physical fracturing of the cellular matrix
of the coffee. This matrix is wood, also called cellulose, and consists
of organized cellulose that reacts readily to heat, and not-so-organized
cellulose that does not. Since every coffee is physically different in
size and density due to the cultivar, origin, altitude, etc. it might
make sense that the particular cell matrix is different too, and not as
universally consistent in reactiveness as H-2O and CO-2.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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12. Full
City+ roast 11:50 - 454 f
First
audible snaps of 2nd crack
This image represents the darker side of a Full
City roast, where the coffee has barely entered 2nd crack, and 10 seconds
of snaps are heard, and the roast is then stopped. Compare the full size
images from the lighter Full City roast and this one, and I think it is
easier to see a difference. Well, maybe I shouldn't say it is easy, since
the main cue that would distinguish the difference between the two is
audible, not visual.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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13. Vienna
- Light French roast 12:15 - 465 f
2nd
crack is under way
(This is my darkest espresso roast)
The Vienna stage (also called Continental) to Light
French stage is where you begin to find Origin Character eclipsed
by Roast Character. If you buy coffee for its distinct origin qualities,
it makes sense that heavy roasting is at odds with revealing the full
effect of the differences we can sense in coffee due to distinct origins.
Nontheless, some coffees are excellent at this stage (our Puro Scuro blend
is engineered for this roast range).
By the way; Espresso is not a roast. But Northern
Italian style espresso is usually roasted to 440 - 446 internal bean temperature.
Southern Italian (Scura) is generally a Light French Roast or a tad darker.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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14. Full
French roast 12:40 - 474 f
2nd
crack is very rapid, nearing
its end.
Sugars are heavily caramelized (read as burned)
and are degraded; the woody bean structure is carbonizing, the seed continues
to expand and loose mass, the body of the resulting cup will be thinner/lighter
as the aromatic compounds, oils, and soluble solids are being burned out
of the coffee and rising up to fill your house with smoke. 474 is well
beyond any roast I do on the Probat. I will go as high as 465 on a couple
blends, and that's my limit.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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15. Fully
carbonized 13:00 - 486 f
Some call this Italian or Spanish roast, an insult to
either!
At this stage, the coffee can be over 25% ash; it is carbonized, dead,
charcoal.
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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16. Immanent
fire ... 13:30 - 497 f
This bean is right at the verge of fire - in fact
you can actually start a fire with a large batch once you dump the coffee
out of the roast drum into the cool tray - the sudden feed of oxygen might
be the needed ingredient for cafe del fuego. Kids, grab your marshmallows!
In a smaller roaster it is a bit harder to get ignition because there
just isn't enough fuel. In a really large 2-3 bag roaster, you should
have called the fire department before you roast to 497 - you will
have a fire. Needless to say, this roast level is full-on carbon and you
can write your name with a coffee bean. Note that the bean size here is
smaller that photo 15 due to the randomness of the seeds selected to photograph
- coffee does not get smaller at this stage...
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Click on image
for large photo, or here
for multi-bean photo
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| *City, Full City
note: I
have been dividing up the roasts around City and Full City into finer
distinctions using the + sign. So City (or sometimes I write "true
City roast" means the coffee has fully cleared 1st crack, and the
roast is stopped (about 425-430 f). City+ means the coffee has cleared
first crack, and time is allowed for an even bean surface appearance
to develop, about 435f usually. Full City, or "true Full City" is
where the coffee is roasted to the verge of 2nd crack without entering
it, which is about 440-445f. Full City+ is where the coffee is roasted
to the verge of 2nd crack and enters it slightly, but the coffee is dumped/roast
is ended at that point, so the batch has no momentum to truly enter 2nd
crack, roughly 445-448f. Beyond that and we are talking Vienna roast
in my book. The temperatures in this paragraph are not internal bean
temperatures, but probed bean temperatures from my Probat roaster. |
***Note from George Steinert, home roaster: "I
see a lot of new users of the iRoast2 struggling to make sense of roast
levels. I have been using the iR2 since February. I
got the best success when I added the digital thermometer and thermocouple
probe (both from SM) and condensed the well-documented "degree of
roast" information on the SM web site into a one page chart (below). By
using the temps on the chart (as measured with the thermocouple planted
in the bean mass) as a "guide" and when combining that with actual experience of
hearing the cracks (when they can be heard through the fan noise), the
color, the smell, and the time (when using a consistent load of green
beans), I have had very predictable results. I continue to use
the chart as my baseline of understanding when roasting with the RK drum
which I started using in June. I reference the
start and end of first crack to tell me how the roast is progressing. After
a while, the aroma becomes a factor. About 60-90 seconds before
first crack begins, I swear I can tell it's coming because of a characteristic
aroma. Primarily I use the sounds
of the crack(s) and secondarily, the time. With the iRoast2, the
temp from the thermocouple gives a pretty reliable indication of where
they are in the roasting process...given some flexibility regarding start
and end of first crack depending on the type of beans. With
the iRoast, you also have the helpful cues of color and seeing what's
happening on the surface of the bean. Users should note that
First Crack is not going to necessarily begin when your thermocouple
hits 401 degrees F nor end when it hits 426 F but after you've done
a few dozen roasts you will get the feel for how to overlay the progress
of the roast onto the temperatures you are reading.
George Steinert's Degree of Roast/Temperature chart:
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| Degree of Roast |
Temp |
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| Green Unroasted |
75 |
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| Starting to pale |
270 |
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| Early yellow |
327 |
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| Yellow-Tan |
345 |
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| Light Brown |
370 |
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| Brown |
393 |
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| 1st Crack Begins |
401 |
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| 1st Crack Under Way |
415 |
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| City Roast |
426 |
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| City+ |
435 |
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| Full City |
446 |
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| Full City+ |
454 |
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| Vienna (Light French) |
465 |
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| Full French |
474 |
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| Fully Carbonized |
486 |
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| Immanent Fire |
497 |
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Please note that both Tom and George emphasize that temperature alone
will NOT determine degree of roast. Each roaster is different and different
beans roast slightly differently as well. All the information on this page
is to be take together to help determine degree of roast - no one element
(appearance, sound, temperature, etc) can determine degree of roast. Most
importantly - TASTE THE COFFEE - and see what that tells you about how
it roasted. |
| Here is a representative image I took of the Agtron Roast
Color Tiles, and might give you a basica idea of the color scale. There
is a bit of glare on the left side though (most visibile on Agrton 45). Since
this is such an approximation and the appearance depends so much on monitor
calibration, etc, I am not going to put a ton of work into this ... I am
working on a better method of sharing these roast colors information.

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