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#1
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Anybody tried roasting your own coffee?
I love the local coffee roaster's beans, they make Starbucks' taste like dirty oil, but I am spending $50 a month on it! I foung lots of sites on home roasting and the beans are as cheap as $2/# but the time involved may offset the savings. Any others tried this?
TIA, -Tom P.S. for any coffee lovers, try to find a shop that roasts their own - you won't believe the difference!
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RIP "Betsy" (Oo=*=oO) '96 E 3 2 0 (W 2 1 0) M 1 0 4 (Totalled) Spaces in sig so as not to screw up the SEARCH; every time someone searches for that MB they don't want my sig! 2004 Audi A8L '98 VW Passat 1.8T 5M '87 Alfa Romeo Milano 2.5L 5M '67 Impala convertible, 327cid |
#2
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Heck, I don't even boil my own coffee!
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JJ Rodger 2013 G350 Bluetec 1999 SL 500 1993 E300 diesel T 1990 190 |
#3
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I've been roasting my own coffee for about two years now, and there is no comparison to any coffee you can buy.
Freshness is the key. While I think Starbucks is okay coffee, you have no idea how long it has been since it came out of the roaster. Once you get the hang of it, you will be absolutely amazed at the quality of coffee you can roast in your own kitchen at half the cost of Starbies. Check out Sweetmarias.com, it has plenty of info, and excellent green beans. I typically roast twice a month for the two coffee drinkers in our house. The problem with homeroasting is that i have yet to find a reliable electric roaster that can do a half a pound at a time. I use an old manual popcorn popper (whirley pop). Sweet marias sells these, and it does a good job, but its a little more work. You might also check out coffeegeek.com, and alt.coffee. any questions let me know. thornton
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1993 300E 1999 E320 Estate |
#4
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I am a barista and coffee enthusiast, and I have a little to say about roasting...
Do it! Roasting is something that can be fun and rewarding. I have had a couple customers bring in some beans they roasted and we made a pot. One was superb, the others were so-so. Regardless, you can experiment and find what you like. This is one of those things I have been itching to try. I also agree most corporate coffee joints make pretty bad espresso. I believe freshness and quality are the two points missing. I suggest someone try Peter James. The coffee shop I worked for just switched to this micro-roaster supplier and the beans are fantastic. They even have some kick ass proprietary roasts. |
#5
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I've been looking into a few models for purchase.
A Nesco coffee roaster from Sears for around $150. A Fresh Roast +8 for roughly $80. And a IRoast2 for roughly $189 W/4 lbs of coffee beans. I'm leaning towards the IRoast 2 because it can be programmed for different roasting profiles where the Fresh Roast +8 just goes all out high heat as fast as it can and stays there till it's shut off. ![]() Soon, very soon.... Danny
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1984 300SD Turbo Diesel 150,000 miles OBK member #23 (\__/) (='.'=) This is Bunny. Copy and paste bunny into your (")_(") signature to help him gain world domination |
#6
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The grind/grinder is equally as important as the roaster, especially for espresso.
I have a Rancilio S27 plumbed in at home and a seperate commercial burr type grinder/doser. For consistencies sake, Peets takes care of the roasting.
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Terry Allison N. Calif. & Boca Chica, Panama 09' E320 Bluetec 77k (USA) 09' Hyundai Santa Fe Diesel 48k (S.A.) |
#7
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Having seen how they roast coffee in Costa Rica at the plantations surrounding the capitol city of San Jose, all this talk of gadgets is kind of amusing
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#8
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I only go as far as grinding mine. I love Mayorga coffee. It's a little company over in Silver Spring, MD, and they have the best coffee I've ever had. Costco was selling it for a while, but I haven't seen it over there lately. JR Tobacco in NC sells it. The beans come out of the bag slightly oily and the freshest I've ever seen.
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" We have nothing to fear but the main stream media itself . . . ."- Adapted from Franklin D Roosevelt for the 21st century ![]() OBK #55 1998 Lincoln Continental - Sold Max 1984 300TD 285,000 miles - Sold The Dee8gonator 1987 560SEC 196,000 miles - Sold Orgasmatron - 2006 CLS500 90,000 miles 2002 C320 Wagon 122,000 miles 2016 AMG GTS 12,000 miles |
#9
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Quote:
For grins, I would like to roast my own sometime.
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Never a dull moment at Berry Hill Farm. |
#10
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Take it one step further
and grow your own coffee...
http://logees.com/prodinfo.asp?number=L1180-6E ![]() ![]()
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"I have no convictions ... I blow with the wind, and the prevailing wind happens to be from Vichy" Current Monika '74 450 SL BrownHilda '79 280SL FoxyCleopatra '99 Chevy Suburban Scarlett 2014 Jeep Cherokee Krystal 2004 Volvo S60 Gone '74 Jeep CJ5 '97 Jeep ZJ Laredo Rudolf ‘86 300SDL Bruno '81 300SD Fritzi '84 BMW '92 Subaru '96 Impala SS '71 Buick GS conv '67 GTO conv '63 Corvair conv '57 Nomad ![]() |
#11
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Quote:
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1985 CA 300D Turbo , 213K mi |
#12
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Masks the smell of other medicinal plants....
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1993 190E 2.6 135k 1989 Ford Thunderbird SC 5 Spd 79K |
#13
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I grew tobacco (not wacky tobbacky) a few times. It was pretty easy to grow, you just have to start it indoors in Feb. and then transfer to the ground in April after the last frost. I also built a rig to dry it using a house hold oil heater and humidifier. I was going to make my own cigars! Making the stogey is the hardest part. (I needed to recruit some virgins to roll the cigars on their thighs)
![]() Tried bananas indoors but they plants died ![]() Logees is a great place for strange plants. http://www.logees.com/ Here is where you can get baccy http://www.organicaseedco.com/tobaccoseeds.html I planted the Havana #608, Orinoco, and Walker's broadleaf seeds. They worked well at the Jersey shore Here is the rig I copied http://www.coffinails.com/curing_tobacco.html It is fun growing your own. Plus if you get the burley and Virgina gold varieties you can make your own cigarettes.
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"I have no convictions ... I blow with the wind, and the prevailing wind happens to be from Vichy" Current Monika '74 450 SL BrownHilda '79 280SL FoxyCleopatra '99 Chevy Suburban Scarlett 2014 Jeep Cherokee Krystal 2004 Volvo S60 Gone '74 Jeep CJ5 '97 Jeep ZJ Laredo Rudolf ‘86 300SDL Bruno '81 300SD Fritzi '84 BMW '92 Subaru '96 Impala SS '71 Buick GS conv '67 GTO conv '63 Corvair conv '57 Nomad ![]() |
#14
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How much beans and what's the investment? You know, in grow lights and stuff?
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You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows - Robert A. Zimmerman |
#15
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Quote:
I just treated them like any other houseplant during the winter, sunny location and watered every other day, and put them outside in semi shade during the summer (that is when they really grow) They are pretty easy to grow. I am thinking of getting another few plants as I left mine behind when I moved a few years ago. They can produce a lot of beans per plant (about 2 pounds). I had enough to last me the year drinking one to two pots a day. They produce beans throughout the year if the conditions are right. They are also a great looking houseplant with shiny dark green leaves and white flowers. Use lots of fertilizer and water.
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"I have no convictions ... I blow with the wind, and the prevailing wind happens to be from Vichy" Current Monika '74 450 SL BrownHilda '79 280SL FoxyCleopatra '99 Chevy Suburban Scarlett 2014 Jeep Cherokee Krystal 2004 Volvo S60 Gone '74 Jeep CJ5 '97 Jeep ZJ Laredo Rudolf ‘86 300SDL Bruno '81 300SD Fritzi '84 BMW '92 Subaru '96 Impala SS '71 Buick GS conv '67 GTO conv '63 Corvair conv '57 Nomad ![]() |
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