Gourmet
coffee is a wonderous thing. But for such a (relatively) simple thing
as cooked coffee beans, there sure is a lot of confusion in the
marketplace! How many different names have you run across for different
types of coffee roasts? Light, Medium, Dark? Espresso? Continental?
Vienna, French, Italian, Spanish? City? Full-City? C'mon, who's
thinking up these things?
Well, the dark secret (pardon the pun) of the coffee
industry is that, well, there really isn't full agreement on which
roast is which. So basically, we all pretty much get to hunt around,
try different coffees from different sources and pick the one(s) we
like. In this article, I'll try to make sense of these terms, and map
it to the color and texture anyone can judge for her- or himself.
The roasting adventure begins with green coffee beans.
These are stored at room temperatures, at 12-15% moisture content.
Roasting is done at temperatures of up to 450+ degrees F. Duration and
temperature determine the roast.
A coffee bean will take on heat until the internal
temperature of the bean reaches approximately 212-240 deg F. At this
point, the outer layer of the bean(s) will discolor, turning a nice
cinnamon color. Here, steam will start being released from the bean.
As the bean heats up further (approx 250-300 degrees F,
again depending on the variety), the external membrane of the bean will
dry up and start separating from the bean itself. At approximately 350
degrees F, the continuing heating of the bean forces a 'first crack.'
This cracking occurs as moisture within is released through the
existing seam in the bean. This essentially blows this small crack
open, forcing the separation of the remaining bean 'chaff'.
Coffee at this stage is a light brown color; entering the
'light City Roast' stage. City Roast is usually achieved at a slightly
higher temperature (above 370 deg F), where the sugars within the bean
start melting or ‘carmelizing’. This gives the distinctive 'coffee
brown' color. City Roasts are usually stopped around 400 deg. or so. At
this point, the sugars are not fully carmelized, and flavor of the
beans at this stage are very much determined by their origin; not by
the degree of roast.
The 'Full City Roast' stage occurs at higher
temperatures, just as the bean reaches the 'second crack' stage. This
stage happens at different temperatures for different beans based on
variety. The second crack comes as the temperatures of the bean reach
the point where the cellular composition of the bean starts breaking
down. To obtain the Full City roast, roasting is stopped just at the
point where this second crack starts (approx 425-435 deg F.) At this
point the bean is darker brown, but 'dry' looking, as the oils of the
bean have not started to emerge through the molecular breakdown of the
bean.
Going into the second crack, we reach the Vienna,
Continental, French and/or Italian roast stages. These are sometimes
also referred to as "Espresso Roast", although strictly speaking,
there's no such thing. Italian espresso blends actually vary - northern
blends are typically roasted to the 'Vienna' stage, well into the
second crack, where the sugars within the bean are almost fully
carmelized and many beans within the roast will appear dark brown with
hints of fissures. Espresso blends in southern Italy are usually
roasted into the "French Roast" stage, where almost all of the beans
will be about one shade removed from black and oils will start emerging
from some beans.
Beyond this point, beans will start releasing
oils and their soluble compounds - mainly as a lot of smoke; but the
beans will be left quite dark with a very oily sheen. Assuming they
have not fully burnt yet, this can be specified as "Italian Roast".
I've observed different temperatures (within the roaster) for all of
these stages depending on the bean variety - so as my roasts reach the
second crack, I tend to trust my eyes and ears more than I trust my
probe thermometer.
One interesting note of coffee roasting is that as beans
reach into the second crack, they tend to lose any distinctive varietal
flavors. Is this a bad thing? Well, for some, perhaps... I for one will
mutter a bit if my Ethiopian Yirgacheffe goes past Full City and I lose
the distinctive flavor notes; and in my early roasting career I almost
cried as a batch of prized Puerto Rican select went unheeded into the
Italian Roast realm before I managed to get back to it. But... some
varieties do better at the distinctive French Roast stage. De gustibus
non disputandum est - it just doesn't pay to dispute the results in the
cup!
And that is coffee roasting. I have seen a fair amount of
advertising of 'slow-roasted' or 'deep-roasted' coffee, which always
gets me to wondering. I suppose if you roast a huge amount of beans in
a low-temperature environment... why, yes, that would in fact be a slow
process! Certainly for a roaster to get beans to a certain roast point
and no further, it does pay to be precise and not rapidly incinerate
his product. But I can't say I'd want to purposely take any longer than
necessary to do so.
As for deep roasting? Hmm. Can't say as I've ever heard
of 'shallow' roasting; but whatever it is, 'deep roast' must be the
opposite! Seriously, the only 'trick of the trade' that I can think of
runs counter to the notion of holding beans at any given temperature...
and that is, once a batch reaches the desired point, get it out of the
roaster and cool it down FAST! As described above, the quality of a
roast depends on those sugars and soluble materials within the bean
getting 'cooked' very specifically. Keeping the beans near additional
heat (yes, even other beans nearby, releasing their own heat energy)
will continue to cook them.
To some extent this is unavoidable, so the experienced
roaster will compensate for this by knowing his roasting environment;
and ideally provide a cooling location where beans can cool as rapidly
as possible by the flow of cool (i.e., room temperature) air over the
freshly-roasted beans. This allows them to 'coast' into their final
characteristic color and taste.
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Grown in Yemen on the
Arabian Peninsula, these small, rounded beans are irregular in form,
size, and color. Despite this abnormality (or perhaps because of it),
they yield one of the finest cups of coffee on Earth. Arabian Mocha
Sanani has a distinctive, pungent, winy flavor that is very full-bodied
and that is accompanied by an exceedingly complex aromatic character.
This coffee is excellent either straight or blended, as in the classic
blend with Java. Its singular flavor can complement nearly any other
coffee. The mocha variety of coffee grows on barely cultivated land on
low bushes that develop under very dry conditions. When the majority of
coffee cherries are ripe, the farmers pick all the cherries at once and
spread them out to dry on hardened earth patios. The dried cherries are
passed through millstones to remove the hulls and to release the two
coffee beans inside. Click
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