Coffee talk

Hi all. My name is Nick, and I'm here to admit that for the last several months I have been a lazy POS coffee roaster. In fact I have roasted none.

I've had a box with 20 lbs of beans from Sweet Maria's sitting in my dining room since I got home from Westport but I hadn't even opened it. Laziness and some other factors have just kept me uninspired in the coffee department this winter, to the point that I was drinking store bought beans and even Keurig coffee. Bleh.

Well today I finally rectified this disgusting situation. I decided that I since I am going fishing tomorrow for the first time in quite a while that I couldn't waste it by drinking crappy coffee.

Knocked out 500 grams of these beans. Took them 100 seconds past first crack. Look and smell good, but we'll see how it tastes in the am

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I'm sure they'll taste good. Not sure how you're roasting but they look a little under-developed. I'd go for a bit longer if you could.
 
Next level for me! Woohoo! Got the coffee ground fine for espresso in my new aeropress!! So excited, I'm like a fat kid in a candy store.. no jokes please.. or no coffee for you! Haha!!

Check out Cafe Lusso in Redmond, a fantastic coffee roasting company! And Seattle Coffee Gear, I went to the one in Kirkland and found out that a former boss and friend at Total Wine is now running all three stores! Link is below!

www.cafelusso.com

www.seattlecoffeegear.com


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Nice! It's all about what you like and what tastes good to you, but I find I like a medium-fine grind for Aeropress, coarser than espresso but finer than what I'd do for drip, or French press.
 
@flybill you are walking a dangerous path!👿

I started towards home roasting by getting an Aeropress, a Baratza Encore, and some good beans from local roasters. After determining that yes, I did appreciate the upgrade, I got curious about roasting. Kinda like getting into tying flies… Of course it will save you money:p (actually it has…all my roasters have been part of a buy coffee, get an air popper deal).
 
@flybill you are walking a dangerous path!👿

I started towards home roasting by getting an Aeropress, a Baratza Encore, and some good beans from local roasters. After determining that yes, I did appreciate the upgrade, I got curious about roasting. Kinda like getting into tying flies… Of course it will save you money:p (actually it has…all my roasters have been part of a buy coffee, get an air popper deal).
Oh I'm already on the path, up the mountain and through the valley.. have to save up for a real espresso machine! I'm gone.. don't try and save me at this point!
 
Anyone willing to sell a 1lb of green beans.. going to use a dog bowl, chopstick and a heat gun!! 😄 really!
 
Anyone willing to sell a 1lb of green beans.. going to use a dog bowl, chopstick and a heat gun!! 😄 really!
Sure. I did it that way for years. It will work great, except the chopstick. Use something like a wooden spoon that will actually move the beans. You have to agitate them quite a lot to get anything like an even roast. Chopstick ain’t gonna cut it, friend.
 
Well, I’m drinking coffee from my own roasting efforts again and I gotta say, the quality of my fly tying is up. Direct correlation! Fresh beans are good for the creative juices…you heard it here first :coffee:;):geek:View attachment 144342View attachment 144343
Looks great and happy birthday!

My coffee has powered me through a full work day overpowering a cold. I may collapse soon but coffee is powerful.
 
My first go at roasting Mexican beans. These arrived in a sampler pack. I would rate them in the “worth trying, but not flagged for future purchase” category. My recent Guatemalan roasts were better, to my taste. 80AD0977-4EBD-487C-886B-D3288897C1C3.jpeg12C15097-CF9C-4210-B528-7B9CA95D8497.jpeg
 
My first go at roasting Mexican beans. These arrived in a sampler pack. I would rate them in the “worth trying, but not flagged for future purchase” category. My recent Guatemalan roasts were better, to my taste.
I've also had mixed results from Mexican green coffee beans. I think the ones I liked the most were from Chiapas also. I recall thinking "why does good coffee seem to come from high conflict zones?" Anyway, maybe we aren't always doing the best thing by them. Like I wonder how that one there would be roasted to FC+ and used for espresso.
 
I've also had mixed results from Mexican green coffee beans. I think the ones I liked the most were from Chiapas also. I recall thinking "why does good coffee seem to come from high conflict zones?" Anyway, maybe we aren't always doing the best thing by them. Like I wonder how that one there would be roasted to FC+ and used for espresso.
It might be good as espresso. In my aeropress I get the dry/clean and slightly herbal flavors. Not bad at all but I prefer a little more inherent sweetness.
 
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