Good morning, coffee students! We hope you all had a great summer filled with late nights full of Dizzy Three (if you’re old enough) and early mornings full ofReady-to-Drink Cold Brew. And now that summer’s over, it’s time to get back from vacation and get back to learning…learning about coffee of course.
Here at The Roasterie, we love giving our coffee students lessons about the wonderful coffee bean. But before we swan dive into today’s lesson, let’s set something straight: Coffee beans aren’t beans; they’re seeds. We call them beans because a long time ago, people would see stuff and just call it what it looked like. The “bean” category stuck and ever since, people have been too busy drinking the stuff to ever stop and vote on a proper name change.
As you may remember from our previous lessons, raw coffee “beans” are green, roasted beans are brown to black. A coffee bean’s final color before it is ground is dependent on when we decide to stop the air roasting process. The color of coffee is directly related to its roast level. But how do we know what color indicates what roast style a bean is? Luck for you, we’ve been doing this for a long time so we can look at a bean and identify its roast in the blink of an eye. But in addition to that, we have an Agtron machine; a light reflectronitor for you cool coffee kids out there.
As a general rule, the darker a bean is, the longer it was roasted. That’s because the natural sucrose (sugar) within the bean goes from sweet to caramel to burnt when it goes through the roasting process.
Now, let’s breakdown the coffee bean color spectrum:
- Green unroasted coffee
- Raw
- Room temperature coffee
- Sweet and fruity
- Starting to pale
- A lighter green
- About 275 degrees
- If it were steak, it be really rare
- Early yellow
- Lime yellow in color
- 330 degrees, give or take
- Moisture from the beans starts to steam off
- Yellow-tan
- Golden in color
- About 345 degrees
- Starts to give off a toasted bread fragrance
- Light brown
- Slightly darker than a pair of khaki chinos
- 370 degrees, almost at the important first crack
- The coffee starts to shed its chaff
- Brown
- Knocking on the door of the first crack
- The sucrose starts to brown (the Maillard reaction is really responsible)
- 1st crack!
- Color hasn’t changed much
- The beans sound like a bowl or Rice Krispies, only louder and better
- As a result, beans start to increase in size and release carbon dioxide
- Middle of 1st crack
- The bean starts to climb towards an internal temperature of 370 degrees (this is critical because this is the melting point of sucrose)
- 1st crack finishes
- Beans reach what is known as a city roast
- The beans are now considered “coffee”
- City +
- Just barely darker than previously
- On the cusp of a light French roast
- Starts eyeing the 2nd crack
- Full city
- AKA a light French roast
- The bean has swelled considerably since roasting started due to the release of CO2
- Full City+
- Resembles a lighter dark chocolate
- At this point we start to hear some soft snaps; the 2nd crack begins
- Vienna- light French roast
- Darker in color
- The origin flavor begins to be overtaken by the roasting characteristics
- Full French
- The bean starts to blacken
- Sucrose is heavily caramelized
- This is dangerous territory, as beans can burn very quickly
- Fully carbonized
- Looks like black licorice
- The beans start to become charcoal
- Open a window because there is probably a lot of smoke!
- Imminent fire
- Piano black in color and shine
- Get the fire extinguisher ready!
The key to roasting great coffee is consistency, which is why we use the air roasting process. This process allows us to control the temperature precisely and roast each individual bean consistently as it floats on the fluid bed. But we wouldn’t be able to replicate our perfect roasts time and time again if we didn’t do countless trial and error, of which we would have had extremely difficulty if we didn’t have are trusty Agtron! So what’s the true lesson here kids? If you’re going to roast your own beans, invest in an Agtron!