Barista Exchange

the world's premiere online community for the specialty coffee industry

Hello everyone. I am a pretty new home roaster and brand new to the bx. I am curious what everyone's opinions are about fluid-bed vs drum roasting. I have friends who are hard-core advocates of each, so I want some more opinions. Anyone and everyone, please tell me what you think and why!

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

In my limted experience Joseph, I have found that coffee roasted in a caste iron drum roaster is far more impactful in terms of flavor and aroma than coffee roasted on a fluid bed. I only roast in small batch quantities in drum roasters, as to my own preferences in taste, this is the only method that gets me the aroma and taste that I want.

As a home roaster I would say go for a drum roaster, because fluid-bed roasters were orinally intended for continuous runs and not for batch roasting as they have been used to do in recent years.

Any other information about fluid-bed roasters would be welcome, because although I have seen and purchased coffee roasted on a fluid-bed, I have never done the test of comparison on my own.

Reply to This

I am a home roaster and have been for the last 8ish years. Started with hot air popcorn popper...quick roast, bright flavor, small batches. I finally built a roaster based on the Stir Crazy from information found starting here
http://www.sweetmarias.com/homemade-homeroasters.php
It appears that Peter Bishop's site that I built mine from is gone now, but the pictures will give you the idea.
A roast takes about 15 plus minutes and results in a mellower coffee (my preference). In addition, I can do 1/2-3/4 pound at a time, so I roast less often (yeah, I know, it's not as fresh, but I'm lazy).

Reply to This

Kenneth Davids says in "Home Coffee Roasting", fluid-bed or hot air roasters (in which the coffee is simultaneously roasted and agitated by a swirling stream of hot air) generally produce a smoother, cleaning cup with less body, while drum roasters produce a more complex, full-bodied cup. I haven't tried roasting in a drum yet. My popcorn machine works well as an air roaster, but I am dissatisfied with the lack of body. I am planning to build a small drum roaster soon. Any other thoughts?

Kyle Fraser said:
In my limted experience Joseph, I have found that coffee roasted in a caste iron drum roaster is far more impactful in terms of flavor and aroma than coffee roasted on a fluid bed. I only roast in small batch quantities in drum roasters, as to my own preferences in taste, this is the only method that gets me the aroma and taste that I want.

As a home roaster I would say go for a drum roaster, because fluid-bed roasters were orinally intended for continuous runs and not for batch roasting as they have been used to do in recent years.

Any other information about fluid-bed roasters would be welcome, because although I have seen and purchased coffee roasted on a fluid-bed, I have never done the test of comparison on my own.

Reply to This

Do you know where to get a cast iron drum roaster?

Kyle Fraser said:
In my limted experience Joseph, I have found that coffee roasted in a caste iron drum roaster is far more impactful in terms of flavor and aroma than coffee roasted on a fluid bed. I only roast in small batch quantities in drum roasters, as to my own preferences in taste, this is the only method that gets me the aroma and taste that I want.

As a home roaster I would say go for a drum roaster, because fluid-bed roasters were orinally intended for continuous runs and not for batch roasting as they have been used to do in recent years.

Any other information about fluid-bed roasters would be welcome, because although I have seen and purchased coffee roasted on a fluid-bed, I have never done the test of comparison on my own.

Reply to This

After thirteen years of roasting coffee in a commercial setting AND having read as much literature about coffee as I can I have learned one thing: Kenneth Davids really doesn't know much about coffee or coffee roasting. He is a writer, that's it. I would say that good results can be achieved using any method that applies heat to the coffee over time. Heck you could do it in a fry pan if you bring the temp up properly. Fluid bed or drum or pop corn popper, the problem is the same. You must have maximum control over your heat so you can get about an eleven to thirteen minute roast with a seven to eight minute second pop. finish slowly and you should have drinkable coffee. Problem with a lot of home style roasters is you can't turn the heat up and down. you must be able to control heat and with air roasters, the air speed hitting the coffee.

Reply to This

It all depends on your taste. But be a roaster for fifteen years I have samples all the coffees at the trade shows and I always find coffee coming for a drum roaster has more body. There is a big argument over cast iron Vs steel. I don't find much difference. A lot of roasters will only use an old probat with a cast iron drum. The only problem I find a lot of new roasters are lacking good burners and don't put out enough BTU's.

I bought a old Dietrich IR 24 and it roasted very bad when I got it, baked the coffee. I switch out the IR burner to a 500,000 power burner and added a bean probe to monitor temperature, it makes great coffee now. Just got to be careful. I have melted some of the metal turning it up to high.

Reply to This

This thread highlights an industry discussion that's been ongoing since Sivetz's fluid bed roasters appeared in the 70's. Trace Prewitt gives visibility to what may be at the heart of the matter - it's the degree of real-time control (manual or programmed) the equipment provides that makes the difference. Drum roaster controls may have gotten a head start (driven by their larger footprint in the industry) over fluid bed roasters in developing sophisticated controls - producing the perception that "drum roasting delivers better body...." and so on. It will be interesting to see if that perception modifies as later generations of fluid bed roasters with more sophisticated control options become available. Even more interesting would be a controlled, fully documented study that controls all variables and directly compares drum v. fluid bed methods...results measured by a panel of experienced cuppers in a blind cupping format. I'd like to hear what people think about this last idea - I'm sure there are some strong opinions out there. :)

Reply to This

Sounds like a cooperative job for some folks from the Roaster's Guild.

Bill Sandreuter said:
This thread highlights an industry discussion that's been ongoing since Sivetz's fluid bed roasters appeared in the 70's. Trace Prewitt gives visibility to what may be at the heart of the matter - it's the degree of real-time control (manual or programmed) the equipment provides that makes the difference. Drum roaster controls may have gotten a head start (driven by their larger footprint in the industry) over fluid bed roasters in developing sophisticated controls - producing the perception that "drum roasting delivers better body...." and so on. It will be interesting to see if that perception modifies as later generations of fluid bed roasters with more sophisticated control options become available. Even more interesting would be a controlled, fully documented study that controls all variables and directly compares drum v. fluid bed methods...results measured by a panel of experienced cuppers in a blind cupping format. I'd like to hear what people think about this last idea - I'm sure there are some strong opinions out there. :)

Reply to This

Currently fluid beds have zero control over your roast profile built into them. There are a few people out there that are developing new, more versatile fluid beds but I think they are still a few years away. For now the only way to have a personal involvement during the development of the roast is with a drum.

Reply to This

I've heard a lot of negative things about Diedrich roasters. Does anyone have experience with these roasters? Is Probat really better?

Reply to This

Reply to This

RSS

Sign in

E-mail

Password
 or Sign Up
By signing in, you agree to the amended Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.
Forgotten your password?

Latest Activity

Keaton Ritchie updated their profile
5 minutes ago
what i've found is that the problem isn't traditional drip brewing - it's the airpots. anything sitting for more than half an hour gets funky tasting. if i brew a 2.2 litre airpot of our colombian at 60g/l and taste it immediately, it's really nice.…
35 minutes ago
Almost forgot Organic Products Trading (optco) Smaller offerings but good people and they get some good coffees in. I have also read great things about sustainable harvest but haven't ordered. Getting a box of new samples from any of these places is…
36 minutes ago
awesome, great info. and zephyr will have el injerto next year! if i was a millionaire i would buy so much damn coffee
45 minutes ago
It is really hard to get reliable info on Ethiopian coffees due to the ECX. (ethiopian commodity exchange) Lots of articles on this on coffeed.
46 minutes ago
Jeff Jaworski added a discussion
For Sale: rebadged La Spaziale EP 1-Group small commercial/large prosumer espresso machine. This beautiful semi-automatic espresso machine is about two years old and is in pristine condition inside and out. I purchased it from a fellow CG'er last…
46 minutes ago
I've got just enough regular decaf drinkers that I can't really eliminate it (as much as I'd love to, but these are the kind of customers that have been coming in for 16 years, so...). Yeah, I'm looking at the schematics now, and I'm thinking I can…
47 minutes ago
Atlas in Seattle. Craig is a q grade trainer and one of the more knowledgeable coffee guys I've met. Also Zephyr, (I deal with the Seattle office.) I haven't tried shrub but I like the concept.
50 minutes ago
keith pettigrew, an australian barista judge who trained me a bit in australia, told me to use espresso within 3 minutes of it being ground. that rule has never failed me. i dropped $1500 on an extra k-10 for decaf and it was worth every penny. to b…
51 minutes ago
excellent suggestions so far, i emailed the links to the roaster and we'll see what he thinks. this is the stuff i really dig - i'm never going to be able to taste every coffee but having specific information about the coffees i do taste helps so mu…
59 minutes ago
Austin Cooper and Alun Evans are now friends
1 hour ago
I have worked in a shop that did this, and even if you grind the decaf and take it straight to the machine, you still can't dial it in to pull decent shots. It would be better to have a cheaper lower volume grinder to dedicate to decaf if you are wo…
1 hour ago
barista Dan is now friends with Duane Fahey and Ruth Hall
1 hour ago
1 hour ago
Aquiles Gonzalez Pereyra and Eat Aspen joined Barista Exchange
1 hour ago
1 hour ago

bX Job Postings

Jobs

Post a Job! $10 for 30 days

Click here to order your Barista Exchange T-Shirt!

© 2009   Created by Matt Milletto

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!