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Les Albjerg
Hello
All,
What I love about the RK drum is what I
think scares most people away. At first look, an RK drum with a
BBQ looks like you have no controls. The opposite is true!
With a RK drum setup you have total control! It is the only
home roast system that I know of where you have the power and
control to roast from 4 oz to 4 pounds of coffee. Where people
get in trouble is not realizing the flexibility of this system
of roasting because they don’t go beyond the first look. After
20 years of homeroasting using every type of roaster from the
new commercial home models to roasting over fire with an antique
popcorn popper, I think I am qualified to say the RK drum is the
best home roaster you can buy for less than $1,500.00. I have
not found a limitation to my RK system yet. After spending
$150.00 on a commercial machine a few years ago, it only took me
a month to go back to my $3.00 popcorn popper.
The RK drum reminds me of roasting over
fire with the popcorn popper except it gets rid of those
dimensions that need to be consistent for a good roast every
time. The RK drum moves the beans at a consistent rate. The RK
drum keeps the beans at the right place to receive the heat they
need to roast. The RK drum gives you a way to control the
heat. So, instead of five dimensions to control, the RK takes
care of three and leaves the roaster with the two most important
dimensions to control, time and temperature. It lessens the
need to be accurate in how much coffee you roast because of its
power. Try to vary the weight of an air roaster by more than an
ounce without it having a major effect. As you will see below,
load does make a difference, but again, you have control over it
before you start the roast. All electronic machines handicap
your roasting by their inherent limitations. Once you learn how
to use your RK drum it is very easy to have perfect roasts every
time.
The last thing I like about my RK is that
it can be used to roast like a fluid bed (air) roaster or like
the commercial drum roaster depending on your profile. Right
now in my roasted supply I have an espresso blend that was
roasted like a big commercial drum roaster. It has those deep
complex coffee flavors that drum roasting is known for. On the
other hand, I like the taste of a bright Central American coffee
roasted in a fluid bed roaster. I have a Costa Rican coffee
that is nice and bright and makes a wonderful vacuum pot of
coffee. No other method of roasting that I know of gives that
kind of flexibility. I have my thermometer mounted so it is
even with the middle of my drum.
Personally, I have settled on one to two pound roasts most of
the time. At Christmas I did two four pound roasts and at times
I do as little as four ounce roasts
Les |