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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.
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.
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. :)
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