For the last day or two, an interesting topic has been under discussion on the Sweet Maria's home coffee roasting mailing list. It seems that a number of people who recently got iRoast 2 roasters find themselves struggling to get the great coffee they were hoping for when they bought the machines,
I really like my IR2. It's my go-to roaster when it is just too cold to roast outdoors. Its smaller capacity makes it ideal for testing a new green bean, perhaps at several different roast levels, before roasting a big batch with my bread machine/heat gun combination.
Many people new to roasting, after reading about the IR2 decide that it seems like the perfect roasting appliance for them. A certain percentage of folks begin using it with the expectation that they will be able to develop highly nuanced custom roast profiles. I know the custom profile feature was important to me when I was in the market for my first roaster.
Unfortunately, some of the people who buy the IR2 are finding that their particular machines are running so hot, that rather than being able to design custom profiles, they simply can't get a good roast out of the little buggers at all. Now, we roasters, even roasting noobs, are a strange bunch. Instead of saying, "Whoops, I got a defective machine," and returning it for one that delivers what Hearthstone, the manufacturer, promised, the people saddled with the bad ones have succumbed to that inner drive almost all homeroasters seem to have to fiddle around or modify them.
The iRoast is nothing more than a kitchen appliance developed to make homeroasting of relatively small amounts of coffee easy for just about anyone. It should work as advertised out of the box.
That means that you should be able to get a decent roast using one of the preset profiles without any fiddling around. Customizing profiles so that you roast beans that are denser a bit differently than beans that are less dense, or beans grown at lower altitudes differently than beans that are grown higher up, can't happen if your IR2 is turning perfectly good green beans to charcoal in six minutes flat.
I'm trying to imagine this compulsion to make silk purses out of sows ears being applied to other small kitchen appliances. Can you picture mailing lists and bulletin boards devoted to discussions of how to adjust/fix/modify brand new toasters with a propensity to burn bread every single time they are used? How about adding on a $150 variac to a stand mixer to fine tune the electrical output of the outlet it is plugged into?
Stop the madness.
Del.icio.us
Mo'Tags: coffee, roasting, iroast

![]()

Roasters: BM/HG (bread machine/heat gun )iRoast2
Grinder: Rancilio Rocky doserless
Espresso: Bezerra BZ02A
Machines: KMB, Bialetti, various pourovers, Aeropress, Yama
Body: short, old, female, tech obsessed

Because Anonymous
Is a Bad Thing
today
May 2008
January 2008
December 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
InMyLife
Prepare To Meet Your Bakerina
Decision Time
Ranting and Roaring
Sublime Vacuity
The Adventures of a Snowball in Hell
the cheshire kitten project
the pelican
Working Without a Net
Alberta Blogs
Motime Help Blog
Motime Template Blog
The Featured Post Blog
Engadget
Gizmodo
NYT > Technology
PC Magazine: New Product Reviews
Semantic@BlogMatrix
Techdirt
The Register
Boy Genius Report
ageing
alberta
blogging
canada
cat
coffee
cooking
copyright
cross-border
design
dmca
election
espresso
girlie-girl
health
holidays
homelessness
homelife
iroast
language
mental health
politics
privacy
remembering
roasting
security
silly
smoking
spam
tech
usa
work