Hi, I made my first batch in the SC/TO. I used 1 and 2/3 cups of Kenya Thunguri. I tried to follow the roasting profile given early in the SC/TO thread, but the thermometer probe seemed to be measuring more of the air temperature and not so much the coffee temperature. Total roast time was 17 minutes and it went into first crack at around 11 minutes and it was truly slow.
Ramzy - like ~7-8- years ago, when I first started playing w/ an SC/TO (invented by an SF guy named Suzuki IIRC, look around coffee geek ~2007/8) ) I did a long series of experiments. My *OPINION* is that any hardware than can't get you to 2nd crack in ~7 minutes has inadequate power and will likely leave you with "baked beans" flavors. Sivetz (the late author of "Coffee Technology") recorded that commercial large scale roasters operate in ~6 minutes. By "Baked bean" flavors I mean that you end up with a chocolate-y simplistic "McDonalds coffee" flavor regardless of the varietal character. There is absolutely nothing wrong (and a lot right) with creating an 8 or 9 minute profile schedule that allows for more delays for browning reactions and maillard reactions on the +- side of 1st crack, *BUT* you need to be able to power your way up hard to 1st crack and then out of the rests and into the edge of 2nd crack fast.
Long slow profiles (like your 17min) kill off the caffeine (and what is the point of this coffee obsession w/o caffeine ?) and ruin the natural acidity of the bean. So you get a good deal of roasty-chocolate flavors and no "bite". IMNSHO there is absolutely no justification for any profile over 10-11 min.
So I've always used/use a common SC unit (with a rake), and a Galloping Gourmet 1400W TO unit (the two will blow a 15A breaker !) and for years I've used a 2.25 inch springform pan as spacer . I pre-heat the unit (no beans) for 2.5-3 minutes, add room temp beans and am seeing 1st crack in 4-5 minutes, 2nd crack in under 8 minutes UNLESS I add delays. . I have measured results and I believe that this combo will roast 250-600grams of green beans adequately, but the sweet-spot is 350-375g of beans. 350g of green beans (my standard load) is ~2.4 cups of greenss. My experience is that tiny loads like your 2/3rds cup (perhaps 110g) do not roast evenly and *should* incinerate in ~7 minutes!
My suggestion for your next roast.
0/ Pre-heat the unit to operating temps. *ALWAYS*; this is a basic pre-req.
1/ bypass the controls and try using full power/no-power and your nose as instrumentation. (Wax -on Wax off, sensei; once you understand - then use automatic controls to do your bidding
2/ Run the beans to the early edge of 1st crack <5min, then stop the power for ~60 seconds.
3/ Then re-apply full-power till you decide they are finished (maybe the early-edge of 2nd crack for city+)
99/ Cool beans rapidly!
You can't get a "bright" flavor at 17 minutes or even 12 minutes. 10-11min is the upper bound IMO. After that you are "diddling your own beans" and killing the acidity.
((NB: a LOT of owners of very expensive roasters will be unhappy w/ my comments))
My *SUSPICION* is that you have an underpowered TO. I've asked repeatedly on this forum and elsewhere and no one wants to answer, but my expectation is that some of the 1200W "Suppernhaus" units lack the power to roast 350g of beans in a rapid time. Decrease the load, but increase the heat containment.
I initially set the TO at 300 to preheat, then 400 to roast.
Big mistake =- set it to "Heart of the Sun" until you approach 1st crack.
After first crack began, I reduced the oven to 350.
That's fine, but you'd better be at 1st crack in <5min. Between 1st & 2nd you are burning off "brightness" at an alarming rate. Plan accordingly.
The stir arms kept reversing direction as someone had warned they might. That doesn't seem to hurt anything as long as they keep moving, but it seems like I am at the upper limit of how many beans I can put in, and it would be nice to put more in so the temperature probe is buried in the beans. I'd like to find out more about a more powerful motor that someone had mentioned.
When you have fewer beans the stir-arm is FAR more-erratic. IMO DO NOT try anything less than 200g of beans in an SC. \*WEIGHT* the input beans.
There was hardly any smoke compared to the hot ai huge poppers.
Yep - and the roast level is slightly more uneven (which is a huge ADVANTAGE!)
We really *WANT* some beans on the more acidic unroast edge and some farther into the *$ bold well-roasted edge to make a good mix. You can't achieve that on some instrument of perfection and science.
Welcome to the Art of Roasting !