☕ Brew Your Best Life with Fresh Roast!
The Fresh Roast SR800 Automatic Coffee Bean Roaster allows you to roast your own coffee at home with precision and ease. Featuring a digital status display, variable heat settings, and a convection fan control, this roaster can handle up to 8oz of green coffee beans in less than 10 minutes. With 11 settings and a powerful 1750 watts, it’s designed for both beginners and experienced roasters, ensuring you enjoy the freshest coffee possible.
Display | LCD |
Voltage | 120 Volts |
Number of settings | 11 |
Special Features | Digital Status Display, Manual Controls, Adjustable Heat Control, Roast Up To 8OZ of Coffee in Minutes, Easy To Use |
Specific Uses For Product | Roasting Green Coffee Beans To Make Fresh Roasted Coffee |
Wattage | 1750 watts |
Style Name | Home Coffee Roasting Machine |
Color | Black |
Material Type | Super high temperature resistant plastic and stainless steel |
G**T
Besides some flaws I love this Roaster.
Lets talk about the flaws first. When its 60 degrees outside it is a bit underpowered. Instead of 220 grams of coffee I roast at a time, I use about 170 grams. You will have to turn up the heat to full, and turn the fan on the highest setting for the drying process. Your beans must always move. At first the beans do not move much as they have moisture in them in the first phase of the drying process. I stir them without the chaff collector on. I have a fan that blows the chaff away from the chimney on the roaster. I do this out in the back yard so I do not care if it makes a mess i just wash it down with water when I'm done. I always check the bean temps with a infrared temp gun through the top of the glass chimney I do not follow the built in temp meter because its a bit off until way in the roasting process. When the beans start moving on there own, I turn the fan to 8 for a minute, then turn the fan to 7 and still on full heat power. Then the beans will get to 360 degrees for a few minutes, on the mallard phase where the beans develope the Sugars. After about 8 minutes in the beans will get to 390 degrees for finishing. You want to keep the beans for about 3 minutes between 350 and 370 to convert the sugars in the bean. After that its the roasting phase, and the temp will go up to 390 or more by that time. If its hotter outside you can add more beans to 220 grams, and should not have a problem getting bean temp to 420 degrees. You really want to check the bean temperature with a infrared temp gun. Dodn't rely trying to get a temp through the glass when your using the chaff collector through the glass with the infrared temp gun. The Chaff collector needs to be off and then you can lazor right into the top of the glass to the beans. if you want to use the chaff collector then fine, but the real bean temperature is abit off on the roaster concerning bean temp.Otherwise when its warm outside, I just fill up 220 grams and go to town. No problems underpowered on warm days. You will need to turn the power down to 8 or seven, and the fan. Remember 3 or 4 mins drying, 3or 4 minutes between 360 and 370 (not over 380 degrees as this is the mallard phase converting starches to sugars and will stop the mallard or sugar developing phase, your coffee will not taste any sweetness.) And the next phase is the real roasting phase. Please unless you like totally black beans with the oils covering the beans its nasty. I do not ever go over 410 degrees. If you see oils on the beans there way overcooked, and your coffee will taste totally bland without good flavors. Primos Coffee on Amazon is good coffee beans very fresh, not too expensive, and really plump up and they are from a single estate so not every Tom, Dick, and Harry's beans is not mixed together. I like green coffee from Mexico the best so I ordered some from Anthony's There products are high quality also, and organic from Mexico. Do try Single Estate coffee its way better.
S**E
Phenomenal Roaster
Roaster has been the best coffee tool investment I’ve ever made. Within 8-12 minutes beans are roasted to your desired levels. Allows for typically 8 ounces of beans to be roasted at any given time. Noise level is low or modest and roasting smoke is limited. Beans come out amazing.
M**Y
Perhaps the best machine for home coffee roasting
The SR-800 replaces our old roaster, which was a smaller, programmable roaster from the same company. The newer version has two distinct benefits in my opinion.First, the new roaster has twice the capacity (180 grams of green beans vs. 90 grams). This means I’m brewing only two batches a week instead of 3-4. That’s a huge time saver.Second, the SR-800 is operated manually, which means you stand by the roaster and adjust the fan and temperature as required during the roast. This may not sound like an advantage, but our previous roaster (now discontinued) was a pain to program and only stored one roasting profile at a time. Not good if you like to try coffee from around the world, because one roasting profile does not suit all coffees. With a manual roaster, you just put in 180 grams of beans and start the machine.What I discovered with the SR-800 is that there are only a few basic principles to follow for a consistently good roast. Hot air is blown into the glass roasting chamber, which pushes the beans in the center up and the beans on the outside down, and so the first principle is to keep the beans moving this way to ensure they are evenly roasted and none are scorched. You start with a high fan speed to circulate the heavy beans and a medium temp to remove moisture, and then gradually increase to maximum temp during the first two minutes. The second principle is to reduce the fan speed step by step as the beans lose their moisture and become lighter. You only need enough fan speed to push the beans in the center to the top so that the outside beans will sink to the bottom. The beans don’t need to be flying around the chamber. As you lower the fan speed, the temp becomes substantially hotter. My roasts generally peak at 450+ degrees Fahrenheit. The third principle is to finish heating the beans within about 8 minutes. I like the beans to start popping at around 6 minutes, and then become evenly dark and plump in the next two minutes. You finish with the cool setting at the highest fan speed and lowest temp for a total time in the roaster of about 10 minutes. If you roast the beans too long, the flavor will become muted and bland.The above is my recipe for a medium dark roast just short of any oil coming out of the beans. I don’t like oily beans because they are messy and the oils starts to go rancid in a few days. I also don’t care for the acidic taste of very light roasts, but to each his own. You can adjust the time and temp as you please to achieve your ideal roast.It takes a few batches to get the hang of it, but it’s not all that hard if you pay attention to what the beans are doing in the roaster for about 8 minutes. Personally, I like watching the beans roast and tweaking the fan and temp. It’s fun and I love the results.The SR-800 seems to be the ideal starter roaster for 2-3 coffee drinkers in one household. Better machines start at double the price and not everyone can taste the difference.
A**R
Be careful
These are good if you roast a little coffee, but if you start roasting a lot it will burn out. Be careful to blow all the chaff out of the bottom where it likes to collect. This can block airflow and result in earlier burnout of the motor. I am on my third unit, but I like it.
A**L
Best price to performance roaster
This worked excellent for 2 years, but suddenly today I think the fan bearing started failing, it still managed to power through and finish the roast, though it sounded horrible. I'm going to chalk it up to bad luck because my previous SR500 lasted 7 years and presumably still works if I need a backup. I'll give it another go because these are a great value.
X**S
Great roaster for frequent home use
This is the second one we've had. The first one lasted just over 4 years before the fan and heat element stopped working. We thought it was a sudden thing, but after getting the new one, we realized it had been losing power and effectiveness slowly over the last 6 months or so. We used it frequently, at least once a week for 4 years, so it doesn't seem unreasonable that it would wear out. If the new lasts four years as well, we will be satisfied.
A**R
Great coffee roaster
I’ve been roasting coffee beans for years and found this very easy to operate. I liked being able to adjust the fan and heat levels. It is easy to clean and small enough for storage.
Trustpilot
5 days ago
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