![]() |
|
Welcome to FoodBanter.com forums which provide access to the finest food and drink related newsgroups. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most newsgroup discussions and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics to the food related newsgroups, communicate privately with other FoodBanter.com members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Coffee (rec.drink.coffee) Discussing coffee. This includes selection of brands, methods of making coffee, etc. Discussion about coffee in other forms (e.g. desserts) is acceptable. |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
Hi there,
Not a coffee drinker, the caffeine hurts my stomach, but I saw something that I would love to get for my fiancé: a coffee roasting pan. I know that there are all sorts of machines on the market that will do this but he's a hands-on type, do-it-yourselfer and I think he would enjoy this. At an exhibition of Italian culture last week they had something I remember my grandmother using in the Old World, essentially a cast iron skillet with a cover and a little window so that you take a peek. I have looked on the net and haven't found something like this. My two questions: 1) Does anyone know where I can find a roaster like this? I will by in NYC this weekend so if there is someplace physical where I can look for such an item, I'd love to know. 2) Is this a completely stupid, impractical idea? We don't have much ventilation in our place so if it causes clouds and clouds of smoke this might not be a great idea after all. However in his woodworking shop... we have a woodfire stove and I thought that perhaps he could try roasting his own beans in there if it is something that causes too much smoke indoors. Any advice would be great and I apologize if this topic has already been dealt with. Best, Johanna |
|
|||
|
I'm sure you've seen these sites about home roasting; low-tech and
otherwise: http://www.lucidcafe.com/homeroast5.html http://www.homeroast.com/frameset-1home.html Might be useful. (remove smoke detector before using). "Johanna" wrote in message m... Hi there, Not a coffee drinker, the caffeine hurts my stomach, but I saw something that I would love to get for my fiancé: a coffee roasting pan. I know that there are all sorts of machines on the market that will do this but he's a hands-on type, do-it-yourselfer and I think he would enjoy this. At an exhibition of Italian culture last week they had something I remember my grandmother using in the Old World, essentially a cast iron skillet with a cover and a little window so that you take a peek. I have looked on the net and haven't found something like this. My two questions: 1) Does anyone know where I can find a roaster like this? I will by in NYC this weekend so if there is someplace physical where I can look for such an item, I'd love to know. 2) Is this a completely stupid, impractical idea? We don't have much ventilation in our place so if it causes clouds and clouds of smoke this might not be a great idea after all. However in his woodworking shop... we have a woodfire stove and I thought that perhaps he could try roasting his own beans in there if it is something that causes too much smoke indoors. Any advice would be great and I apologize if this topic has already been dealt with. Best, Johanna |
|
|||
|
I'm sure you've seen these sites about home roasting; low-tech and
otherwise: http://www.lucidcafe.com/homeroast5.html http://www.homeroast.com/frameset-1home.html Might be useful. (remove smoke detector before using). "Johanna" wrote in message m... Hi there, Not a coffee drinker, the caffeine hurts my stomach, but I saw something that I would love to get for my fiancé: a coffee roasting pan. I know that there are all sorts of machines on the market that will do this but he's a hands-on type, do-it-yourselfer and I think he would enjoy this. At an exhibition of Italian culture last week they had something I remember my grandmother using in the Old World, essentially a cast iron skillet with a cover and a little window so that you take a peek. I have looked on the net and haven't found something like this. My two questions: 1) Does anyone know where I can find a roaster like this? I will by in NYC this weekend so if there is someplace physical where I can look for such an item, I'd love to know. 2) Is this a completely stupid, impractical idea? We don't have much ventilation in our place so if it causes clouds and clouds of smoke this might not be a great idea after all. However in his woodworking shop... we have a woodfire stove and I thought that perhaps he could try roasting his own beans in there if it is something that causes too much smoke indoors. Any advice would be great and I apologize if this topic has already been dealt with. Best, Johanna |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Coffee (9) Collection | Lindatn | Recipes (moderated) | 0 | 22-06-2004 01:22 PM |
| Cold Brewed Coffee | Kate ...... | General Cooking | 0 | 09-03-2004 01:30 PM |
| Dessert Coffees (11) Collection | Susanne Weber | Recipes (moderated) | 0 | 07-12-2003 12:10 AM |
| Civil War Coffee (9) Collection | Snoleppard42@aol.com | Recipes (moderated) | 0 | 19-11-2003 04:29 PM |
| Coffee Can Breads (7) Collection | luckytrim | Recipes (moderated) | 0 | 20-10-2003 03:59 AM |