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Coffee
beans arrive at Aroma's Santa Fe warehouse in the raw, unroasted state
called "green." Green beans are essentially tasteless, and have little
if any odor. Roasting is the last and most important step in the long
sequence of processing that the beans go through after they are harvested.
Aroma's roasting style has its origins in the North Beach area of
San Francisco. We use an even-temperatured hot air roaster on the
beans. The beans are roasted on a fluid bed of hot air, rather than
rotating them in a drum over a flame. This improves the evenness and
consistency of the roasts, as none of the beans come in contact with
the hot metal of a drum. We roast dark to bring out the full flavor
of the coffee without imposing the burnt flavor of over-roasting which
is trendy and masks the use of inferior beans. We apply our style
to organics as well as to the best varietals we can find.
Aroma roasts only in small batches. Coffee is then hand-packed into
airtight bags with one-way valves. This custom approach to roasting
and packaging ensures Aroma's high quality standards are sealed in
every bag of coffee we ship.
Pick your roast
Each of our coffee descriptions contains a Roast Indicator to help
you choose the roasts that best match your individual tastes. Although
general descriptions can often be misleading because the terms have
come to hold different meanings coast to coast, here is how Aroma
defines each of its major roasting categories:
- Light
/American Roast:
This is our lightest roast, used primarily in our flavored coffees,
but also in a few others such as our Kenya AA, Columbian, Organic
SWP Mexican Tollan, and our Organic Breakfast Blend.
- Full
City Roast: Usually a medium roast, more or less dark
cinnamon in color and with little or no oil on the surface.
- Italian
Roast: The next stage, when droplets of oil appear
and the color is only slightly darker, handsomely speckled with
dark-brown spots.
- French
Roast: This is the stage when oil completely covers
the beans and they are the color of bittersweet chocolate. At
this point the beans are heavily carbonized and you taste more
of the flavor of the roast and less of the inherent flavor of
the bean.
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