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The Gene Roaster from Gene Café
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In the evolution of
home coffee roasters there was always one machine, or two, that did the job the best depending on
consumers' need. There was a time when even the Cafe Rosto was the best roaster available and the only alternative
to the well proven Fresh Roast roaster. But each roaster is eclipsed by the next better thing.
The Gene Roaster just took center stage. It may seem expensive but dollar for dollar its
really not. The happiness factor scores an all time high on this one. It delivers on
it's promise.
- The Gene Roaster is easy to use.
Its as easy to use as a Fresh Roast Roaster.
Its intuitive.
WAY the heck more obvious and satisfying than a Hot Top.
- It roasts the most coffee of any home machine.
Eleven ounces at a time.
Thats 4 more than an Alpenrost.
- Its worth every cent.
Figure it at
about $1.30 per day for year #1. Over five years its about .25 cents/day,
or 3-4 cents per cup. The Gene Roaster costs less than but roasts more than a Hot Top.
And, the Gene Roaster is easier to use.
- Automatic cool down cycle.Doesn't just cool for a certain amount of time it cools until the bean temp is down to 140.
- Adjustable timer with read out.
- Adjustable temperature.
(Readout alternates between aprox temp and target temp.)
- Easy viewing. Big glass chamber
- The manufacturers even promote the idea to use it in a business setting.
- Awesome chaff collection
- Quiet, guiet, quiet.
The Machine.
The machine is surprisingly smaller in person than it appears in photos. Somehow the Alpenrost
feels bigger even though this one consumes more square inches in its footprint. It's overall
volume and even shape is similar to a double wheeled shop grinder or shoe buffer if you've ever
seen those. The design of this machine is that of a real appliance.
The buttons have a very nice feel to them. They have a great tactile quality that doesn't
happen by accident. The designers took the time to build it in on purpose. Pressing the red or
blue button gives a little resistance, then a 'pup-pup' feeling so you know something was done.
Rotating them has a nice feel too. It feels like a step motor so as you rotate you can feel
how many clicks left or right you go. A big digital read out that confirms the setting.
You could master this machine in complete darkness. If you knew it always reset to 482
degrees and zero minutes each time you plugged it in, and you knew that two complete
rotations plus three clicks put you at exactly 18 minutes. Using this machine is easy.
(This machine does have a LOT of manufactured parts in it. Not much appears to be off
the shelf. But it looks like they put a lot of thought into it. Its not
like many parts parts have a chance of breaking, but the original assembly of the machine
must take some time.)
And away we go...
One of the acid tests around The Coffee Project specifically in roasting machinery is,
"Does it do what it promises to do?"
In the case of the Gene Roaster the answer is, "Yes." Its quiet, it does the job, it is
thoroughly intuitive. Fill with beans, Push the red button, select a setting, push the blue
button select a setting. Easy.
Customer comment:
"It's a pleasure to encounter a well designed piece of equipment like this. Been a long wait.
The unit is very quiet and works just as well as I hoped. Materials, fit and finish are fab.
In spite of web rumors to the contrary, I had no problem hearing the first crack.
Consistency is on a par with professional roasters. Chaff handling is excellent. At roast
completion all chaff has been sent to the chaff collector." Lyn
How does it work?
It gets hot and spins. 100% visibility and 100% control. What could be better? Actually, for
more detail on real world use,
click here... or visit our blog for current musings.
You will absolutely want to have a good vent in your environment. Roasting coffee produces
smoke and it has to be handled. The very good thing is that the smoke produced by the Gene
Roaster is of the beans only, not from burning chaff like the Alpenrost. And the smokes
wafts lazily little by little, unlike the Alpenrost which shoots it out all at once at
cool down. So, smoke control is a must, but a good vent will do it. The lighter you roast
the less smoke to handle. The machine is very quiet so not only do you get to SEE the beans,
you can hear them too.
What's under the hood?
(pictures)
The instructions
DO READ THE INSTRUCTION FIRST! Seriously. Not only are they critical to the finer points of
using the machine, they are darn funny. They are mostly well written and have accompanying
illustrations with a cartoon like roaster expressing its many moods. Its pretty cute.
Obviously written in English as a second language, some of the phrasing is awkward;
but mostly very adorable. The point they want to make always gets across.
The editorial design of the instruction booklet is professional quality. This is very nice
to see. Its a cue that they really did spend time on every aspect of a good design, right
down to the printed material as reference. The illustrations are good, the editorial design
leads the reader through the instructions with sidebars and icons... the information
is delivered in a very thoughtful and easy to understand way. (As opposed to a big
block of engineer text as other manuals can be.) They did a good job.
In the manual they even promote the idea of using this machine in a commercial setting!
How refreshing is that? Because this machine will absolutely wind up in small shops and
hobby businesses everywhere anyway. So entrepreneurs, dig in.
Anyone who had troubles with the Alpenrost will have no troubles with this machine.
You will need to have basic sensitivity to the beans themselves, but if things
go wrong, you won't be able to blame the machine. AS WITH ANY MACHINE HOWEVER!!!
as the beans are approaching done, please hit the cool button! Don't just stand there and watch them
become charcoal.
And, don't ever leave ANY roaster unattended.
Did we mention how nicely put together the manual was? what a nice detail not to let
slip. Its really worth the read.
The manual even includes a basic time/temp chart to get you started. Perfect. The absolutely
only thing they could have used is a proofreader or spell checker. Otherwise its a winner.
There's a description of how to get sweat flavors. That might be a typo.
Final thoughts
- Yes, it smokes. If you like dark roasted coffee you will want to use it near a very good
vent or take it outside. 1/2+ lbs of coffee is a lot no matter what.
- You will need to anticipate how much more the beans will roast during cool down.
That's a lot of mass to cool and its not instantaneous. Plan on reaching your cool down
before they hit the point where you like the beans.
- At up to 11 ounces at a time you won't be roasting anywhere near as often as you would
in other roasters.
- Once cooling stops, go ahead and get the beans out of the chamber which will still be
kind of warm.
- You'll need to relearn working with your favorite beans a little. A longer roast time
means you gain a little body at the cost of a little brightness. Why not keep a Fresh Roast roaster around the house too for small batches of highlighters when you do a blend.
- As the manual says,- "For safety purpose, make sure to understand the operations
described and keep the followings." Yes, good advice...
The Gene Roaster is:
Quiet,
Cost effective.
It has full control, and
Full visibility of the beans.
...it has an awkwardly written but extremely well produced manual.
The Gene Roaster is a winner.
Click here for more information about using the Gene Cafe Roaster...
_____________
See the Coffee Geek video at You Tube
and visit the coffee geek website, www.coffeegeek.com its an awesome source of info on all things coffee.
For even more thoughts on the Gene Roaster, visit our blog.
New to home roasting? Read Roasting 101 for an idea of what to expect.
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