I've starting roasting green coffee beans in a frying-pan at home and in a tin foil tray, when having an outside bbq.
What would be a good way to make a Vietnamese style butter-roast? Should I just fry the beans in butter, until they are brown?
|
|
Just frying them in butter butter won't work. The temperature needed to roast the bean is much higher than the milk solids can handle. If I were you, I'd begin by clarifying the butter to get rid of the milk solids, then use the clarified butter with the same method you are using now. References:
|
|||||
|
|
I have been roasting coffee for a few years and have never heard of this. It wasn't so easy to find on google. http://www.vietnamese-coffee.com/vietnamese_coffee_about.php
I also googled pan roasting techniques. Apparently you should be able to achieve a roasting time of 15-20 minutes. So you are spending several minutes at 200C. With such a small amount of butter and sugar, I wonder when you add the extra ingredients to the pan so as to not burn the coating. If just using the oil to help the beans turn, then I imagine adding the oil from the start will work. I might have to try this myself. |
|||
|
|
I've added about one tablespoon of butter on the beans while turning them constantly in the frying pan at about a crack and a half.... When finished it leaves a high gloss on a medium roast. The flavor is wonderful and it seems to make for an even smoother more rich flavor. |
|||
|
|