Equipment Suggestions
Charlie;Don't waste your money buying a third roaster for cacao. As long as you can turn the temperature down to about 300 degrees, your coffee roasters will work just fine.Remember: Cooking anything is about heat and airflow. If your cooking instrument creates both, then you can cook anything you want in it.Case in point: we use a commercial electric convection oven in our shop, roast a few hundred lbs of beans every week, and also toast our coconut, roast all of our nuts, bake brownies, cupcakes, cookies, and other pastries.Cheers.Brad.
Greetings!
I became involved in Specialty coffee bean roasting a year and a half ago and have been interested in roasting and processing cacao beans. My green bean supplier has contacts that would help me choose.
I currently have two commercial roasters and will be purchasing a roaster( small one to start ) for the cacao beans from the same manufacturer. I really don't see the difference but there must be something.
We have Tazza Chocolate here in MA and was very impressed with their start up story and their artisan way of producing their finished chocolate. Although I would love to get an old roaster and melanguer, I feel the time looking and refurbishing would not put me where I want to be. So I guess my questions are....Santha products, any experiences? I looked at the BLT winnower and still looking.
I know what questions will be asked of me and that is volume. Not sure but I would rather purchase once than twice. I just want to offer something different with my coffee blends.
Any leads in the right direction for equipment will greatly be appreciated.
This forum is great and I spent all day reading every post.
Thanks
Charlie
updated by @charlie: 04/11/25 09:27:36
I became involved in Specialty coffee bean roasting a year and a half ago and have been interested in roasting and processing cacao beans. My green bean supplier has contacts that would help me choose.
I currently have two commercial roasters and will be purchasing a roaster( small one to start ) for the cacao beans from the same manufacturer. I really don't see the difference but there must be something.
We have Tazza Chocolate here in MA and was very impressed with their start up story and their artisan way of producing their finished chocolate. Although I would love to get an old roaster and melanguer, I feel the time looking and refurbishing would not put me where I want to be. So I guess my questions are....Santha products, any experiences? I looked at the BLT winnower and still looking.
I know what questions will be asked of me and that is volume. Not sure but I would rather purchase once than twice. I just want to offer something different with my coffee blends.
Any leads in the right direction for equipment will greatly be appreciated.
This forum is great and I spent all day reading every post.
Thanks
Charlie
updated by @charlie: 04/11/25 09:27:36
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@clay
• yesterday
• comments: 0
Posted a response to
"Packaging and Storage"
"Mandy:
There are multiple types of packaging used for chocolate, depending on the brand, purpose, and specific product. Some common types of..."
@clay
• yesterday
• comments: 0
Posted a response to
"Paper vs. Metal vs. Plastic: A Candid Look at Chocolate Packaging Pros & Cons"
"Mandy – I appreciate that you did not appear to link to the company you work for, which apparently manufactures tin cans, given your email address...."
@eric-lau
• 2 days ago
• comments: 0
Posted a response to
"Paper vs. Metal vs. Plastic: A Candid Look at Chocolate Packaging Pros & Cons"
"Good suggestion! We have a chocolate shop. I think the aluminum foil +paper box packaging would be very suitable for us."
@kapil-jain
• 9 years ago
Chocolatevenue is an online chocolate store in India.We are specialized in customized chocolates .Chocolates can be customized as chocolate message and chocolate bars.
You can get written your message on chocolates and can get customized your chocolate bars by selecting the desired ingredients.
for more details

