I have a
moccamaster technivorm 10 years old (and a bonavita 8cup)
breville smart grinder old model (BCG800BSXL)
behmor 1600 roaster with about 500 batches on it (typically they last around 1000 batches before something needs repaired parts are available.)
You have to let the beans rest for 2-5 days after roasting for all the outgassing to stop and get fuller flavor..
the last beans I roasted took about 5days.. usually its closer to 3 days.
it tasted really flat when I tried it on day 3 and 4... I was disappointed then boom they were great.
I use the Behmor 1600 to roast. its a model or 2 back without wifi on it.
aprox 13-16oz at at time. 13oz in winter on deck, 16oz when its hot out
cycle time is around 35min. around 19-22min roasting, then 12min cooling cycle.
I usually prefer city+ roast about 10s into 2nd crack. (this is medium dark to dark)
.. but it doesnt taste anything like nasty starbucks darkroast where its burnt.. it tastes sort of.. um... chocolately and smooth vs a more woody/grassy lighter roast. (I am not a professional coffee or wine taster)
Look for a SCA approved coffee pot..
https://sca.coffee/certified-home-brewer
Bonavita is a great choice at lower $$$ than some
Then get a burr grinder.. flat or conical.. no need to go super expensive for drip type coffee (ie not espresso machine)
avoid
Had 4 of them go bad in 2.5 years.
A typical EXCELLENT coffee grinder would be
Baratza Encore Conical Burr Coffee Grinder
Lastly the roaster.. there are cheaper but if you want super ease of use and able to make 1lb batches
the behmor 1600 is it.
Behmor 1600AB Plus Customizable 1-lb, Drum Coffee Roaster
There are some air popper types that are much cheaper but 5oz batches.
such as:
FreshRoast SR540 (4.6oz)
Google any of these for links.. or I can steer you towards something. I will say Invalsacoffee has unsurpassed coffee bean quality and GREAT customer service.. been a customer for 10 years. Have not been disappointed yet..
I typically only buy bolivian coffee but I have tried others.. and come back to bolivian.
The coffee growers they buy from are incentivized with more $$$ for better quality.
https://invalsacoffee.com/
IF you are still reading.. yes coffee makes noise when you roast it.. much more accurate than a timer.
first crack sounds like those snap pops we all threw on the ground as a kid.. the beans expand similar to popcorn but not as drastic. this is the beginning of drinkable coffee.
second crack is aprox 2:45-4m after first crack its the hull cracking and sounds like pencils snapping in half.
about 1min into second crack you are close to burnt coffee.. and shortly thereafter you are into ash and coffee fire.
Which actually happened to me once.. I was distracted by a police chase through my backyard at exactly the wrong time.
(coffee roaster fire)
I am just an amatuer but after 13+ years of roasting I've picked up abit of info. need anything expanded on.. dont understand something ... let me know. Its turned into a full hobby.. but its fairly rewarding if you are a coffee nut.. or just like coffee.
And finally a disclaimer.. if you are into espresso.. be ready to open the checkbook for a REALLY good grinder.. $300+ range definitely better to overspend on the grinder vs the espresso machine.. makes a world of difference.