Coffee enthusiasts should not roast coffee beans at home: Experts
Coffee roasters machine. (Shutterstock Photo)


Roasting your own coffee may seem appealing but go steady as there are health risks involved, especially if you are a heavy consumer of coffee.

When you roast the beans yourself, you heat them to about 200 degrees Celsius (392 degrees Fahrenheit), whether you're using a pan, oven, popcorn machine, or professional home roaster.

That high temperature evaporates the moisture and the beans grow larger, change color and release their aroma.

However, consumer advisors warn that roasting coffee produces acrylamide, a byproduct of heating certain foods to high temperatures that should be consumed in the smallest quantities possible.

"Laboratory tests show that acrylamide in the diet causes cancer in animals," the U.K.'s Food Standards Agency says. "Scientists agree that acrylamide in food has the potential to cause cancer in humans as well."

This substance can also be found in starchy foods like potatoes and bread after they have been roasted, baked, or fried at high temperatures for long periods.

"Eat a varied and balanced diet" is the general advice from the medical experts of Britain's National Health Service. "While we cannot completely avoid risks like acrylamide in food, this will help reduce your risk of cancer."

If you're buying ready-roasted coffee, food producers have to observe fixed guidelines in many countries, but you don't have that kind of protection at home, nutrition experts say.

So you might want to consider how much coffee you drink and whether you are better off buying roasted beans or if you prefer to prepare your own at home.