Roast of the coast Exploring the process with Columbia River Coff ee Roaster BY GREGORY ZSCHOMLER When it comes to enjoying a good cup of coff ee, there are a lot of steps between crop and cup. The popular beverage moves through three phases: growing, roasting and brewing. As a craft, roasting is both an art and a science. Nancy Montgomery and Tim Hurd, founders of Columbia River Cof- fee Roaster in Astoria, run one of the North Coast’s premier roasteries. It all started with an antique Royal No. 5 coff ee roaster that the pair purchased in 1992. “We off er a wide variety of coff ee(s) for a wide variety of coff ee drinkers,” Mont- gomery said. The roastery distributes more than two dozen proprietary roasts as well as custom blends. Perhaps their most well-known and locally-consumed variety is the dark roast, called Thundermuck, but they also distrib- ute an assortment of single-origin roasts and unique blends such as Fishers & Fallers and Jonny Tsunami. Jon Reimer, director of coff ee at Colum- 12 // COASTWEEKEND.COM Columbia River Coff ee Roaster 279 W. Marine Drive, Astoria Open from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Mondays through Saturdays www.columbiarivercoff eeroaster.com bia River Coff ee Roaster, oversees raw coff ee buying and the roastery’s whole- sale program. Both Reimer and Montgom- ery stress that the coff ee business is about building relationships, from growers to customers. Beans are purchased from growers from around the world — that is, within the coff ee-growing belt along the equato- rial zone between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn — which stretches across Central and South America, Africa and Asia. ABOVE: A view of various roasting machines at Columbia River Coff ee Roaster. BELOW: Jon Reimer, left, director of coff ee at Columbia River Coff ee Roaster, stands beside owner Nancy Montgomery. Photos by Gregory Zschomler See Page 13