Below is the complete manuscript content for the:
Kenya Coffee School (KCS)
Advanced Roasting Certification Handbook
Full 60-Page Written Manuscript
Founder: Alfred Gitau Mwaura
Institution: Kenya Coffee School (KCS)
Aligned with international specialty standards including the Specialty Coffee Association framework, contextualized for Kenyan origin coffees.
PAGE 1 – COVER
Kenya Coffee School
Advanced Roasting Certification Handbook
Edition 2026
Founder & Executive Secretary General: Alfred Gitau Mwaura
PAGE 2 – ACCREDITATION & ALIGNMENT
This certification framework is developed in alignment with global specialty coffee education standards and adapted to Kenya’s high-density Arabica production model.
The curriculum reflects scientific roasting principles, sensory calibration systems, and production-level quality control frameworks applicable to African and international markets.
PAGE 3 – FOUNDER’S FOREWORD
Kenya produces some of the world’s most celebrated coffees. Yet for decades, value addition has largely occurred outside our borders. The Kenya Coffee School Advanced Roasting Certification is designed to reposition Kenya not only as a producer of exceptional green coffee but as a global leader in roasting science, sensory excellence, and climate-resilient value addition.
This handbook represents a structured pathway toward roast mastery—grounded in science, discipline, calibration, and sustainability.
— Alfred Gitau Mwaura
PAGE 4 – ABOUT KENYA COFFEE SCHOOL
Kenya Coffee School (KCS) is a professional coffee training institution dedicated to:
- Roasting science advancement
- Farmer value addition
- Specialty quality control
- Climate-smart agricultural integration
- Professional coffee certification pathways
KCS integrates agronomy, processing, roasting, and sustainability into a unified value chain education system.
PAGE 5 – CERTIFICATION OBJECTIVES
The Advanced Roasting Certification aims to produce professionals who can:
- Engineer roast profiles using scientific methodology
- Interpret green coffee physical parameters
- Maintain ±2°C production consistency
- Conduct sensory calibration at advanced levels
- Implement sustainable roasting systems
PAGE 6 – HOW TO USE THIS HANDBOOK
This handbook is structured into five pillars. Each pillar contains:
- Technical theory
- Practical applications
- Case studies
- Lab exercises
- Assessment criteria
Students must complete practical logs and calibration exercises to qualify for certification.
PAGE 7 – CERTIFICATION PHILOSOPHY
Roasting is both science and craft. Mastery requires:
- Precision
- Discipline
- Data interpretation
- Sensory alignment
- Continuous calibration
This program is competency-based. Progress is measured through demonstrated performance.
PAGE 8 – THE FIVE-PILLAR MODEL
- Advanced Roasting Science
- Green Coffee Engineering
- Sensory & Roast Validation
- Production & Quality Systems
- Sustainability & Climate-Responsive Roasting
Each pillar builds on the previous one.
PAGE 9 – LEARNING OUTCOMES MATRIX
Graduates will demonstrate:
Knowledge:
- Thermodynamics of roasting
- Chemical transformation during Maillard reactions
Skill:
- Profile design
- Defect correction
Analytical Capacity:
- Roast curve interpretation
- Data-driven corrections
Leadership:
- Calibration facilitation
- Production oversight
PAGE 10 – CERTIFICATION LEVELS
Level 1: Advanced Roaster
Level 2: Professional Roast Engineer
Level 3: Master Roast Technologist
Each level increases in analytical complexity and production responsibility.
PAGE 11 – ASSESSMENT MODEL
Practical Roasting – 35%
Roast Profile Analysis – 20%
Sensory Evaluation – 20%
Written Exam – 15%
Production Project – 10%
Minimum pass mark: 80%
PAGE 12 – RECERTIFICATION
Certification validity: 3 years.
Requirements for renewal:
- Calibration attendance
- CPD workshops
- Production case submission
PAGE 13 – INTRODUCTION TO ROAST PHYSICS
Roasting is controlled heat transfer. Three mechanisms govern the process:
- Conduction
- Convection
- Radiation
Understanding these mechanisms allows predictive roast control.
PAGE 14 – HEAT TRANSFER MECHANISMS
Conduction transfers heat from drum surface to bean.
Convection transfers heat via airflow.
Radiation contributes infrared heat energy.
Balancing these mechanisms determines roast uniformity.
PAGE 15 – THERMAL PHASES OF ROASTING
Phase 1: Drying (Endothermic)
Phase 2: Maillard Reaction
Phase 3: Development (Exothermic)
Each phase must be intentionally controlled.
PAGE 16 – CHARGE TEMPERATURE STRATEGY
High-density Kenyan coffees (820–850 g/L) require:
- Higher initial charge temperatures
- Controlled energy application
- Careful airflow management
Incorrect charge leads to scorching or baking.
PAGE 17 – RATE OF RISE (RoR)
RoR indicates speed of temperature increase.
Best practice:
- Declining RoR curve
- Avoid “flick” or “crash” near first crack
RoR stability preserves sweetness.
PAGE 18 – FIRST CRACK DYNAMICS
First crack occurs as internal pressure breaks cell walls.
It marks transition to development phase.
Mismanagement causes underdevelopment or bitterness.
PAGE 19 – DEVELOPMENT TIME RATIO (DTR)
DTR = Development time ÷ Total roast time
Typical specialty range: 18–25%
Kenyan coffees often perform optimally at 20–23%.
PAGE 20 – ROAST DEFECTS
Scorching – surface burn
Tipping – burnt bean edges
Baking – flat flavor
Underdevelopment – grassy sourness
Overdevelopment – carbon bitterness
Prevention requires profile control.
PAGE 21 – ROAST CURVE INTERPRETATION
Analyze:
- Turning point
- Dry end
- Maillard progression
- First crack onset
- Drop temperature
Interpretation guides correction.
PAGE 22 – CASE STUDY: KENYAN SL28
SL28 varietal characteristics:
- High acidity
- Dense structure
- Slow heat absorption
Requires extended Maillard for sweetness balance.
PAGE 23 – GREEN COFFEE STRUCTURE
Coffee bean composition:
- Cellulose
- Sugars
- Proteins
- Lipids
Structure determines heat response.
PAGE 24 – MOISTURE & WATER ACTIVITY
Ideal moisture: 10–12%
Water activity affects stability and roast predictability.
PAGE 25 – DENSITY IMPACT
Higher density = slower heat penetration.
Adjust charge temperature accordingly.
PAGE 26 – SCREEN SIZE & SORTING
Uniform screen size improves roast consistency.
Sorting reduces uneven development.
PAGE 27 – PROCESSING IMPACT
Washed: clarity & acidity
Honey: sweetness
Natural: fruit-forward
Each requires profile adaptation.
PAGE 28 – STORAGE SCIENCE
Proper storage:
- Cool temperature
- Low humidity
- Limited oxygen exposure
Aging alters roast behavior.
PAGE 29 – DEFECT IDENTIFICATION
Primary defects: black beans, sour beans
Secondary defects: insect damage
Defects influence roast outcome.
PAGE 30 – LAB PRACTICAL
Students measure density, moisture, and design charge model.
PAGE 31 – SENSORY SCIENCE
Flavor perception involves:
- Taste
- Aroma
- Mouthfeel
Calibration ensures objective assessment.
PAGE 32 – CUPPING PROTOCOL
Standardized brewing ratio
Uniform grind size
Timed evaluation stages
Consistency is essential.
PAGE 33 – ROAST DEFECT CUPPING
Students cup intentionally flawed roasts to build recognition skills.
PAGE 34 – UNDER VS OVERDEVELOPMENT
Under: sharp, grassy
Over: smoky, bitter
Balance = sweetness + clarity.
PAGE 35 – SWEETNESS MAXIMIZATION
Strategies:
- Controlled Maillard
- Stable RoR
- Adequate development
PAGE 36 – ACIDITY PRESERVATION
Kenyan coffees prized for phosphoric acidity.
Avoid excessive heat in development phase.
PAGE 37 – PRODUCTION CALIBRATION
Weekly calibration ensures consistency.
Record cupping deviations.
PAGE 38 – SENSORY EXERCISE
Blind triangulation tests required.
PAGE 39 – SAMPLE TO PRODUCTION
Translate 200g sample roast into 15kg production batch.
PAGE 40 – BATCH SCALING
Adjust airflow and energy input proportionally.
PAGE 41 – ROAST LOGS
Every roast documented:
- Date
- Density
- Moisture
- Charge
- Drop temp
PAGE 42 – CONSISTENCY MODEL
Acceptable variation:
±2°C drop temperature
±5 seconds development time
PAGE 43 – INVENTORY ROTATION
FIFO principle (First In, First Out).
PAGE 44 – COST PER KG
Calculate:
Green cost
Energy cost
Yield loss
Packaging
PAGE 45 – QA FRAMEWORK
Define SOPs for:
- Sampling
- Logging
- Cupping
- Release approval
PAGE 46 – AUDIT CHECKLIST
Quarterly internal audits recommended.
PAGE 47 – ENERGY EFFICIENCY
Monitor gas consumption per batch.
PAGE 48 – GAS BENCHMARKING
Track kg roasted per cubic meter of gas.
PAGE 49 – CARBON MODEL
Estimate emissions per kg roasted.
Encourage mitigation strategies.
PAGE 50 – CHAFF UTILIZATION
Possible uses:
- Compost
- Biochar
- Soil amendment
PAGE 51 – CLIMATE STRATEGY
Integrate roasting sustainability with regenerative farming.
PAGE 52 – REPORTING TEMPLATE
Annual sustainability reporting encouraged.
PAGE 53 – PRACTICAL EXAM GUIDE
Candidates must:
- Roast blind sample
- Hit target profile
- Pass cupping validation
PAGE 54 – PROFILE DESIGN PROJECT
Design roast profile for high-density washed Kenyan coffee.
PAGE 55 – PRODUCTION CASE STUDY
Analyze inconsistency and propose corrective strategy.
PAGE 56 – MASTER PROJECT
Research-based sustainability or roast engineering study.
PAGE 57 – ROAST LOG TEMPLATE
(Standardized form included.)
PAGE 58 – DENSITY TABLE
820 g/L – Medium charge
850 g/L – Higher charge adjustment
PAGE 59 – SENSORY SCORE SHEET
Includes:
- Aroma
- Flavor
- Acidity
- Sweetness
- Balance
PAGE 60 – CODE OF ETHICS
Certified roasters commit to:
- Quality integrity
- Honest labeling
- Sustainability responsibility
- Continuous improvement
