Glossary > Roasting > Ambient Temperature

Ambient Temperature

Roasting

In Simple Terms

Ambient temperature just means the temperature of the room you're roasting in. For roasters, this matters because a cold room or a hot one changes how the machine behaves. Experienced roasters keep an eye on it and adjust their profiles accordingly.

What is ambient temperature and why does it matter in roasting?

Ambient temperature is the temperature of the air in your roasting environment. It matters because your roaster doesn't operate in isolation - the machine absorbs heat from and loses heat to its surroundings, and those conditions change with the weather.

On a cold January morning your drum will behave differently to a warm August afternoon, even if you set the same charge temperature. Cold ambient air drawn through the drum and cooling tray removes heat faster; a warmer environment means less thermal loss. The result, if you don't account for it, is roast-to-roast inconsistency even when the profile looks identical on screen.

Experienced roasters log ambient temperature alongside every roast and adjust charge temperature or heat application seasonally. If you've ever had a profile that worked reliably in summer start producing different results in winter without any obvious changes, ambient temperature is almost always where to look first.