a harsh or humorous critic (sometimes intended as a facetious compliment)
<noun.person> the honoree gave his roasters as good as he got
a cook who roasts food
<noun.person>
flesh of a large young chicken over 3 1/2 lb suitable for roasting
<noun.food>
a special cooking pan for roasting
<noun.artifact>
Roaster \Roast"er\, n. 1. One who roasts meat.
2. A contrivance for roasting.
3. A pig, or other article of food fit for roasting.
However, she said, this is the season when roaster demand for green coffee picks up, which could help prices to level off and even recover somewhat.
The company is buying a Dollars 230m roaster to process some of this ore and is developing other extraction technologies. Newmont Mining, meanwhile, is exploring properties in Nevada, near its existing operations, and in Oregon and Idaho.
Speculators, confident that no further market shocks were imminent, began selling their long positions; and the resulting lower prices attracted no significant roaster buying.
Apart from some roaster demand for green beans arriving in the near term, there hasn't been any major buying or selling in the cash market, he said.
A lack of roaster demand for green beans also depressed prices, analysts said.
The latter closed at Dollars 1,220 a tonne, up Dollars 18. But dealers said the turnover was fairly light at just 2,825 lots (5 tonnes each) despite signs of continued roaster buying in the physical market, particularly of lower grade beans.
But roaster buying was attracted at that level and the price ended at Dollars 888 a tonne, up Dollars 2 on the week.
Ms. Georgakis predicted coffee will continue to trade between 90 cents, where roaster buying usually comes in to support the price, and 96 cents, where producers sell heavily and push the price back down.