Soybean (Glycine max L.) is a popular oil crop, used in traditional cooking by Asian people and commercially processed to produce edible oil and protein meal. The protein meal is used in wheat flour fortification, bakery products, and soy nuggets, whereas the edible oil is largely consumed in cooking and frying (de Oliveira Silva & Perrone, 2015; Raigar & Mishra, 2018). The other value-added products consumed worldwide produced from soybean are soy flour, soya milk, tofu, etc. (Navicha, Hua, Masamba, & Zhang, 2017). The use of soybean sometime imparts beany taste to the product which negatively affects the acceptance of soy foods among consumers. Roasting process can be used to countered this issue (Shin, Kim, & Kim, 2013), which involves heating of soybeans using dry hot medium at 160-200°C depending on the installed equipment and duration of heating (Raigar & Mishra, 2018). Various methods of roasting such as rotary drum, heated ceramic roasting, and salt bed roasting are commonly used (Chauhan, Chauhan, Sharma, Bajpai, & Yadav, 2003; Tulashie, Appiah, Akpari, & Saabome, 2020). Use of direct and indirect fire in the roasting process varies the degree of heating, and thereby the product quality. Being a high-temperature short time method, roasting induces desirable, and undesirable quality changes in the kernels (Schoeman & Manley, 2019). It is a popular grain processing method used worldwide for the different roasting products with improved taste, color, aroma, texture, palatability, digestibility, and sen