Are any of you fine folks brewing your own cold brew? Post pics, recipes and gear if so as it’s that time of year and I just received a request from Mrs. RW.
Are any of you fine folks brewing your own cold brew? Post pics, recipes and gear if so as it’s that time of year and I just received a request from Mrs. RW.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
Timely post as I have just started working from home and now have access to my coffee setup all day.
We have a few sizes of French press and a ceramic pour over cone. I prefer the latter, so when making my 2nd cup of coffee to bring up to my desk with that, I've been doing an extra-strong 12oz of french press at the same time, then pouring it with milk into a large glass mug and sticking it in the fridge. Add a few ice cubes after lunch and it's been a good way to get my last caffeine jolt of the day.
This works great for me, but cold brewing may be in my future given my newfound flexibility.
my name is Matt
The best cold brews I've had have been from an industrial sized Toddy. Looks like they have a home setup now - http://a.co/1TZIvdc I haven't tried the little home one, but this is the brand I'd go with if I were going to. All the baristas I know start with 1lb of coffee for every gallon of water, let it sit for 24 hours, and adjust if needed. Cold brew will keep for a week or so in the fridge so it's easier to do a bigger batch.
If you're feeling a little less ambitious, Grady's sells pre-ground and bagged coffee specifically for cold brew. You just put the bags in a pitcher and steep them like tea. It's got a strong flavor, but it's not bad. https://www.gradyscoldbrew.com/colle...w-bean-bag-can
Quoting myself here because what the heck.
I’ve been drinking iced coffee since college, when I worked for the public works Dept and later on as a maintenance guy at a retirement village. Make a strong pot the night before, ample ice, milk, (and sometimes sugar) in a thermos the next morning. This is how I learned it from my Pop Pop who did the same with a battered green Stanley thermos when he climbed telephone poles for a living.
Been doing the same off and on for a couple decades now.
But recently, having started working from home, I’ve been buying quart jars of Chameleon concentrated cold brew and man is it good. I use a giant cocktail ice cube and two parts coffee to one part 2% milk. And the taste is so rich it’s not even funny. I can go back to my French press stuff cooled off and iced, but I don’t really wanna.
If anyone out there has suggestions as to how to replicate that- brewing eqpt and beans, I’d be all over it. The bottled stuff at $10/jar/week isn’t bad price wise, but if I could cut that down a bit, I’d have more money to save for my backup pit, left handed backup pit bike.
my name is Matt
Our oldest kid asked if I could make her a cold brew stand since I made one of her brothers a pour over stand. I’m a bit stumped as to what I would make to contain this beast...the Filtron Cold Brew Coffee Brewer. Any experience with this piece of equipment?
Filtron Cold Brew Coffee Concentrate Brewer
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
Not sure what you’d make a stand for with the Filtron system. That’s what I use and the only time I wish I had something is during steeping process. Or brewing. Whatever you want to call it. And that’s only because I’m afraid one day I’ll come home and the cork will have leaked. Other than that, I don’t really see a need/ use for a stand.
Last edited by dashDustin; 09-17-2019 at 12:28 AM.
-Dustin
plus one for filtron. a good home set up option.
I tend to make iced chemex's myself if I am in the mood for cold coffee.
I'm super cheap so I just use any old 64 oz juice bottle. I pour one cup coarse ground coffee in along with 4 cups water and agitate to make sure all grounds are wet. I then put it in fridge for 18 to 24 houra. I pour it all through a standard coffee filter that ia lining a pour over into another container. I then cut the concentrate to taste with water for my wife or juat pour over a little ice for me.
I have been craving some cold brew lately but will wait till we finish our bottle of juice.
I drink a ton of iced coffee this time of year but coldbrew just doesn't do it for me. Doesn't seem to have the oomph...
Guy Washburn
Photography > www.guywashburn.com
“Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.”
– Mary Oliver
The Japanese do iced the best way, creating a hot brew that siphons directly through a chilling coil so the time it spends hot is limited to the time it's actually brewing. After brewing and chilling, they make coffee ice cubes so that the brew maintains its strength. Consult your local Heisenberg for the supplies. :)
My usual setup is to drop 100g of coffee (coarsest my grinder can grind) and 700g water into a mason jar. Shake, refrigerate. I'll shake it up whenever I get anything out of the fridge. In 24-48hr, I'll run it through a pour over filter into another container.
Huh - sounds like I'm brewing for waaay too long: Cold Brewing FAQs | Stumptown Coffee Roasters Blog
https://www.wholelattelove.com/blog/...ama-drip-maker
Best cold brew I've ever had was an medium roast African out of one of these.
Randy Larrison
My amazing friends call me Shoogs.
Realize this is my third post in this topic but I’ve been working from home for a couple years now (pre COVID) and the Hario cold brewer (700ml) has been doing the trick for the last couple years. I go thru about two pitchers a week in the warmer months.
Once you get the hang of it, it makes cold brew as good or better than the concentrated bottled stuff you can buy at the grocery store, at a fraction of the price. Highly recommended recommend it.
I'm confused about this thread revival and how I missed it previously. I'm sure I posted somewhere in a cold brew thread. Anyway, Filtron is not the original--unless it is, I didn't do my research--but the original upon which filtron would seem to be based is Toddy. We were hooked on it in the 80s in New Orleans when PJ's coffee started doing these amazing ice coffees using Toddy and their own freshly roasted beans ("Viennese" darkness)--they added a splash of mexican vanilla to a gallon for their secret recipe. Anyway, on paper you can do it in any container (Chemex, a big bucket, etc.) but the felt filters in Toddy (or the bags they introduced later) don't clog as quickly as paper and are reusable. looks like filtron is similar system. But Toddy is the original, basically the same price, and a good company. Mine is several decades old.
https://toddycafe.com/the-toddy-story
am I the only Marvin?
^ I made my first batch with a Toddy this past week and I was in orbit after every drink...definitely works, as I need to adjust my concentrate to water ratio.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
I seem to recall that PJ's cut it in half with water. It also depends on how much ice you use. I have a couple of the store bought concentrate bottles that I fill at full strength to save room in fridge and get accurate dispensing. I noted yesterday on their site that Toddy says 10 uses out of the filter which is ridiculously short unless you never give them a proper rinsing. Mine last several years.
Bottle I'm talking about:
66100p.jpg
am I the only Marvin?
I do this now : https://perfectdailygrind.com/2019/0...ust-2-minutes/
Delicious cold brew made in 2 minutes with minimal equipement.
enjoy!
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