The author of that article doesn't know what he's talking about. The reality is that isn't cold brew, it takes at least 12 hours for the coffee to seep, just like cold brewed tea, while that method you showed is fast it's not having a long enough extraction time to be as good as traditional long brew times. The other thing he said which if completely incorrect too is that cold brew does not use any heat whatsoever, what he's mixing up in his terminology is iced coffee, where you brew a hot cup of coffee then pour over ice, that isn't cold brewed. I understand too that they were stirring it rather briskly, but again it's the soaking of the coffee for a long time that makes the cold brew process work. Look, if there was a fast way of making cold brew coffee, coffee places would have discovered that a long time ago. If you look at the picture of the coffee coming out of the pitcher you can see that the coffee is very light in the glass container as well as that which is being poured out, cold brewed for 12 hours or more would be black with hardly any light going through it and the pour would also be black. I suppose if you like your coffee weak well then that would work just fine!
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