I'm getting old and the morning coffee isn't doing anything for the crash after midday. It's also getting hot and I don't want an afternoon hot cup of coffee. I want to try making cold brew and it seems simple enough. Any tips?
So far I've seen 1:8 coffee to water recommended. 24 hours steeped and 2:1 water to concentrate. Sound ok? Any extra steps to make it twice as good?
I've on of those glass carafe's with the insert for coffee grounds, but I use my french press because it's just easier. I do 1:4 course ground coffee to water, so it's a concentrate. I use 200g coffee + 800ml water in my press. I let it brew in the fridge for at least 12 hours, up to 18. Can go to 24, but that's not my preference.
At serving time, I like it with generous 1/3 coffee concentrate + lean 2/3 water.
If I did not want to make a concentrate, but to drink straight up, then I'd go 1:8 or 1:10.
It's all about taste though! You'll find your sweet spot after a couple brews. Course ground coffee makes a much "cleaner" cold brew than regular grind. I don't generally filter mine unless its super cloudy.
Youโre certainly on the right track. I only cold brew occasionally, but almost always use 1:6 coffee to water and dilute 1:2 afterward with either ice or hot water, depending on my preference. Itโs also what I use when expecting overnight houseguests. Start with 1:8 or 1:6 and experiment thereupon if you feel up for it.
For an indulgent treat, add sweetened condensed milk!
You may have to experiment a bit with your first couple if batches, as the end results can vary depending on the quality/type of filters, and the strength of your preferred coffee. Add or subtract coffee from your batches until you get your desired strength.
Interesting, I made my first batch in a French press..only enough for one serving though. If I make a bigger batch, how long have you found one can store the concentrate? It'd be tempting to make a huge batch on the weekend to last me the week. I only see myself having a cup a day.
I don't think there's a clear cutoff from a taste perspective, it'll just be staler the longer you wait. As with most things, it's just about juggling the convenience vs quality tradeoff. But the win-win solution, especially in the later days, might be that condensed milk everyone's talking about.