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Long Miles Coffee

Brew Guide: Amazingly easy cold brew coffee

September 22, 2012 by karasscreative

 You might think that making cold brew coffee is a difficult and time consuming process. I did too, until we started making it and I realized it’s about as easy a peeling a banana. For real. In fact, it’s much easier than attempting to make a cappuccino in the morning AND your cold brew will stay fresh for up to a month if kept in tightly sealed containers (I use glass jars).

What’s the big whoop about cold brew coffee you say? Well, it brews using a much gentler process than, say, espresso. Espresso is hot water forced through packed coffee grounds for somewhere between 20-30 seconds. Cold brew coffee brews at room temperature for 12-16 HOURS giving it more time to bond with the unique characteristics of the coffee you are using.

The NUMBER 1 rule I used to hear my Coffee Guy shouting to his students back when he trained baristas? “Water is lazy.” In the context of espresso this means that it is bad to give the water any unnecessary paths to travel by having a poorly “tamped” (the act of pressing the coffee into the porter-filter ) espresso puck. In the context of cold brew? Well, it means the water should have a good ol’ lazy sunday lunch with your coffee grounds before you separate the two.

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All you need to remember when making our cold brew coffee is the magic cold brew ratio of 9 cups of water to 1/2 pound of coffee.

To make our very technical cold brew coffee you will need:

9 cups of room temperature water

1/2 lb. ground coffee (we are using some of Burundi’s finest beans, roasted lightly and ground to a medium grind. Burundi coffee complements the cold brew process really well)

a strainer and cheesecloth (don’t have cheesecloth? try laying a few layers of kitchen/paper towel in your strainer)

a large (12 cup) storage container

Step 1: Grind 1/2 lb. of coffee.

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Step 2: Place a 1/2 lb of ground coffee in a large mixing bowl or jar (preferably one with a lid). Add 9 cups of water.

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Step 3: Let your Littles stir the coffee and water until combined.

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Step 4. Cover and let the coffee sit at room temperature for 12-16 hours. No need to stir during this time.

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Step 5. After the 12-16 hours are up, strain the coffee while doing a happy dance.

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Step 6. Chill your brew.

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Step 7. Consume. If you are looking for ways to spice up your cold press coffee, keep an eye peeled for our next post. I have just made a batch of THE BEST flavored syrup and it was easy-peezy to do. If flavored syrup doesn’t float your boat, try adding milk, cream, a dash of honey or some sweetened condensed milk.

For photogs: Images are both film and digital. Film: Canon EOS3, Portra 400 Digital: files edited with VSCO.

 

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10 thoughts

  1. Dawn
    September 22, 2012 at 3:21 pm

    Yes! I love my cold brew coffee! (iced coffee with it is incredibly so much better than when coffee is made hot, then poured over ice … in my humble opinion ;)) Thx for sharing! :)

  2. Jason Grube
    September 24, 2012 at 6:13 pm

    Oh man, another way to geek out over coffee! I love these posts.

  3. Sakin
    September 27, 2012 at 8:41 am

    I love this post. I will try this in a few days;).

  4. Trish
    September 27, 2012 at 10:33 pm

    We made this last weekend SO good & SO easy! Thanks for adding delicious cold brew caffeine to our lives :)

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    March 16, 2013 at 6:08 am

    I had been wondering if your web host is OK? Not that I am complaining, but slow loading instances times will very frequently affect your placement in google and could damage your high quality score if ads and marketing with Adwords.

  6. Joe
    June 27, 2013 at 10:16 pm

    By cup, you mean, an 8 oz cup?
    That’s probably a stupid question, but in the coffee world, it also means 5oz, 6oz, and 8oz haha

  7. Nick
    May 15, 2014 at 12:17 pm

    Your ratio of coffee to water seems a lot higher than what some other sites suggest, in my searches I’ve usually seen 1/2lb med-course ground coffee for every 34oz (1 liter) of water. How did you determine 1/2lb per 72oz?

    • Bob
      June 22, 2016 at 5:09 pm

      I agree. I use 9 cups of water for 16 ounces of coffee. It tastes great! Using 9 cups of water to 8 ounces of coffee doesn’t result in a cold brew concentrate. Just weak coffee.

  8. Jon Stromme
    May 25, 2014 at 5:14 pm

    We still keep coming back to this recipe, its that good and easy! Thanks for sharing!

  9. Dan Rollins
    June 15, 2015 at 3:02 am

    BRAVO! I have tried a couple different “recipes” and by FAR your instructions yield the best results! It is clearly the water to coffee ration you suggest. I LOVE straight Cold Brew, I don’t add anything to it, so this is perfect! The others that suggest less water may be good as a concentrate but you guys nailed it! Thank you. AND I was so encouraged reading your story and your blog learning that you guys not only love Coffee but you love Jesus! So awesome, and I saw the giveaway a while back of Dogwood Coffee, I live in Minneapolis and stop by there whenever I can, amazing coffee shop. Anyway, I am glad Google connected me to your site, God Bless! – Dan (And I am a full time filmmaker so if you guys ever consider doing a documentary about what you are doing… let me know, you have an amazing story.)

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