Iced coffee with milk being poured into glass on wooden board

What Is Cold Brew Coffee and How Do You Make It?

 

Keyword: what is cold brew coffee?  Where it started, why it’s popular now, and complete how-to recipes.

What is cold brew coffee?

Cold brew coffee is coffee made by steeping coarsely ground coffee in cool or room-temperature water for an extended time (typically 12–24 hours), then straining out the grounds. The result is a smooth, low-acid cup that often tastes slightly sweeter and less bitter than hot-brewed alternatives. Answering the keyword directly: what is cold brew coffee? — it’s coffee extracted slowly with cold water instead of fast with hot water.

Where it all started

Cold-extraction approaches are old — slow-drip techniques and regional cold methods existed before the specialty-coffee boom. The modern home/café version (immersion cold brew like mason-jar or Toddy-style) grew popular because it’s simple, consistent, and scalable for cafés and home brewers.

How to make cold brew — quick recipes & ratios

Two easy home-friendly approaches: ready-to-drink and concentrate. Use weight for the most consistent results.

Simple jar method (ready-to-drink)

  • Ratio: 1:8 coffee : water by weight (example: 125 g coffee : 1000 g water)
  • Grind: Coarse (like coarse sea salt)
  1. Add grounds to a jar or pitcher.
  2. Pour cold filtered water over grounds, stir to saturate.
  3. Cover and steep in the fridge or room temp for 12–18 hours.
  4. Strain through a fine mesh, cheesecloth, or paper filter into a clean container.
  5. Serve over ice or refrigerate.

Concentrate method (most flexible)

  • Ratio: 1:4 coffee : water by weight for concentrate (example: 250 g coffee : 1000 g water)
  • Grind: Coarse
  1. Combine grounds + water in a jar, French press, or Toddy-style brewer. Stir gently.
  2. Steep 12–18 hours (up to 24 for more extraction).
  3. Strain/filter to remove solids.
  4. Before serving, dilute concentrate (common: 1:1 concentrate:water or milk) to taste.
  5. Store in fridge; use as needed.

Cold-drip / Kyoto-style (optional slow method)

Slow water drip through a bed of grounds (6–12+ hours). Produces a clean, delicate profile. Requires a tower or dedicated kit — great for ritual and nuance.

Equipment & coffee choices

  • Equipment: mason jar, pitcher, French press, Toddy kit, or dedicated cold-brew maker. Fine-mesh sieve + paper filter/bottle filter for clarity.
  • Coffee: freshly roasted whole beans, coarsely ground. Medium roasts are versatile; light roasts give brightness, dark roasts give chocolate/malt notes.
  • Water: filtered water for clean extraction.

Tips, troubleshooting & storage

  • Too fine a grind → over-extraction & sediment. Use coarse grind.
  • 12–18 hours is the usual sweet spot. Much longer (36+ hrs) risks odd flavors.
  • For clearer coffee, double-filter with a paper filter.
  • Storage: sealed container in fridge. Best within 7–14 days; flavor degrades after that.

Serving ideas

  • Classic: dilute (if concentrate) and pour over ice.
  • Milk-forward: cold brew + milk (oat, almond, whole) over ice.
  • Sweetened with simple syrup (dissolves in cold drinks) or flavored syrups.
  • Cocktails: use concentrate as the coffee base for espresso-style cocktails.
  • Hot option: dilute and gently warm to preserve character (don’t boil).

Quick FAQ

How long to steep?
12–18 hours is typical for immersion methods.
Can I use hot water to speed it up?
Using hot water changes the extraction — that’s iced coffee. True cold brew uses cold/room-temp water and time.
How strong should it be?
Single-serve: ~1:8 coffee:water. Concentrate: ~1:4, then dilute to taste.
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