Cold Brew Coffee (Recipe & Tips!) (2024)

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Cold Brew Coffee (Recipe & Tips!) (1)

I know, fall is coming and everyone’s excited about pumpkin spice lattes. But, it’s still blazing hot outside and I’ve been working on my cold brew coffee game all summer. I’ve become a self-proclaimed cold brew aficionado, so hear me out!

Homemade cold brew coffee is:

  • Smooth, slightly sweet and super refreshing
  • Easy to make
  • More affordable than buying at a coffee shop
  • Ready-made for busy mornings
  • Easily heated up if you’re in the mood for hot coffee

Cold Brew Coffee (Recipe & Tips!) (2)

You can make cold brew on the weekend, then pour your coffee from the fridge every morning. No boiling water. No fussing with a coffee maker.

As someone who is 100% not a morning person, cold brew coffee is a total game changer.

Let’s make some cold brew!

Cold Brew Coffee (Recipe & Tips!) (3)

Fun Facts about Cold Brew Coffee

Cold brew can be strong.

This depends on a lot of factors, including the beans used, steeping time, and dilution. The dilution is the factor that is the easiest to control. Don’t drink cold brew concentrate straight—it’s highly caffeinated!

Cold brew is less acidic.

If regular drip coffee or espresso upsets your stomach, cold brew might not. The only way to know is to try it, and you’ll have more control over the end result if you make it yourself.

You can heat up cold brew and drink it hot.

Indeed, it’s true, and it’s very good. The flavor stays about the same.

Cold brew takes longer to make than drip coffee.

Since the water is cold, it needs to steep for about 12 to 18 hours to soak up the coffee’s color, flavor and caffeine. The cold extraction process brings out fewer of coffee’s bitter compounds, which produces a sweeter and smoother result.

Coarsely-ground coffee makes the best cold brew.

No coffee grinder at home? No problem. Just grind your coffee at the grocery store using their big coffee grinder machine, with the dial set on the coarse/French press option. I’ve provided approximate amounts of ground coffee to use if you don’t have a scale for a more accurate weight measurement (don’t worry about it).

Use any coffee variety you enjoy to make cold brew.

Any variety will work, and you’ll find that it tases less bitter when its steeped in cold water instead of hot. It would be fun to compare a glass of cold brew coffee with hot coffee of the same variety.

Cold Brew Coffee (Recipe & Tips!) (4)

Basic Cold Brew Coffee Ratio

Here’s the deal: This ratio is flexible. A kitchen scale will come in handy if you have one, but it’s not necessary. You’re making cold brew concentrate, and you can dilute the concentrate to taste once it’s finished.

  • Per 1 cup of water, you’ll need 1 ounce (by weight) coarsely ground coffee. That’s about 1/4 cup whole coffee beans, which yields roughly 1/2 cup ground coffee. If you’re accustomed to the metric system, 1 ounce is equal to 28 grams.
  • You’re going to end up with a little less concentrate than the amount of water you used, since some of it will be absorbed by the coffee grounds. However, you’re going to dilute it with an equal amount of water, so you will be doubling your final yield. Clear as mud? I mean, coffee? Good.

Examples

  • Let’s make cold brew coffee in a common 1-quart wide-mouth mason jar (affiliate link). In the jar, you’ll combine 3 ounces coarsely-ground coffee (that’s about 3/4 cup whole coffee beans turned into 1 1/2 cups coarsely-ground coffee) with 3 cups of water.
  • After steeping and straining the mixture, you’ll have about 2 1/2 cups of cold brew concentrate, which is enough for 5 cups of cold brew. You’ve just made enough coffee to last you from Monday through Friday!
  • If you have a 2-quart jar, simply double the amounts offered above.
  • If you have an extra-large French press like I do, you can use 5 ounces of coffee (about 1 1/4 cups whole coffee beans turned into about 2 1/2 cups coarsely-ground coffee) and 5 cups water. You’ll end up with about 4 1/4 cups concentrate, or enough for 8 1/2 cups of cold brew.

Cold Brew Coffee (Recipe & Tips!) (5)

Recommended Steeping Time

The steeping time is flexible as well. I’ve read suggestions for “overnight or 12 hours,” and “at least 18 or up to 24 hours,” so do what works with your schedule. Starbucks steeps their cold brew for 20 hours.

If you accidentally steep yours longer (even 24+ hours), it’s ok. Your concentrate may taste a little more bitter than it would have, but it’s probably fine. It may also be extra-strong, so you might want to dilute with some extra water.

How to Strain Your Cold Brew

Once you’re done steeping the coffee, you’ll need to strain the coffee grounds out of the water. A fine-mesh sieve or French press filter isn’t sufficient (you’ll end up with murky, sludgy concentrate). Most methods will suggest using cheese cloth, but I hate cheese cloth! It’s difficult to work with and seems so wasteful.

I played around with other options and found two that work great. See my photos for examples of each. Choose one:

  1. Thin paper coffee filters: Use the“basket” paper filters that splay out in a round seashell shape like you see here. Make sure your filter is made ofvery thin paper, not a thicker material that will take forever to filter through. These are the filters I used.
  2. A vintage handkerchief: Yes, really—any small, thin, clean, lint-free, cotton cloth like a co*cktail napkin will do. It should be large enough to cover your sieve when draped across it. I found my handkerchief at the bottom of my photo props, and I love that it’s easy to wash and reusable (although you could end up with a light coffee stain, so don’t use your favorite white one).

To strain, simply place the coffee filter into a small fine-mesh sieve, or drape your cloth over the sieve. Place it over a pitcher or liquid measuring cup, and pour the concentrate through it. That’s it!

Cold Brew Coffee (Recipe & Tips!) (6)

Have I convinced you to try making cold brew coffee at home? It’s so much cheaper than buying it from the coffee shop! Please let me know how it turns out for you in the comments.

Want to change it up? Try making cold brew iced tea. Like cold brew coffee, it’s more smooth and less bitter.

Looking for more recipes to ease your morning routine? Here are 23 make-ahead breakfasts.

Cold Brew Coffee (Recipe & Tips!) (7)

Watch How to Make Cold Brew Coffee

Cold Brew Coffee (Recipe & Tips!) (8)

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Cold Brew Coffee

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  • Author: Cookie and Kate
  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Total Time: 20 minutes (plus 12 hour resting time)
  • Yield: 5 cups coffee 1x
  • Category: Drink
  • Method: Cold brew
  • Cuisine: American

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4.9 from 129 reviews

Let’s make cold brew coffee! It’s easy to make, and it’s so nice to have coffee ready to go. This recipe is written for a 1-quart wide-mouth mason jar; you can scale it up or down using 1 ounce* (28 grams) coffee per 1 cup water. The quantities provided will produce about 2 ½ cups concentrate, which is enough for 5 cups of cold brew.

Scale

Ingredients

  • 3 ounces (85 grams) coarsely-ground coffee (that’s about ¾ cup whole coffee beans turned into about 1 ½ cups* coarsely-ground coffee)
  • 3 cups water (filtered water if you have it)

Instructions

  1. In a1-quart wide-mouth mason jar, combine the coffee and water. Stir to combine. I like to let my mixture rest for about 5 minutes and stir it again; the coffee grounds seem to gain more water exposure this way.
  2. Put a lid on your container and refrigerate it for 12 to 18 hours.
  3. When you’re ready to strain your cold brew, place a thin paper coffee filter or a small, thin cotton napkin, cloth or handkerchief over a small fine-mesh sieve. Pour the concentrate through the prepared sieve into a liquid measuring cup or pitcher. Let it rest for a few minutes to let the last of the cold brew trickle down.
  4. To serve, fill a glass with ice and fill it halfway with water. Then fill the rest of the glass with cold brew concentrate, and stir to combine. Cold brew concentrate will keep well in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks, although I find that it has the best flavor within the first week.

Notes

*Measurement note: These are ounces by weight, not by volume. This is always the case with non-liquid measurements. “1 ½ cups coarsely-ground coffee” is the least exact measurement I can offer (the volume of the ground coffee depends on the exact coarseness of your grind)—but it will work. Just adjust the concentrate-to-water ratio to suit your liking as your pour your glass of cold brew and you’re all good.

▸ Nutrition Information

The information shown is an estimate provided by an online nutrition calculator. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice. See our full nutrition disclosure here.

Did you make this recipe?

Please let me know how it turned out for you! Leave a comment below and share a picture on Instagram with the hashtag #cookieandkate.

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Cold Brew Coffee (Recipe & Tips!) (2024)

FAQs

What is the ratio of coffee to water for cold brew? ›

Tips & notes. Scale it up or down using a 1:12 ratio. This cold brew coffee recipe scales up and down easily, as long as you stick with the ratio of 1:12 (coffee to water). No matter how much you're brewing, the wait time is still the same: around 8-11 hours inside the fridge.

How many cups of coffee for a gallon of cold brew? ›

The basic formula for cold brew is one pound of ground coffee beans to one gallon of water. Unless you're running a small café out of your kitchen (or just plan on being really productive), you likely won't need to make that much. A more home brewing-friendly ratio is a quarter-pound of beans to four cups of water.

What not to do when making cold brew coffee? ›

You're grinding the beans too fine.

Another common mistake you want to avoid when making cold brew is grinding your beans too fine. In making cold brew with coffee grounds that are too fine, you'll likely end up with over-extracted cold brew that is too bitter to enjoy.

What is the golden ratio for cold brew? ›

Remember: most people agree that a 1:15 to 1:18 ratio is ideal for balanced strength for regular coffee. However, some people like to drink their cold brew coffee a little stronger—around a 1:10 to 1:14 ratio—because once you add ice (and some of it melts), you end up at a balanced strength.

How many tablespoons of coffee grounds for cold brew? ›

Use 4 Tbsp (22 g) of grounds for every cup (6 fl oz) of water. Fill the press with cold or room-temperature water. Gently stir the grounds a few times with a spoon.

Can you use regular ground coffee for cold brew? ›

A coarse grind size is ideal for cold brew — similar what you'd use for a French press. The coarseness will allow water to evenly saturate the grounds for a nice even extraction. If the grounds are too fine, they tend to float together in a dense mass and won't be evenly saturated with water.

How long does homemade cold brew last? ›

To ensure your cold brew lasts longer with clarity and freshness intact, store it in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 10-14 days. If you notice cloudiness after this period or any sour smells or tastes, discard it immediately as these could be signs of spoilage.

How long should you steep cold brew coffee? ›

The best part about making cold brew at home is you can dial it in to your personal taste. Somewhere in the 16 to 20 hour range is the sweet spot for most coffees. We're willing to bet you'll find your favorite steep time right in there somewhere. Start with a 16-hour batch, taste, and go from there.

Why does my homemade cold brew taste bad? ›

The Concentrate Tastes Bitter or Sour

If you find your cold brew to be a little sour, it probably is under extracted and just needs to brew more. Add an hour or two or use a finer grind setting next time if you're using the immersion method.

Should I put cold brew in the fridge? ›

The concentrate should be stored in the fridge once the brewing is complete. From then you have 8-14 days before the flavors begin to decay rapidly. In the food world, food products should never be stored for longer than 2 weeks, otherwise you risk dangerous bacteria growth.

What is the best water to coffee ratio? ›

Coffee's golden ratio is 1:18 (1 gram of coffee to every 18 grams of water). If you want a stronger cup, use a ratio of 1:15 or if you want a lighter cup, use 1:18. But somewhere between 15 to 18 grams of water to every gram of coffee is most common.

How many tablespoons of coffee per cup? ›

The standard ratio for brewing coffee is 1-2 tablespoons of ground coffee per 6 ounces of water – 1 tablespoon for lighter coffee and 2 for stronger coffee. That 6-ounce measure is equivalent to one “cup” in a standard coffeemaker, but keep in mind that the standard mug size is closer to 12 ounces or larger.

How much water do you put in Starbucks cold brew? ›

For each serving, pour 8 oz of Starbucks® Multi-Serve Cold Brew Concentrate into a glass over ice, combine with 4 oz of sparkling water and stir. If using Starbucks® Single-Serve Cold Brew Concentrate, pour 1 pod into a glass over ice, combine with 8 oz of water and stir.

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