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
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!
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.
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.
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:
- 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 of very thin paper, not a thicker material that will take forever to filter through. These are the filters I used.
- A vintage handkerchief: Yes, really—any small, thin, clean, lint-free, cotton cloth like a cocktail 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!
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.
Watch How to Make Cold Brew Coffee
Cold Brew Coffee
- Author:
- 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
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.
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
- In a 1-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.
- Put a lid on your container and refrigerate it for 12 to 18 hours.
- 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.
- 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.
Diana
This was a revelation for me. Perfect taste following the recipe- thank you! Enjoyed it so much more than the hot coffee I brew at home. I’m going to be keeping this in the fridge permanently.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m happy to hear that, Diana!
christopher heath
Hi Kate, and a big hug for Cookie. As a one cup coffee drinker first thing in the morning, coffee was used purely for it restorative properties. Decided over christmas to make cold brew as a change, and wow what a change. Without doubt the nicest coffee i have ever tasted, and one cup is now not enough. From a small coffee cup i am now onto a mason jar with a handle, and could easily drink more. Its delicious and im hooked. Merry christmas and happy new year Kate.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad you like this recipe, Christopher!
Kristin
Kate,
Thank you for these instructions. When I grind 1/4 c whole coffee beans, it yields about half that amount of ground coffee— that is, about 1/8 c coarsely ground coffee. Is this what you meant? Do I add 1 c water to that or do I need to grind another 1/4 c whole beans to make a full 1/4 c coarsely ground coffee first and then add 1 c water to that? Thank you!
Happy New Year!
Kristin
Matthew
Are you sure grinding the whole beans gives double the volume? It doesn’t really make sense that there would be more volume after grinding. I’m excited to try this recipe, but I’m quite confused on the amount of beans to use. (I also can’t find my kitchen scale, so that’s my fault.)
Kristin
Matthew, this was my question, too. I found that 1/4 c whole beans to 1 c water worked fine for me. I just ignore the “1/4 c whole beans coarsely ground yields 1/2 c ground coffee” part.
Thanks again, so much, for these instructions, Kate!
Bon appetit!
Kristin
Kenzie
3 ounces ground coffee is equivalent to (1/4) cup + (1/8) cup. Just a heads up.
Nicole
I have the same concern. Got confused by the numbers.
Thanks for the heads up, Kenzie!
Darren
I have an 8c french press i use, and thought i would use it to try my first cold brew, but measuring out 8 oz of ground coffee per your ratio, fills the FP half way with coffee? i think the recipe said to cut in half with water when ready to drink, but even 4 oz of ground coffee is a lot. thanks
Mari
Oh my goodness, it is summer where I am and finding a cooler solution for the much needed caffeine kick is so perfect! Thank you so much!! Also following your recipe was really easy to do and we love the end result. Delicious cold brew coffee in the comfort of our home
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for your review, Mari!
Saira
Hi, if I’m using fine ground which is used for espresso how much should I use per cup of water?
Kate
Hi Saira, sorry for the delay! I really would not recommend using finely-ground coffee since you’ll have a hard time filtering it out later. Coarsely-ground coffee is best.
Eric Hyde
Great article, lot’s of good tips. I love the 1oz coffee for 1cup water suggestion for a 2x coffee concentrate. I noticed that you say the whole beans turn into a larger volume of ground and I think you have it backwards:
“1/4 cup whole coffee beans, which yields roughly 1/2 cup ground coffee” this should be 1/2 C whole beans yeilds 1/4 cup ground, right?
Cheers!
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Eric! I have gotten this question a lot. Trust me, this is the right breakdown. :) I know it seems confusing!
Tim
Eric, don’t trust her…do your research like your school teacher taught you and get at least 3 sources for every piece of information…
https://food52.com/blog/7317-how-to-make-cold-brewed-coffee
“grind 3/4 cup beans for 4 cups of cold water”
and
https://www.mydomaine.com/cold-brew-coffee-ratio
“This recipe relies on the cold brew coffee ratio of 3/4 cup ground coffee to four cups cold water.”
So which is it? Ground or unground 1/4 cup coffee to 1 cup of water? Who knows!
Also some science for you all…
https://mathworld.wolfram.com/CirclePacking.html
Kate
Hey Tim, I can assure you that my math is right. Weighing the coffee is the best way to measure for this recipe.
The amount yielded (in cups) after the beans are ground depends on just how coarse the grind is. In my coffee grinder at the coarsest setting, it doubles in volume (1/4 cup whole coffee beans yields roughly 1/2 cup ground coffee). Remember that the weight remains the same either way, so this is only relevant if you’re working with pre-ground coffee!
Anecdotally, if you’ve ever used a grocery store’s coffee grinder to grind an entire bag of coffee beans, you may have noticed that you had to tamp down the ground coffee to make it fit into the same bag. That’s because it increased in volume. The weight remained constant. Hope this helps clarify.
Laura
Tim- your comment is referencing the grounds to water ratio. That isn’t the discussion/dispute. The question is in regards to the change in volume from whole beans to ground beans.
Just thought I’d clarify.
DS Caprette
I don’t think you get 1.2 cup of ground coffee from grinding 1.4 cup of whole beans do you? Isn’t at lest one of those an error?
Maybe you should edit the page?
Kate
Hi DS, It is correct. :)
Barr
Thanks for the great cold brew ideas. And a messy kitchen is the sign of a happy home
Sarah Pudgeon
Hi
Tonight I made the cold brew coffee and green tea and I cannot wait to try both tomorrow. Thank you for these great recipes!
★★★★★
Baxter
How much caffeine would you say is in here?
Thanks!
★★★★★
Kate
Hey Baxter! It’s really tough to say since caffeine varies by bean. According to some quick Internet research, Starbucks Cold Brew Coffee contains 12.81 mgs of caffeine per fluid ounce. I’m not sure how my recipe compares, but that might be a decent point of reference.
abby
Can I also use cone coffee filters?
Kate
Sure you can, as long as it’s not a thick liner (otherwise the water will take forever to drip through).
Jackson
Love this Recipe. Used a very strong dark roast, and steeped for 36 hours. I got the perfect amount of bitter as well as the more subtle flavors that I don’t always notice when I drink it hot.
★★★★★
Victoria
I used finely ground coffee because I didn’t have coarse coffee grounds. I did use a French press. I did three ounces of coffee to 3 cups of water. It steeped for 18 hours. It rendered 500 ml. I added 500 ml of water and diluted it. It came out great!!! Thank you for the recipe.
★★★★★
Susan Rodriguez
Here at home (Zapopan, Jalisco) we do kombucha y keifer, and use the clean, old transparent curtains cut into squares for the filters over a strainer. The work well, clean up easily with some stain, but do not absorb the color heavily and dry fast.
★★★★★
Marie
I made this last night, together with the chia seed pudding and it made my morning (taste) GREAT! Thank you so much for creating these incredible recipes with such love. I’m going to try more recipes now that I have so much spare time! From Marie (locked-down Lisbon, Portugal).
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Marie! Thanks for your comment and review :)
Frater
i came across this recipe also looking to add coffee to my morning mush!!
★★★★★
Logan Smith
Hey Kate, I am loving the recipe and the ratio you have chosen! I just had a question about how much caffeine you estimate would be in a serving of cold brew (1 cup water and 28g coffee) with the rest being diluted by equal parts water. I like the peace of mind knowing how much caffeine I’m getting so I don’t go overboard.
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Logan! Sorry I can’t give you exact amount as it really depends on your type of roast you are using and variety of beans. They can all vary slightly.
Donna
We are staying home in NJ. With a lot of time on our hands and no trips to Starbucks, I attempted cold brew for the first time. Fortunately, my local grocery still had coffee beans and a grinder available to me! I followed the recipe exactly. The coffee measure is not 6 ounces in a measuring cup. Just as the directions say, it’s a 6 oz weight using a kitchen scale, which indeed comes to just about 1.5 cups of measured coffee. I weight out my grounds to 6 oz. and that’s about how much there was (give or take a little). The resulting cold brew received approval from my daughters. I actually got the question “Is there more coffee to make it again?” Doesn’t get better than that. Thanks for the recipe!
★★★★★
Kate
I love to hear that, Donna! Thank you so much for your comment and review.
Jacci George
SOOOO good! I had to use regular ground coffee as I didn’t have an coarse on hand. It worked fine except that I may not have ended up with as much liquid since I was impatient and not willing to wait for all of it to strain. This is a game changer for me!
Kate
I’m glad it’s a game changer for you too, Jacci! I appreciate your comment. I would appreciate a star review, if you wouldn’t mind, since you loved it so much. :)
Jacci L George
FIVE STAR!
★★★★★
Falynn
This is awesome!! I am fortunate to have an awesome local roaster shipping coffee to my door and I was getting tired of my hot cup so I decided to take the cold plunge.
Your ratio is perfect. I added this to my morning protein smoothie and was surprised at the clarity and energy I had when these things are combined.
Normally I am running for the smoothie after my coffee drains me but the cold brew, fruit, nut butter, and protein powder work so well together…
THANK YOU!
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks, Falynn! I’m so glad to hear it. Love your morning smoothie idea.
Cynthia
I have found leaving it in the fridge for 24 hours vastly improves flavor. 1 1/2 cups ground coffee, fill mason jar with H2O and shake
daily. I keep 2 jars going.
Wendy
You mentioned that this can also be made into hot coffee. Would you use the same amount of water and concentrate as you would use if you were drinking it cold?
Kate
Yes, same amounts just warmed up!
Nicholas Rivero
I love this article and the way it is written! I work at Starbucks and this helped me with ratios since we just use a pre-measured bag for our large batch. I also appreciate the metric units. Definitely trying this today!
★★★★★
Gregg
Would it work to dilute the concentrate 1:1 before storing it? That way you can just pour and go.
Kate
Sure! It’ll just take up more space in the fridge.
Monica
Just wanted to say thank you so much for this recipe, it’s perfect! I had almost given up on making cold brew at home!!
★★★★★
Amirhoseyn
Hi thanks for the amazing recipe
I have a question
Can i add some fruit like strawberry into the jar for flavor?❤️❤️
★★★★★
Kate
Hi! I’m not sure about adding fruit to this one. I don’t think it would get you the result you are after.
Nimet Saleh
Hey there! Can’t wait to try this!!
Just a few questions:
Does the mixture need to be diluted?
Also, should I add ice then use measuring cups to measure a 1:1 ratio?
Lastly, I can add creamer to this after diluting the mixture?
Thank you!
Kate
Hi Nimet! Hope you love the cold brew. Yes, the mixture needs to be diluted or it will be VERY strong. Here’s how I make it: 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. You can add a splash of creamer before stirring, too.
Andrea
What can you use instead of a mason jar? I would love to try this but do not have any mason jars. I have large Pyrex bowls, would that work?
Kate
Sure, anything will work as long as long as it can accommodate 4 to 5 cups!
Grace Ogungbile
I loved this although i made it with espresso beans. Sooo yummy. Just have to be careful not to drink to much.
★★★★★
Katie
I just made a batch, I can’t wait for it to be ready! Have yet to find one of your recipes that I don’t love! Thank you!
★★★★★
Leo
Would it be ok if you combined the 3 cups coffee concentrate with 2 cups cold water and then store that in fridge? Then it would be ready to pour and drink.
Kate
For sure!
Leo
I actually figured out I liked drinking the concentrate better. It’s stronger coffee for me! :)
Jhett
Hey!
I’m not sure if you’ve answered this question or not(and sorry if you have!) but when I’m ready to strain the coffee, do you think it would work using my pour over coffee maker? It has a metal filter.
Thanks!
★★★★★
Kate
Hey Jhett! I think that would work well! Only one way to find out. :)
Megan
Made this overnight and the ratio of coffee to water is PERFECT. I let it sit on the counter for 11 hours but tonight I’ll try it in the fridge for 12-18 hours. Thanks!
★★★★★
Julie
Hi Kate,
I love the Cold Brew Concentrate from Trader Joe’s, but I don’t love the price. I am excited to try your recipe. Could I use a blender or Vitamix to grind coffee beans? Do you have a favorite brand of coffee that you like best for cold brew?
Thank you,
Julie
Kate
Hi Julie! You’re right, cold brew can be so pricey! I have never tried grinding coffee beans in my Vitamix, but here are some instructions on how to do so. Remember that this coffee should be coarsely ground—I’m not sure what textured they achieved with their timing suggestions. I usually gravitate toward a darker roast (like Trader Joe’s French roast), just because that’s my general coffee preference—turns out great in cold brew, too.
Hye Mi
I love this coffee! I just use a basic coarse ground coffee from the grocery store and the flavor is lovely – rich and smooth, and slightly sweet, caramel-y almost. I tried to increase the amount of concentrate yield by adding more water, but I really wouldn’t go too much more than 1:1 coffee/water, unless you prefer your coffee to be more bitter. With more water, I let it steep longer to get the concentrate strong enough, and the added time I think made the concentrate more bitter and very caffeinated. Still great!
I also serve mine 1 part concentrate 1 part milk over ice and it makes it so smooth and creamy. I think other milk alternatives would be great too.
★★★★★
N.
I made this with pre-ground decaf coffee, which seems like it would be a bad idea, but it actually turned out quite lovely! I’m super happy with the result. Delicious with oat milk. Thanks so much!
★★★★★
A spirit of simplicity
I love making coffee like this. I add a bit of vanilla and sometimes some brown sugar.
James
Just wanted to say that I was looking for a cold brew recipe to try out. Made this about two weeks ago.. and have made 3 more batches since! The most recent batch was a double too, so there’s currently 1.5L of cold brew sitting in my fridge!
Absolutely love the recipe and am determined to never let my fridge be without a stock of cold brew in future!
Lucy
For everyone complaining about measurements…why don’t you just use a scale and measure the weight? Kate gives you the information you need! I put my pitcher on the scale, tare the scale (so it doesn’t weigh the pitcher), and add 28 grams per cup of water! Easy. This recipe turned out well after 12 hours, I will experiment with longer brewing next time!
★★★★★
Annie Pershall
Hi Kate!
Would cheesecloth work as a filter for this or is it not fine enough for this purpose?
I’m looking forward to trying this recipe!
Thanks for all your great food!
Annie
Kate
Hi Annie! I personally find cheesecloth to be wasteful. Head to the How to Strain Your Cold Brew part of the post where I lay out the options I find work best.
Megan
Thank you!!! You saved my coffee!!
I recently splurged on a new, much more expensive than I usually get, bag of fair-trade coffee beans and my first couple attempts at brewing it were very disappointing. I just couldn’t figure out what was going wrong because it smelled amazing and tasted abysmal.
Then, I came across your blog and decided to give cold brew a shot. After all, I love it from the coffee shop – it couldn’t be too bad, right?
Now I think these beans must have been created for the sole purpose of becoming cold brew coffee, because I just tasted the result and I can’t believe they are the same beans! This cold brew is rich, smooth and delicious, both cold and warmed up. It tastes exactly like it smells – java heaven! I’m so glad I’m not going to waste any more time or money trying to turn these beans into coffee the “old” way. Thanks again!
★★★★★
Kate
I’m so glad this was just what you needed, Megan! Thank you for your review.
Cindy
Love this!!! I have shared this recipe with a few friends and now they are hooked on cold brew coffee! Thank you so much for this recipe
★★★★★
Terry Berkley
Fabulous. I am a fan of strong black coffee, hot or cold. With this method, I can brew a few days worth and save much time in the morning. I followed your recipe precisely starting with 3/4 cup of whole beans which I then ground in a manual ceramic burr grinder set to coarse. Steeped in fridge for about 20 hours. I used my big french press to remove the bulk of the grounds and then used my single serve aeropress to filter the fine particles. The aeropress is key, look it up. It has a little hand piston that forces the liquid through a tiny paper filter disk. The result was diluted 1-1 with water and presto – great coffee. Thank you!
★★★★★
Cyndi
We started making cold brew 2 weeks ago. It is a game changer. We typically drink decaf but we’ll add some caffeinated to it. Less acidity is beneficial to both my husband and I for a couple of minor health issues. Some organic half and half or Bailey’s makes a delightful cup of coffee
★★★★★
Jill
It was a very easy recipe to follow. Just double filtered it but haven’t tasted it yet. it looks beautiful:) I’m sure I will love it
★★★★★
Kate
Be sure to let me know what you thought once you tasted it, Jill! Enjoy.
Tyler Krueger
Great recipe! In Texas is it SOOO hot, so for my daily caffeine fix I was resorting to hot brew coffee and then had to let it sit. Decided to try cold brew at home, and this recipe is great! I drink the first 6 cups in the first day! Haha!!! Thanks for sharing!
Steevo
Sounds good! I’m actually going to try making cold brew for the first time.
So is that supposed to be 1/2 cup of beans that grinds to 1/4 cup grounds or 1/4 cup beans ground to 1/8 cup?
Kate
Hi Steevo! About ¾ cup whole coffee beans turned into about 1 ½ cups* coarsely-ground coffee. If you have a kitchen scale, I recommend using that.
Dana Underwood
Can’t wait to try this! I am such a fan of yours as everything I make from your site ends up SO DELICIOUS!! If i am using coffee that I bought pre-ground (peets) Should I just go by weight? Thank you!
Kate
Hi Dana! I hope you love it. I would use the weighted measurements, but make sure it’s coarsely ground.
Moe
Will it work if I tie my coffee grounds in cheese cloth and soak them almost like a teabag?
Kate
Hi Moe! I highly suggest the method I suggested here. :)
Jeff
Hi Kate,
This recipe is the same I have been using for the past two years and I love it. I use a “Nut Bag” (such a funny term)… The kind used to strain nut milks. Works great and it’s easy to clean, though I’d recommend dedicating one for coffee, if you also make your own nut or oat milk.
Cheers!
Jeff
★★★★★
dmedlev schrempth
You left out the fact that if a person has a drip coffee maker that uses #4 or #6 filters, the top likely opens up and can be used as a sieve with the paper filter in place and the carafe down below.
D. Morton
1 measure of whole beans will make less than 1 measure of coarsely chopped coffee, because the smaller the piece the less air between pieces.
The measures in the recipe for whole and ground coffee are inaccurate.
Lowell
I’m going to try this!
What do you put in it for cream / sweetener to make it like the picture?
Kate
Hey Lowell! Hope you love your cold brew. I just add a splash of half and half for the photos. The pretty swirled effect didn’t last long. :)
Duff
We are loving cold brewer coffee thanks to you, your website and tips! We drink it hot and iced. Mmmmm!
AND it is something that I make with my 24 year old son. An added bonus.
Cold brewed tea is next for us!
You rock!
★★★★★
Beth
Can you link the small
Strainer you used? This looks great! Thanks!!
Kate
Hey Beth! Good idea, thank you! The strainer came in a set of three of various sizes—here it is (that’s an affiliate link). Hope you love the coffee!
Beth
Thanks so much!!!!
★★★★★
Kathleen
Great recipe! I made it with decaf coffee and strained through cheesecloth. A note on cheesecloth: I use it to strain my homemade yogurt also.and just launder it with my towels to clean. It is definitely reusable. Thanks for the recipe.
★★★★★
Ruby
How much coffee concentrate Does this recipe make exactly?
★★★★
Kate
Hi Ruby! The quantities provided will produce about 2 ½ cups concentrate, which is enough for 5 cups of cold brew.
Jul Wilbur
Looking forward to making my cold brew coffee!
Inge
I used your method using Starbucks coffee bought at Costco and surprise!! It tasted almost the same as the CB at Starbucks. My wife could not tell any difference.
I drink two cups in the morning, one at home and one driving to work. I will not buy it at Starbucks any more since I can make it for a fraction of the price.
★★★★★
Kyle
What beans do you use??
Gwen
This cold brew recipe is so easy and so delicious! An absolute necessity during this summer heat wave! Thanks!!
★★★★★
Nik Nik
I need more alkalinity in my diet but can not give up coffee. Getting ready to try this! I’m going to use a re-usable coffee filter to strain the concentrate as I don’t have the fine mesh sieve. Thanks for sharing this
Christian
Stop asking Kate stupid questions. She layed the recipe out in great detail already. If you don’t understand it then it is probably not for you. Yes when you grind coffee it will be more volume. No don’t add fruit to it. Who are you. Goodness gracious
★★★★★
Jennifer
Today I made the best pumpkin spice cold brew! I made pumpkin spice using Kate’s recipe on this site, then followed her cold brew recipe here, adding about a teaspoon to the ground coffee before adding the water. Let it sit overnight, filtered as directed, and it’s DELICIOUS!
I had previously tried to stir pumpkin spice directly into the finished cold brew, and it ended up weirdly lumpy and floating on top (not appetizing). Adding it to the carafe and letting it steep overnight is the answer.
P.S. Kate – I have made every single recipe in your cookbook. Literally. Every. Single. One. It’s my favorite cookbook of all time. Any plans for another? :)
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Kate
That sounds delicious! Thank you for sharing, Jennifer. I’m happy you found a work around. I don’t have any plans for other cookbook, sorry!
Shwpon Rahman
Is test better in a sunny and hot day i tried it myself thanks for your recipe
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Lydia
My favorite cold brew tip is to use a nut milk bag! You need to use a wider mouth container or you won’t be able to pull the bag out once it’s filled with grounds (I love Cambro’s 2 or 4qt round containers). Add your water, line the container with your nut milk bag, drop in your grounds and stir. After steeping, lift the nut milk bag out and voila! No need to strain and you can make a larger batch :)
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Amy
Hi Kate,
What are your favorite brands, roasts, country of origin to make into cold brew?
Kate
Hi Amy! I like to buy local when I can and vary roast depending on what I’m feeling :)
Teen Mom
Followed your recipe exactly and brew for 14 -18 hours in a french press. I have been using this recipe for months and don’t know if I can go back to hot coffee. So smooth and delicious. I use Starbucks beans and some oatmilk. I add a touch of almond milk caramel creamer. Hubby has been using pumpkin spice creamer. Hubby bought us steel insulated cups from amazon that keeps the ice from melting. Working from home makes it very doable. Feels like a treat every morning! Thank you!
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Kate
I’m happy to hear that! Thank you for your review.
Melissa
Can i substitute the water with milk or use any amount of milk or not?
Kate
Hi Melissa, You can omit the milk if you just want straight cold brew coffee. I like the creaminess it provides.
Will
Would you recommend using a mason jar over a French press?
Thanks!
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Vanessa
Fantastic! Thanks, Me and my boyfriend really enjoyed the cold brew.
Kate
I’m so glad! Thanks, Vanessa!
Sudheer
Coffee taste better when it is Nitro Brewed, check the below article to know how to make nitro brew at home https://cookieandkate.com/cold-brew-coffee-recipe/
Cathy Smith
Hello,
I have a couple questions. After it steeps and is filtered do you add the water all at once or when your pouring a cup? Also how long can it remain in the fridge. Thanks for the recipe. Cathy
Kate
Hi Cathy! See step 4 for both of your questions. Enjoy!
Lindsay
I went searching for a recipe for cold brew in my French press, since I already had one and saw no reason it wouldn’t work for cold brew. This recipe is perfect. I ground my beans super coarse, and had no need to pour them through a filter or sieve, and I accidentally brewed it 3 days. It was SO GOOD. Everything I’d want in an iced coffee. Thank you for the perfect ratios, great recipe.
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Ng Shu Tian
I just made the cold brew simple with water and the ground coffee with the amount u given , end result taste just like Starbucks cold brew, after 20hour in the fridge, was surprised! Thanks for the recipe!
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Kate
You’re welcome! Happy you enjoyed it.
Ng Shu Tian
But I couldn’t sleep that day despite only drinking only 150ml, too concentrated already! Unexpectedly it affects but expected.
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Peter Ji
Good recipe. But the coffee I made had a lingering bitter and sour aftertaste. I can taste the bold flavor though. Is there something wrong with my grind or the bean I am using? I use a stone hand grinder with a coarse grind and Dark Matter coffee beans (a local coffee package bean). Any tips?
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Cindy Babylon
Can’t wait to make some
Dee
Happy to see someone used fine ground coffee, i have a lot in my cabinet i need to use and coffee brewed hot and then chilled overnight just doesn’t cut it! lol, So I will now try cold brew with my ample amount of fine grounds!
Ann
Followed the recipe exactly as instructed, and I got the most delicious cold brew ever. Weigh the coffee as directed. Her measurements are absolutely correct. Not sure where you all are going wrong with your measurements. Cold brew is my absolute favorite but can be an expensive indulgence at a coffee shop. Now I make it at home, and I’m soooo HAPPY!
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Kate
Thank you! I’m glad it worked great for you, Ann.
Christine Roach
I’m fairly new to coffee in general, but I discovered Stok cold brew, LOVE IT, but want to make my own. My first attempt following this recipe yielded really bitter results. Was that because of the roast? The brand? The soak time? It was so much effort that I literally ended up pouring down the drain. :(
Kate
Hi, the type of bean can play into it or if you steeped it too long. I have some notes lined out in the post!
Katie
Hi Kate! I tried to make this and had a LOT of trouble straining it. I have thin coffee filters, and I even strained it in a metal strainer first to get the bulk out, then used the coffee filter, and it just will not filter. It drips SO slowly! It’s almost not worth doing. How long does it usually take you to strain it? Thanks!
Kate
It may be the type of filters you are using. I would suggest trying another one and see what happens. Sorry you are having issues!
Liliana Saplontai
Hello Kate! Hope all is well, and thank you for this recipe! Is it okay to use a nut milk bag to strain the cold brew?
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Kate
Hi Lilianan, I don’t know if that will get you the same result as I haven’t tried it myself. But, I believe someone else has and it worked for them. Let me know how it works fo you!
Agnes
Hi Kate
Im a big fan of cold brew! Thank you for posting about this! Any particular coffee beans you can recommend? We had amazing cold brew in Kyoto and would love to try to copy this.
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Kate
Hi Agnes! See the post for my insight into the beans I recommend using.
Grace Ginther
Do you recommend a certain type of coffee bean?
Kate
See the post for my recommendations!
Nicky
Hi Kate!
Thanks so much for the recipe – it’s delicious! I’ve tried it a couple times now and
each time I’ve come out with just under 2 cups of concentrate. I’ve been weighing the coffee and using 3 cups of water – do you think it’s because my grounds are too big?
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Kate
Hi Nicky, you will come out with slightly less concentrate as the grounds retain some. If you are happy with the overall flavor, you can leave it. Or try playing with the grounds some. But, you still want it to be coarse.
Jacquelyn O
Awesome recipe! I weighed every ingredient out as suggested and it came out perfectly! My fiancé that doesn’t like iced coffee even liked it! After a failed attempt using a different method and recipe I’ll only be using this one for the future!
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Mary
Hi Kate. I know a lot of people have asked about the measurements. I have read some but not all of the comments so maybe you answer it eventually. But can you reread them in your recipe to confirm.
You say, “that’s about ¾ cup whole coffee beans turned into about 1 ½ cups* coarsely-ground coffee”
The whole beans should take up more space than ground, correct? So how would 3/4c of whole beans make 1 1/2 cups (twice as much) grounds? I think the numbers are switched, perhaps.
Kate
Hi Mary, I can’t respond to all comments, unfortunately. I do try my best to answer questions. I can assure you these measurements are correct. I have a note with more explanation.
Steve
I keep coming back here for the measurements. I have used whole bean and now just trying coarse ground, but using a scale, this is very excellent cold brew. I do not dilute either except with cream and it is fantastic. Thank you!
Cameron
I follow this recipe every time I make cold brew. It’s perfect, thank you!
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Kate
You’re welcome, Cameron! I appreciate your review.