1. The brewing process uses no energy (only room temperature water and a pot, no machines). 2. It involves only reusable utensils/filters/pots. 3. The brewing process produces no waste: the only byproduct, the coffee grounds, are used as compost. 4. The brew is bottled in reusable (so many uses!) and recyclable mason jars. 5. The brew can be kept in your fridge for several weeks, meaning every drop can be savored (no more pouring half a pot of coffee down the drain!)
The story...
So basically I'm a student at Lehman College, and in late Spring, 2008, I built and ran a small snack/beverage cart that I pushed around campus. One day when looking for a way to make and sell coffee on it that wouldn't require gigantic pricey coffee machine gizmos, I stumbled upon a recipe for cold brewing coffee.
I mixed up a batch that night, filtered it the next day, and at first sip I knew I was on to something. Now I am licensed and insured, I formed an LLC, and I am brewing in much larger batches, at a commercial kitchen in my home town of Mamaroneck.
After an article in the Journal News, demand really started picking up. You can find the brew at Chocolations, a great chocolate & ice cream shop located at 447 Mamaroneck Avenue, in Mamaroneck of course. It is also now available at Millers Toys, in Mamaroneck as well, 335 Mamaroneck Avenue.
Cold brewed? What's that?
Great question. Cold brewing coffee is a process involving water, coffee grounds, and time (instead of heat). Essentially, you steep the grounds in water, at room temperature, for about 24 hours. You then filter the grounds out through a multi-step filtration process, and voila, you have cold brewed coffee.
Sound simple? In theory, it is, but in practice, it is quite messy and needs the perfect combination of duration, quantity of grounds vs. water, the right roast, the proper fineness of the coffee grounds, and the right brewing conditions. Because of this, my recipe is a closely guarded secret. : )
Anyone else doing it? Yes, there are a few companies (maybe three or four) who bottle cold brewed coffee. However, they sell it as a syrupy 'coffee concentrate', and I don't know about you but that sounds highly unappetizing to me. Thus, I tailored my recipe to yield a black coffee, ready to drink. Pour over ice, add what you like, enjoy. Zap it in the microwave and try it hot if you want. None of that "three parts water, one part concentrate" nonsense.
1 comment:
Congratulations on caffinating Manhattan, Luke! It's great to know I can now get my fix of Luke's Brew when I'm in the City!!
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