daveooph131
Well-Known Member
What's the water to coffee ratio for making cold brew? I'll be putting this up soon on my tap for the summer.
Sent from my iPhone using Home Brew
Sent from my iPhone using Home Brew
I am working with a local cafe to put coffee on tap now. Here is what you will need...assuming you have the means to brew 5 gallons of finished product:
-a kegerator, including all the lines and tap
-a bottle of beer gas (nitrogen/CO2 mix)
-a nitro tap (like a guiness tap....a regular tap will not work)
-at least one cornelius keg, plus the in/out connectors to the kegerator.
If I were a shop owner and setting it up, I would start with the ability to do two 5 gallon batches at once, so that you could have one batch sitting on gas conditioning while the other were being served. That means you would need a means of splitting the gas line into two inlets (either a simple tee, or a valve manifold with two out lines). I say this because it seems like it takes a few days on the gas before the coffee will start cascading.
I am actually heading over to check on our nitro project today. There have been some bumps in the road, but I think we have it going now. I have been out of town, so I havent checked in on the coffee, but I will post an update later...hopefully with a picture or two.
We are putting our cold brew coffee on a nitro tap and only have 2 kegs to rotate through. I can't wait 24 hours for the coffee to gas!
Here are some photos of the final product! After a lot of playing around, we decided to go pretty low in the infusion. We got a lot cleaner and less gassy flavour this way, and the foam retention is outstanding. Hope some of you get to make it to Shanghai to try it!
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Here are some photos of the final product! After a lot of playing around, we decided to go pretty low in the infusion. We got a lot cleaner and less gassy flavour this way, and the foam retention is outstanding. Hope some of you get to make it to Shanghai to try it!
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FYI for anybody reading this thread and interested in doing this:
-if you want the cascading effect (like Guiness), you must use beer gas. This is a nitrogen/carbon dioxide blend. The CO2 is what causes the cascade, not the nitrogen. You must also use a stout faucet with the gas pressure set high...like 35#.
There is no benefit to adding CO2 (in any amount) to a keg of coffee, since oxygen (the "O") degrades the flavor of brewed coffee in short order; also, who wants fizzy coffee?
Hi everyone,
I'm in Australia and just charged my cornelius keg with 100% nitro at 20psi.. Should I increase that to 45psi and leave it charged for a couple of days?
What psi would you serve it through the taps at? And would you use beer gas?
Hi everyone, I am in Austin, TX and have Cuvee Black and Blue on tap in a 5 gallon setup with 100% Nitrogen at around 30 PSI. Works great for me as long as you have a good stout faucet.
Anybody else use Cuvee or Stumptown cold brew kegs?
(I have done Cuvee in my office and now at home, going to definitely start looking at my homebrew options as well!)
Before I go and try to trade my newly purchased beer gas tank for a 100% nitrogen tank I want to be for certain I can get the same cascading and creamy head using pure nitrogen. Has any one had a personal experience??
You guys are wrong about this "it won't cascade without CO2" thing.
A setup with pure nitrogen, at 45 psi and with a stout faucet, will get you the cascading effect you desire. The key is that the nitrogen has to be well-mixed with the kegged coffee *this may be possible through conditioning, but in my cafe we simply hook up the nitro, bleed out any oxygen and then agitate the crap out of the keg. It's worth noting that the cascade is more than a visual effect *the active nitrogen ending up in the customer's beverage promotes a cleaner aftertaste and fuller body, which is pretty crazy, since nitrogen has no flavor; this means the nitrogen is fooling your taste buds into *perceiving* the flavors differently, which is just nuts.
There is no benefit to adding CO2 (in any amount) to a keg of coffee, since oxygen (the "O") degrades the flavor of brewed coffee in short order; also, who wants fizzy coffee?
CO2 does affect the flavor of the coffee, no question. (As to the poster above who balks at the notion based on beer.