Cold brew is exploding. Sure, people have been brewing coffee by letting grounds sit overnight in room-temperature water since the days of the Bishop and Mrs. Proudie. But it's only recently that contraptions specially designed for cold-brewing coffee have hit the market, all of them claiming to produce better-tasting cold brew than the old "mix it all in a bucket and let it sit" method. There's the Bruer and the Filtron.
There's even the decades-old Toddy, itself little more than a bucket into which you mix grounds and water—proving that no matter what heights of preciousness the hipsters of gadgetdom attempt to elevate the cold brewed cup of coffee, the old zero-fuss methods still work just fine.
But now OXO, the giant of the household gadget industry, makes a cold-brewer. It's a smartly designed, mostly plastic $50 kit that you can find on a shelf at big department stores. And this is OXO we're talking about, a company that specializes in designing products for a mainstream audience. The fact that such a big name is now in the cold brew game marks a turning point. Your little cult just crossed over. This is your indie coffee's major-label debut.
OXO's brewer comes in five easy pieces. There's the main tub where the brewing happens, and it's suspended on a built-in stand. The whole assembly is about a foot and a half tall and sort of hourglass shaped. Atop the brewing chamber is a concave cover with small holes in it. You pour water into this cover, and the water sprinkles down onto the coffee in the chamber below (OXO calls this perforated lid the "rainmaker"). Beneath the brewing chamber, inside the stand half of the hourglass, is enough room to slide the 32-ounce borosilicate carafe. Once you've finished brewing, just flip a switch at the bottom of the brew chamber and the coffee runs through a filter and into the carafe. The carafe goes straight into the fridge, and you top it with a plastic stopper. The stopper has both a silicone ring to seal the carafe, and a 2-ounce fill line for measuring out your cold-brew one dose at a time.
