The case for cold-brew coffee
It’s chocolatey, creamy-smooth, thirst-quenching and charged with caffeine. It’s also a beverage that Mintel has shown is preferred 67 per cent of the time over engineered energy drinks. Steve Ballantyne and Mitchell Stern are behind Station Cold Brew, the first company in Toronto dedicated to cold-brew coffee, which has been steadily making its way into cafés, restaurants via tap dispensing brew kegs and grab-and-go stubbies in retail stores. Google’s Toronto office has stocked it since last July.
They, like Diana Olsen, president and founder of Balzac’s Coffee Roasters in Ontario, felt that cold brew offered an all-natural, quality-driven beverage that catered to the changing demands of a sophisticated consumer base.
Unlike iced coffee – which is quick heat-extracted coffee poured over ice, cold brew steeps coffee grounds in small batches of cold-filtered water for up to 18 hours. The result is a naturally sweet-tasting beverage that’s free of bitterness, and 70 per cent less acidic than hot-water infusions. Despite the labour-intensive process and increased storage space required for production, even Starbucks has started to offer cold brew in more than 2,800 of its North American outlets.
Since introducing cold brew at her cafés last year, Olsen says that 50 per cent of the chilled coffee sales are now strictly cold brew. It’s a growing trend, so much so that Balzac’s has phased out selling heat-extracted iced coffee in favour of the higher-quality product (cold brew commands a 10-per-cent premium, but customers are willing to pay the difference). Besides increased awareness and demand Sebastian Sztabzyb, of Calgary coffee roasters, Phil & Sebastian, credits the rising sales – an estimated 20 per cent since his company started to produce cold brew two years ago – to the take-away packaging.
“It’s really hard to take a latte home,” Sztabzyb said, “but to take a two-litre bottle of a drink that can stay in your fridge for a week – that can be enjoyed every morning or shared with friends – is a new market that wasn’t previously possible.”
All three coffee companies modelled their products after craft-beer culture: from valuing local production to designing a sleek, vintage-inspired brand. Phil & Sebastian’s cold coffee is sold in beer bottle stubbies and available as six-packs. Meanwhile, Station has a brewmaster, Mike Roy, who uses a proprietary blend of direct-trade coffee beans and chicory, and runs the liquid through a VST refractometer so it reaches its sweetest potential. Balzac’s teamed up with Toronto-based Mill Street Brewery to offer customers nitro cold brew – a draft beverage that pours like a stout, with a thick foamy head and rich, creamy body.
Cold brew may have a shorter shelf life than soft drinks, but Ballantyne doesn’t see that as a problem. “I have a belief that people would rather drink a healthier, local, responsibly sourced option over something that’s not.”