Steeping coffee in milk

Steeping coffee in milk - Person Performing Coffee Art

I'd like to add coffee to my hot cocoa recipe, but I'm not interested in using instant coffee. What do you all think is the best method- maybe I should heat my grounds & milk together and let it steep? Has anyone ever tried this?



Best Answer

When my husband and I were trying to make good coffee ice cream, we did just that -- steeping the coffee beans in milk. It worked quite well.

If you have a French Press, you can use that with coarsely ground coffee beans. Heat the milk to a simmer or even a very low boil, and then use it in place of water in the French Press. This was how we got the best results for our ice cream.

You can also get good results from whole beans. Heat the whole beans in milk in a pot, and then let sit in the refrigerator overnight. Strain out the beans, and you'll have strongly coffee-flavored milk.




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Quick Answer about "Steeping coffee in milk"

  • Step one: Weigh and grind the beans. Weigh 30g of coarsely ground coffee. ...
  • Step two: Steep the grounds in the milk. Pour 450ml of milk into a mason jar, then gently shake or stir it to ensure the grounds interact thoroughly with the milk.
  • Step three: Put it in the fridge. ...
  • Step four: Let it sit for 8 hours.


  • Can you soak coffee in milk?

    In short: absolutely! By swapping water for milk in your cold brew, you will end up with a creamier, nuttier coffee. While the basics of cold brewing still apply when brewing with milk instead of water, there are a few things you'll need to keep in mind.

    Can you steep coffee in hot milk?

    It is possible to brew coffee with milk instead of water, but not always advisable. Doing so will produce a much less strong cup of coffee, and can cause issues such as curdling milk and clogging your coffee maker. If you want to do this, it is safest to slowly warm the milk and use a french press.

    How do you add milk to brewed coffee?

    Pop your cup with milk in the microwave for a few seconds before adding the coffee! Have a steam wand on your machine and fancy a classic milky coffee, like a latte or a cappuccino? You ideally want the milk somewhere between 60-70\xb0C (140-160\xb0F) - this is the optimum temperature to bring out milk's natural sweetness.



    Brewing Coffee With...Milk? | Coffee Collaboration




    More answers regarding steeping coffee in milk

    Answer 2

    Making [good] coffee is a science. For your purpose, you should make an Espresso like strength coffee.

    Follow these guidelines for your best result, and don't seep the grounded beans in milk.

    • Buy a 'natural' roast Arabica beans.
    • Use fresh beans.
    • Grind on demand, just on time.
    • Grind 7-8gr / 0.25-0.28 oz of coffee per cup
    • Tamp the coffee grind gently but firmly into the filter.
    • Pour hot but not boiling water over the grind (92-96°C / 197.6-204.8 F)

    This will give you a strong coffee that you can mix with your cocoa.

    References: Coffee Research and Kaffee

    Answer 3

    You could just make really strong coffee and add it to the rest of your mixture. A little water probably won't ruin it. Something like adding just enough water to cover your coffee grounds should make it strong enough.

    Answer 4

    I've made ice cream with very, very strong, fresh ground, local coffee from Cafe Moto in San Diego. The coffee flavor wasn't "forward" enough when I took it to the shop for them to taste. I used a lot of coffee and not much water, fine ground, slow, long steep in a stovetop at 205 degrees. It was good, but not enough coffee flavor. HOWEVER, if you use too much coffee, the water won't freeze as creamy as cream and milk do, so I found that this batch was "icier" than the next few have been. So, the next time I decided to steep coffee from Cafe Moto, medium ground (Chemex grind) in the cream/milk cold brew style, for 9 hours. The end results were great, but I still want to see what longer will do, so tonight I am doing a 24 hour soak, medium grind, Cafe Moto Colombia, Red Honey Process. It all gets put into a clean mason jar, I shake it a few times in the time it's sitting in the fridge, and strain later with a tedious combination of wire sieve/cheesecloth...or let it settle and slow pour it into a different container a couple of times. Use a little more milk than your recipe calls for (1/4-1/3c) because you'll lose some in the straining/steeping process. Tonight I chose (for no particular reason) to steep about one full Hario hand grinder's worth of beans (maybe a cup ground) with about 20-25 ounces of Ultra Filtered Fairlife Milk for 24 hours. This milk is amazing if you have not tasted it yet....they claim 50% more protein and 50% less fat...all by filtering it multiple times. Anyways, steeping in cold milk is my preffered method, but with good coffee only.

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Chevanon Photography, Andrea Piacquadio, Ena Marinkovic, Pixabay