Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    The White House just joined TikTok

    August 19, 2025

    Microsoft employees occupy headquarters in protest of Israel contracts

    August 19, 2025

    Google Gemini can now read your Docs aloud

    August 19, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » This Coffee Machine Makes Cold Brew That Looks Like a Frothy Pint of Guinness
    Gear

    This Coffee Machine Makes Cold Brew That Looks Like a Frothy Pint of Guinness

    News RoomBy News RoomJanuary 3, 20253 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email

    And so a flood of fancy machines has entered the world, each one designed to short-circuit the long path to cold caffeine. Most fast-chill hot coffee or use pressure or agitation to speed up extraction. WIRED reviewers have not always been kind to such attempts.

    The Cumulus is something different: It starts with genuine cold brew, extracted in cool water over the course of hours from high-altitude coffee beans specifically selected for cold extraction. The cold brew is then condensed, using a proprietary process of vacuum distillation that can pack a double-shot’s worth of coffee into a recyclable capsule the size of a light bulb’s bottom.

    Cumulus makes a variety of these capsules, light roast and dark roast and decaf and espresso, retailing for around $2.50 a pop. You’ll need them to use the machine. Plunk a capsule into the Cumulus, select your style of cold brew among “still,” “nitro” or “espresso,” and press a glowing button on the device. That’s pretty much the end of the usage instructions.

    The Cumulus will then pressurize and chill and hydrate the result into 10 ounces of still or nitro-bubbled cold brew, or perhaps a wildly foamy 2-ounce double-shot of coldspresso.

    Each drink arrives fridge-cool, 34 degrees Fahrenheit. The device is easy to clean, mostly by removing and rinsing a tray at the bottom. The front-loading water reservoir is just as easy to fill and replace. The ease and intuitiveness is a bit astonishing for a first-generation device.

    Who’s Got the Flavor?

    But though it is made with genuine cold brew, the flavor of Cumulus coffee does not quite have the character of classic cold brew.

    The device avoids the acrid bitterness, acidity, and tepidity that have marred most other machines that hurry up cold brew. But from light to dark, the various flavors of coffee made with the Cumulus tend to taste mostly like … other coffee made with the Cumulus.

    The capsules tend “smooth,” not robust or roasty, with an unplaceable flavor or tang that remains consistent across capsules. Some have described the Cumulus’ unique character as falling between espresso and cold brew, with floral pep unknown to cold brew’s customary gentleness. Less charitably, one could describe the note as sharp, even a bit phenolic or rubbery, especially on lighter roasts. The dark comes on smoothest.

    The vacuum distillation process used to condense the cold brew is proprietary, so it’s difficult to ascribe causes. But what I do know is that coffee is a complicated thing, full of hundreds of substances—esters, acids, oils, things with funny names—which vaporize at different rates and under different conditions. Distilling and condensing it fully is, presumably, as much art as science.

    I’ve asked person after person to taste the Cumulus Machine’s cold brew. Some houseguests, ranging from my mother to a Jersey-Italian coffee lover, preferred the Cumulus’ frothy nitro to the best packaged equivalent and couldn’t believe this bubbled heaven could arrive so immediately.

    Others, me included, have puzzled at its somewhat idiosyncratic flavor, as a peek into an uncanny valley of cold coffee. It’s cold brew, sure. But it’s also something else.

    A Fine Froth

    Where the Cumulus succeeds wildly and unequivocally is froth and texture.

    The nitro function on the Cumulus is the foamiest vision of nitro coffee I’ve yet encountered, whether in cafés or at home: a micro-pressurized riot of tiny bubbles that pervades the whole substance of the coffee. Mix a nitro cup with milk and sugar, and it’s a carnival of fat and sweetness and fine-structured air. This is air that doubles as architecture.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleAnthropic reaches deal with music publishers over lyric dispute
    Next Article To Fight AI Search Spam, Prioritize Real Human Voices

    Related Posts

    One of Our Favorite Graphics Cards Is Finally on Sale for MSRP and Comes With ‘Borderlands 4’

    August 19, 2025

    The Global Car Reckoning Is Here. Far Too Many Auto Companies Don’t Have a Plan

    August 19, 2025

    Need A Portable Battery Bank? This One Is $350 Off

    August 18, 2025

    WIRED Tests Dozens of Air Purifiers a Year. Here’s What We, and You, Should Look For

    August 18, 2025

    Pebblebee Is Getting Serious About Personal Safety Tracking

    August 18, 2025

    I Tried the Best At-Home Pet DNA Test Kits on My Two Cats

    August 17, 2025
    Our Picks

    Microsoft employees occupy headquarters in protest of Israel contracts

    August 19, 2025

    Google Gemini can now read your Docs aloud

    August 19, 2025

    Google announced the next step in its nuclear energy plans 

    August 19, 2025

    Apple is reportedly making more of its new iPhones in India instead of China

    August 19, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Security

    Russia Is Cracking Down on End-to-End Encrypted Calls

    By News RoomAugust 19, 2025

    WIRED copublished an investigation this week with The Markup and CalMatters showing that dozens of…

    One of Our Favorite Graphics Cards Is Finally on Sale for MSRP and Comes With ‘Borderlands 4’

    August 19, 2025

    The Tweens Down Under: Life Without Social Media in Australia

    August 19, 2025

    Meta’s AI translation tool can dub your Instagram videos

    August 19, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.