• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Ultrasonics Make Cold Brew Coffee In Minutes Not Hours

May 11, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Coffee that matches the taste profile that usually takes a day to achieve through cold brewing can now be produced in 1-3 minutes using ultrasound, with more caffeine to boot. The technology could make the cold brew experience available to the impatient and the housebound, making most coffee fans happy and forcing coffee snobs to find some other way to distinguish themselves.

Advertisement

Cold brew coffee has rocketed in popularity in the last decade, with those who imbibe for more than the caffeine hit praising the extra sweetness and aroma and reduced acidity compared to traditional methods. However, the 12-24 hours it takes to make using cold brewing techniques is far too long for those ill-prepared to wait, restricting cold brew to well-equipped cafes and patient home brewers.

Advertisement

Scientists at the University of New South Wales calculated the conditions required to combine an ultrasound transducer, metallic horn, and coffee basket to get the flavor out of ground coffee faster. They demonstrated the acoustic bubbles produced by sound waves at 38,800 Hz dissolve small grains of coffee in cold water within minutes when they collapse. Larger grains become pitted by the micro-jets produced in this process, releasing more of the 2,000 compounds in coffee beans into the water. Most importantly, caffeine levels almost double compared to traditional cold-brewed counterparts, which probably also means it’s higher than espresso. 

Having proved the chemical profile of the infused water resembled or exceeded the product from 24 hours of cold brewing, it was time for the taste test. It might be expected that this was a task volunteers would be lining up for, with hundreds of graduate students easily on hand. Instead, the inventors sought help from the Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation (QAAFI) at the University of Queensland who provided paid testers.

Eleven individuals were recruited from a panel maintained by QAAFI to compare the taste profiles of coffee using three methods; exposure to ultrasound for either one or three minutes, or 24 hours of traditional cold brewing. The same bean blend was used throughout, but a wide variety of basket loading percentages were tried. This was just to make sure the results were right of course, nothing to do with extending the time in which testers were paid to drink top-of-the-range coffee.

If you’re wondering how one gets what must sound to many like a job from heaven, QAAFI’s Dr Jaqueline Nadolny told IFLScience; “We have tests that prospective panelists do to see what flavors they can distinguish. Most have been on the panel for years.” Performance on each study is monitored to see if someone is no longer suited. 

Advertisement

While Nadolny admits it; “Sounds like a fun job,” she says not all the foods people have to test are as beloved as coffee. “Last year people had to consume 24 burger samples a day and they got sick of it,” she noted.

It's a tough job but someone has to be paid to spend weeks comparing the taste and aroma of ultrasonic coffee with traditional cold-brew

It’s a tough job but someone has to be paid to spend weeks comparing the taste and aroma of ultrasonic coffee with traditional cold brew.

Image Credit: Megan Pope/University of Queensland

In this case however, the testers drew up a list of 23 attributes on which to rate the coffees on scales of 1 to 100 before they’d taken a sip. They concluded the 1-minute sonicated coffee matched ordinary cold brew on measures of flavor and aftertaste. When sound waves were used for three minutes, the match was even closer, proving similar for aroma intensity and scent of dark chocolate. 

“Hence, it is expected that a sonication time between 1 and 3 min is ideal for creating a coffee comparable with 24-hour cold brew coffee, depending on the interest of customers,” the researchers write in their paper.

“Our trained sensory panel tastings proved that we can achieve a taste profile very similar to either a traditional cold brew or an espresso in the time it takes to brew a hot espresso,” Nadolny said in a statement.

Advertisement

The test involved turning the coffee basket into an ultrasonic reactor using an ultrasound-producing technology previously patented by UNSW. “We’re able to demonstrate that this can be adapted to an existing espresso machine,” Dr Francisco Trujillo said. “We are very excited about developing this technology, which can be used by companies that already manufacture coffee machines, so consumers will be able to enjoy a 3-minute ultrasonic cold brew at home.”

Few other foods may have the popularity of coffee, but Nadolny told IFLScience there might be a few other applications for the technology, perhaps in getting more flavor out of tea or milk powder.

Cafes will save on refrigeration space and what Trujillo calls “semi-industrial brewing units,” while maintaining their edge over home brewers, can apply the technology to single-origin beans or in-house blends.

Just as long as you don’t drink it first thing after waking up. 

Advertisement

The work is published open access in Ultrasonics Sonochemistry, a journal that has possibly never had such widespread interest before.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Events leading up to the trial of Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes
  2. “Man Of The Hole”: Last Known Member Of Uncontacted Amazon Tribe Has Died
  3. This Is What Cannabis Looks Like Under A Microscope – You Might Be Surprised
  4. Will Lake Mead Go Back To Normal In 2024?

Source Link: Ultrasonics Make Cold Brew Coffee In Minutes Not Hours

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Kissing Has Survived The Path Of Evolution For 21 Million Years – Apes And Human Ancestors Were All At It
  • NASA To Share Its New Comet 3I/ATLAS Images In Livestream This Week – Here’s How To Watch
  • Did People Have Bigger Foreheads In The Past? The Grisly Truth Behind Those Old Paintings
  • After Three Years Of Searching, NASA Realized It Recorded Over The Apollo 11 Moon Landing Footage
  • Professor Of Astronomy Explains Why You Can’t Fire Your Enemies Straight Into The Sun
  • Do We All See The Same Blue? Brilliant Quiz Shows The Subjective Nature Of Color Perception
  • Earliest Detailed Observations Of A Star Exploding Show True Shape Of A Supernova
  • Balloon-Mounted Telescope Captures Most Precise Observations Of First Known Black Hole Yet
  • “Dawn Of A New Era”: A US Nuclear Company Becomes First Ever Startup To Achieve Cold Criticality
  • Meet The Kodkod Of The Americas: Shy, Secretive, And Super-Small
  • Incredible Footage May Be First Evidence Wild Wolves Have Figured Out How To Use Tools
  • Raccoons In US Cities Are Evolving To Become More Pet-Like
  • How Does CERN’s Antimatter Factory Work? We Visited To Find Out
  • Elusive Gingko-Toothed Beaked Whale Seen Alive For First Time Ever
  • Candidate Gravitational Wave Detection Hints At First-Of-Its-Kind Incredibly Small Object
  • People Are Just Learning What A Baby Eel Is Called
  • First-Ever Look At Neanderthal Nasal Cavity Shatters Expectations
  • Traces Of Photosynthetic Lifeforms 1 Billion Years Older Than Previous Record-Holder Discovered
  • This 12,000-Year-Old Artwork Shows An “Extraordinary” Moment In History And Human Creativity
  • World’s First Critically Endangered Penguin Directly Competes With Fishing Boats For Food
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version