Spyke

Industrial-scale coffee brewing can use counter-flow heat exchangers to recover pretty much all the heat energy, combined with insulation to prevent losses.

1
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Saving up to 75% of energy by not heating the water is a minor benefit for home users or small coffee shops. But for companies making ready-to-drink coffee products at industrial scale, it could be very significant indeed.

So this is a method to make crap in a bottle or can.

Gotcha.

I'll stick with the trusty French Press

Edit: ...Though I gotta admit it's pretty dang cool that they figured out a new way to brew coffee using cold water and reduce the energy use of large scale production.

20
czardestructoreply
lemmy.world

Just because they're doing this to chase money to fund their research doesnt mean it couldn't potentially make a better cup or coffee at home. I think its a britllant idea where heat makes the coffee bitter, perhaps there's a magic ratio of heat and ultrasound to make a majestic cup of Joe.

21

An edit to my post got lost in the aether as I entered a dead zone at work, on reflection it is cool tech.

I'm skeptical about inviting more tech into the home for something so simple in this day and age of subscription services and lack of repairability, but if it makes a better cup of coffee, I'd try it.

3

The spaceage of espresso machines. Heat generation is expensive in space, when the opportunity cost is the atmo circulation. This could be the answer to a problem we haven't yet run into as a species. I dig it.

3

made out of legally sourced, organic, renewable, non-GMO, and gluten-free raspberries

1

They've brewed something (very slowly) that compares well to room temperature espresso? That's dandy and all, but I wonder how it compares to a proper espresso, after spending additional energy to heat it.

1

You reached the end

I used sound waves to make espresso. It could cut coffee-brewing energy use by 75% | Spyke