For maybe the first time in my life, I have received expert praise for my “foam situation.”
The foam in question was the bubbly top to a frigid espresso martini I’d just made in my home kitchen. And the “situation” was that there was a lot of it. The cocktail brimmed with satisfying crema as thick as the head on a Guinness—leading to kind words from an esteemed cocktail pro of my acquaintance.
This was surprising for lots of reasons. One was that I didn’t even have to shake the drink to get it frothy. The other was that the espresso in my drink had never touched heat.
Espresso, by definition, requires heat and high pressure to make. But the espresso in my martini was instead a novel substance called cold-brew espresso, made by an innovative new device called The Cumulus Machine that is certainly the most talked-about cold-brew machine in recent memory.
The dedicated cold-brew machine, which retails for a heady $700, was created by some big names in coffee. Mesh Gelman, former innovation head at Starbucks, spearheaded the thing. Howard Schultz, Starbucks’ erstwhile CEO, helped fund it.
The Cumulus promises a unicorn. Perhaps miraculously, the device makes genuine cold brew—not just iced coffee in disguise—within about a minute, in a somewhat hulking countertop machine that looks a bit like a Dell PC from the early 2000s. The Cumulus will also make frothy nitro brew, using nitrogen sucked from naked air.
It’ll likewise whip up cold espresso with a weirdly persistent crema, which makes for an impressive-looking foam-topped martini.
Some Like It Cold
The Cumulus came after an epiphany, Cumulus CEO Gelman told me in a conversation this fall—one that arrived after he saw that 75 percent of drinks ordered at Starbucks were now cold.
The popularity of cold brew has quadrupled since five years ago, according to coffee industry stats. There are Zoomers, industry legend goes, who don’t even think of coffee as a hot drink.
But there’s a problem. Cold brew, prized for its low acidity and smooth expression of a bean’s character, famously takes as long as 24 hours to brew the old-fashioned way. Not everyone has the patience or the foresight to make it at home. (Check out WIRED's guide to the best home cold-brew devices.)