☕ Brew it your way—because life’s too short for bad coffee!
The Cold Brew Mason Coffee Maker is a 64oz pitcher designed for crafting delicious cold brew coffee at home. Featuring a user-friendly design, durable BPA-free materials, and a super dense stainless steel filter, this coffee maker allows you to enjoy café-quality drinks while saving money. With easy cleaning options and a sleek design that fits in your fridge, it's the perfect addition to any coffee lover's kitchen.
Number of Items | 1 |
Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
Item Dimensions W x H | 3.94"W x 10.24"H |
Capacity | 4 Pounds |
Theme | Cold Brew Coffee |
Style Name | Classic |
Color | Black |
Material Type Free | Bisphenol A (BPA) Free |
Finish Types | Stainless steel |
Product Care Instructions | Hand Wash Only |
Material Type | BPA free soda-lime Glass |
Recommended Uses For Product | Cold Brew Coffee |
Reusability | Reusable |
Container Type | Glass with Metal Filter |
Additional Features | Pitcher Lid, Stainless Steel Filter, Fridge Safe, Dishwasher Safe |
Bottle Type | Standard Bottle |
R**.
The Best Cold Coffee Extractor Yet!
I love cold coffee; especially in the winter. I was spending about $30 a week on Starbuck's ready to drink cold coffee 64 oz bottles. Recently, my grocery order arrived and to my horror, my cold coffee was not part of my delivery because they were out of stock.I decided it was time to make my own. I stumbled across this product during a search on Amazon. I had sorted the results by reviews and this product appeared at the top. I decided to order two of them. My thinking was, I could have a jar ready and a jar brewing. I haven't needed to open the 2nd box yet. The 64 oz mason jar holds plenty of coffee and lasts me around 2 days. I simply start another batch as soon as I pour the last cup.This is a high quality mason jar with thick glass like one would expect. The O-rings are high quality. The plastic screw on top pourer is thick and sturdy. I also liked that it came with a grounds stirring long handled spoon. It came in handy stirring down grounds that insisted on floating above the water.Even if you do not enjoy coffee, Id recommend getting one for serving high quality iced coffees when you have guests, or consider giving one of these as a gift. I have enjoyed mine very much. This is a solid buy at $20.
H**Y
Items is better than expected * Strong Handle
Update: this is a must buy. I love mine. Worse thing I kept seeing in reviews is the handle is flimsy. Well I will let you know mine is strong and able to grab it and pour with no issues at all.Very cool product. The can’t wait to use it. I just came here to say that there were a lot of reviews of the handle being flimsy. I do not see that or is mine flimsy. Honestly if your handle is flimsy return it for a new one. Nothing is perfect 100% of the time. But wanted to say mine is all others have said about it in the positive and I did not get one with a flimsy handle or anything damaged. Love this purchase so much.
L**L
I love this thing. (Edited review: still going strong after a year!)
(Edit to review:) I have had this coffee carafe for a year now, and it is still working great. I've found a couple of tweaks to the iced coffee preparing that have made the process more effective. One was I started ordering coffee specified be ground to "pour over" grind. The sediment, or grounds in the coffee thing I mentioned in my longer review really was not, and has not been, an issue, but this size of grind seems to improve the steeping process, i.e. seems to get more coffee flavor out of the grounds with no increase in sediment. But when I can't afford special ordered ground coffee- Graffeo, from San Francisco- Swiss Water Decaf- supermarket pre-ground coffee works just fine in this carafe. By the way- if you are a decaf drinker, you can Google to find out if your coffee has been decaffeinated by the Swiss Water process, which is chemical free, or not. You can "check your decaf"- if you know what I mean.Another thing I started doing was, after I put the grounds into the long metal filter, instead of filling the carafe with cold water, I started filling it with *hot* water. Not boiling water- I don't want to crack the carafe- but very hot water- almost steaming- *very slowly*, stirring as the water is added with the long metal spoon thing. This adding very hot water step, I've found, speeds up the steeping process, so if I drink the iced coffee after say, 8 or 12 hours, it has a nice rich flavor, as opposed to needing it to sit and steep for at least 24 hours to achieve a nice strong coffee taste. (Just be careful to add it slowly, and the water should be quite hot, but NOT boiling.)All in all- this carafe has proved to be an excellent investment. The handle is every bit as sturdy as the day I bought it. As I mentioned in the longer review, I don't pick the carafe up and move it around by the handle when it is full of coffee or even half full, not because the handle feels weak, but because I am a klutz. So I always support the carafe, unless it is a third or under full, by the bottom when I am taking it out of the fridge and putting it back in. It's a great product, and I'm glad I have it. I've actually been thinking of buying another one, because the quality of the iced coffee this carafe makes is so good that I am drinking a lot more of it! Highly recommended!(Original review) I love iced coffee. I had been making my daily iced coffee using instant decaf coffee in an old insulated thermal carafe. I would make a big batch of it and put it in the refrigerator, and it lasted me a couple of days, and it was fine. Or- so I thought.I was thinking about upgrading my iced coffee situation, so I looked around on Amazon for a new iced coffee maker. I liked this one because it got decent reviews; it was made of glass, not plastic; the filter was made of metal; it produced a lot of iced coffee (I ordered the 64 ounce size); and it looked sturdy and durable. I also ordered some water decaf ground coffee- Verena Street Mississippi Grogg, a brand I had never heard of, and this coffee proved to be excellent. I eagerly anticipated new iced coffee day.When the Mason coffee maker arrived, it was indeed nice and robust. Though quite substantive, it was not too heavy for me to manipulate with ease, and I am a small older woman with some arthritis in my hands and shoulders. I washed all of the components- the big glass jar, the heavy-duty plastic pouring lid, and the very cool-looking long metal cone-shaped, fine-meshed coffee filter. It also came with a super long skinny spoon stirrer thing that is also really heavy and well made. I can tell you this- even though it appears this coffee maker was made you-know-where, they did not skimp on the materials. Every part of the coffee maker feels like it was constructed the way things used to be when I was a kid. All the parts- the glass carafe, the plastic lid, the metal filter, the long spoon thing- are heavy and solid. I could tell this iced coffee maker is going to be around for a long, long time.Despite its obvious sturdiness, I am careful when lifting the coffee maker in and out of the fridge when it is full, as it is very heavy with all that volume of liquid. I do not just pick it up solely by the handle. I cradle it in my arm the way you do a football, or, if I do use the handle, I make sure to put a supporting hand under the carafe’s bottom. I do this *not* because the handle feels flimsy, or it is wiggling around, or has given any indication that it is about to snap off. I handle the full coffee maker this way because I am clumsy, and I have a tendency to break things, and I like my nice new carafe, and I want it to be around for a long time.I found the instructions that came with with the coffee maker to be rather enigmatic. There was an allusion to an enclosed “O ring” and “T ring.” Well- there are two translucent rubber rings that are part of the coffee maker. One is nestled at the top of the filter, and the other is inside the plastic lid that screws onto the glass jar. The instructions seem to be implying there are two spare rings in the box someplace. If so, I didn’t find any. The suggested amount of coffee to add to the filter (I think) to fill the 64 ounce coffee maker is 8 ounces, which is about a cup. I added a bit more than that, as I like my coffee strong, and this was new decaf coffee that I was working with, and I don’t like weak coffee. I set the coffee maker in the sink, turned the cold water on low, and let the water run down into the top of the filter, onto the grounds. The grounds within the filter started to float to the top of the water, which is when the long spoon/stirrer came in handy. (I’ve noticed that some brands of coffee have more buoyant grounds than others. For example, the Peet’s decaf Major Dickerson’s Blend- no chemicals!- those are very buoyant grounds, and stirring them and getting them saturated with water was more of a challenge than the first coffee I tried- the Verena Street decaf- which seemed to absorb water very fast, and didn’t need to be stirred at all. So the need to use the spoon/stirrer will vary with the coffee used, it seems.). I filled the carafe with as much water as I could, so I could have coffee for at least three days. The water started to look nice and coffee-colored right away, and I thought- this is going to be good. I screwed on the top, and put the coffee maker in the fridge.I admit I didn’t have the patience to wait a full 24 hours before tasting the brew, but I did let the coffee steep for a good 14 hours. You have to unscrew the top and remove the filter before you can pour any coffee out through the lid. I got my insulated tumbler, filled it half way with ice, and poured the now quite dark and rich-looking iced coffee into the tumbler. I added my favorite sugar-free coffee creamer, popped on the lid, dropped in the metal straw, and took a sip.Wow. Why- why… why had I wasted all of those months drinking crummy instant decaf coffee? This was quality iced coffee- rich and smooth-tasting, without the bitter chemical tang I guess I had learned to ignore in my daily instant decaf. I literally stood and stared into space for some time, savoring how good this coffee tasted. And making it wasn’t a hassle. As another reviewer had so wisely mentioned they had done, I had set aside the wet, grounds-filled filter on a plate to allow the grounds to dry out. This made cleaning the dry grounds out of the filter much easier than dealing with wet grounds. The dry grounds fell right out of the filter with a tap, and it rinsed clean right away.Now I only have to make coffee every three days, as opposed to once a day. And it doesn’t taste stale, even after sitting in the fridge all that time. And since the coffee is being stored inside a glass container, not a plastic one, there’s no worry of any weird chemicals leaching out of the plastic into the liquid even after three days in the fridge.I did want to mention this. When I tried the coffee the first time after initially taking it out of the fridge, I did notice a *very small* amount of coffee ground sediment in the coffee. Very minimal traces of grounds. These traces did not bother me one bit. In my long life, I have drunk coffee that has been made in less than ideal circumstances, like the times when I had to prepare coffee by very slowly pouring boiling water through a paper towel containing coffee grounds into an empty mayonnaise jar (many, many years ago,) so a minuscule amount of coffee grit was not a big deal. After the coffee had settled in the refrigerator for about an hour, if there were any remains of coffee grounds in it, they had vanished. The coffee I had used had come pre-ground, and it was fairly finely ground. More coarsely ground coffee should eliminate this issue. For me, it wasn’t/isn’t a concern.All in all, I am *very* pleased with my purchase. For the quality of this coffee maker, the price is a steal. The Mason Cold Brew Coffee Maker really has elevated my daily tumbler of coffee from “ok- yeah- coffee” to a truly pleasurable coffee drinking experience.
K**N
Perfect for Cold Brew
I love this coffee carafe for many reasons. The glass is thick and substantial, the mesh insert is metal and super durable, everything is dishwasher safe, and it makes a really good cup of cold brew.I owned one and would make three days worth of coffee for my husband and I (6 cups). On the 4th day when the carafe needed washing we’d treat ourselves to Starbucks. I ended up buying a 2nd carafe as I started to prefer our homemade cold brew far and above what we used to love at Starbucks. That way on wash day, we simply fill up the clean one and always have one on hand ready to go.Been using this for almost a year and not a single complaint. If something does happen to go awry with this, I’d happily replace it with the same product for how reliable it’s been so far. Great value and saves me lotssss of $$$ on to go coffee!
E**S
Works well
Very convenient and affordable. The plastic handle feels a little flimsy.
N**N
Loving this cold brew coffee jar
Great value for the money, easy to clean, durable, and works great!
D**E
Simple cold brew coffee
I've looked at cold brew makers for at least a year. To say I'm picky about my coffee is an understatement. When I came avoid this, I liked that it has a glass jar. I went mostly off other reviews, but I'm happy I did.The o-rings, the mesh that holds the coffee, the jar, and the lid are all good quality.It's easy to use and the cold brew it makes is pretty good. It's a good value and I don't care about the looks, but it's not bad.Before you choose to go the cold brew route, make sure you know how much more coffee it takes than hot coffee. For me it takes a little over twice as much. Some of my friends and family have been shocked, but happily drank my cold brew.
V**A
Great for cold brew!
This is super easy to use and perfect for cold brew. Found this gem off of TikTok. I love how sturdy the glass is and the cap is a heavy duty plastic that is great quality. The insert is easy to clean and doesn’t let grinds seep into the brew. I let my first batch sit into the fridge for 24 hours and it was divine. Got it on sale for $14.99.
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