Nitro Cold Brew: What It Is, Why It Tastes Creamy, and How to Make It at Home

Nitro cold brew's characteristic cascade of bubbles and dense foam head are produced by nitrogen infusion, not carbonation. (CC / Wikimedia Commons)

In 2016, Starbucks began piloting nitro cold brew in a small number of US stores. By 2017 it had expanded to hundreds of locations, and by 2019 the company was calling it one of the fastest-growing beverage categories in its portfolio, adding new variations including nitro cold brew with sweet cream and nitro cold brew with salted honey. What made it unusual was not just the flavour but the texture: a coffee drink with no milk, no cream, and no sugar that tasted meaningfully creamy. The explanation for that paradox lies in the physics of nitrogen gas and the way it interacts with liquid at different pressures, a phenomenon that has been understood and exploited in the brewing industry for decades before anyone thought to apply it to coffee.

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What Nitro Cold Brew Actually Is

Nitro cold brew begins with standard cold brew coffee. Cold brew is made by steeping coarsely ground coffee in cold or room-temperature water for an extended period, typically 12 to 24 hours, then filtering out the grounds. The result is a coffee concentrate that is lower in acidity than hot-brewed coffee (because acidic compounds that dissolve readily in hot water extract less readily in cold water) and higher in dissolved solids at most preparation ratios. Cold brew made at a 1:4 coffee-to-water ratio produces a concentrate that is typically diluted before serving; cold brew at 1:8 produces a ready-to-drink strength.

Nitro cold brew infuses this cold brew base with nitrogen gas (N2) under pressure and dispenses it through a special tap equipped with a restrictor plate, sometimes called a Guinness-style tap or nitrogen faucet. The restrictor plate contains a small disc with multiple tiny holes, typically 0.5mm in diameter. When the pressurised nitrogen-infused coffee is forced through these holes, the pressure drop causes the dissolved nitrogen to rapidly form millions of tiny bubbles. This is the cascade effect visible in a freshly poured nitro cold brew: a swirling surge of small bubbles that settles into layers before stabilising into a dense foam head at the surface.

Why It Tastes Creamy: The Nitrogen Physics

The creaminess of nitro cold brew is not a chemical reaction or a flavour compound. It is a physical phenomenon related to bubble size and surface tension. Nitrogen gas is far less soluble in water than carbon dioxide, the gas used in carbonated drinks. At atmospheric pressure, nitrogen barely dissolves in liquid at all; it only stays in solution when kept under elevated pressure. When the pressure is released through the restrictor plate tap, the nitrogen forms bubbles immediately and explosively, but because N2 is so insoluble, those bubbles are extremely small (typically under 1 micron in diameter, far smaller than CO2 bubbles in carbonated drinks, which range from 50 to 150 microns).

These ultra-fine nitrogen bubbles behave differently in the mouth than carbonated bubbles. CO2 bubbles are large enough to cause the familiar fizzy, slightly acidic sensation on the tongue and palate. Nitrogen microbubbles are too small to feel individually: instead they form a dense, stable foam that coats the mouth with a smooth, rounded sensation. The brain interprets this foam coating as creaminess, even in the absence of fat or dairy. This is the "Guinness effect," named after the Irish stout that has used nitrogen dispensing since the 1950s. Guinness Stout's characteristic texture (creamy despite being low in fat content) is produced by exactly the same mechanism. The nitrogen widget in canned Guinness, a small plastic device that releases nitrogen gas when the can is opened, was developed specifically to replicate the draught experience in packaged beer.

Caffeine Content: Higher Than You Might Expect

Nitro cold brew is typically more caffeinated than regular coffee due to the concentration of the cold brew base. A 240ml (8oz) serving of Starbucks Nitro Cold Brew, as of 2024 nutritional data, contains approximately 280mg of caffeine. A standard 240ml drip coffee contains 95 to 200mg depending on preparation. The nitro format is therefore not a low-caffeine option: it is among the most caffeine-dense standard menu offerings at major coffee chains.

The cold brew base achieves this higher caffeine concentration because it uses a high coffee-to-water ratio and a long extraction time. While hot water extracts coffee compounds faster and more aggressively, cold water given sufficient time (12 to 24 hours) extracts caffeine very efficiently, since caffeine is highly soluble across temperatures. Cold extraction does not extract certain volatile acids and some bitter compounds as effectively as hot water, which is why cold brew and nitro cold brew taste smoother and less bitter than espresso or drip coffee, even at higher caffeine concentrations.

Calories: Zero (for the Plain Version)

One of nitro cold brew's clearest selling points is its caloric profile. Plain nitro cold brew contains essentially zero calories, zero sugar, and zero fat. The creaminess is produced entirely by gas physics. This makes it one of the few genuinely satisfying zero-calorie coffee experiences: it does not taste like an absence of something, in the way that black drip coffee does for people accustomed to lattes, because the nitrogen foam actively creates a textural richness.

The variations that Starbucks and other chains add to the base (sweet cream, flavoured syrups, salted honey) do add calories. A Starbucks Nitro Cold Brew with Sweet Cream contains 110 calories and 11g of fat. But the plain format stands as a genuinely low-calorie option with the mouthfeel of a dairy drink.

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Making Nitro Cold Brew at Home

Full commercial nitro cold brew requires nitrogen gas cylinders, a pressurised keg, and a Guinness-style draught tap, which is expensive (commercial setups cost $300 to $1,000+) and impractical for home use. However, several more accessible approaches produce reasonable approximations.

The iSi cream whipper method uses a cream whipper (the device normally used to make whipped cream) with N2O (nitrous oxide) chargers rather than the nitrogen used commercially. N2O is more soluble in liquid than N2, which means the bubbles it produces are larger and the foam less stable than true nitrogen cold brew. However, at home scale, the result is noticeably creamier than plain cold brew and produces some of the cascading effect when dispensed. An iSi gourmet whip costs approximately $60 to $100, and N2O chargers (8g) cost around $10 to $15 for a pack of 10. The process: fill the whipper with cold brew, charge with one N2O cartridge, chill for 30 minutes, dispense upside down as with whipped cream.

Dedicated nitrogen dispensers use actual N2 gas and produce a much closer approximation to commercial nitro cold brew. The NitroPress is a compact nitrogen infusion device that costs approximately $100 and uses mini N2 cartridges (available in multipacks for around $20). It accepts any cold brew coffee, infuses with nitrogen, and dispenses through a restrictor plate. The result is close to café quality. The Hatfields and Joes Cold Brew system uses a similar approach at a comparable price point.

Canned nitro cold brew is the simplest home option. Several brands now produce canned nitro cold brew using a widget mechanism similar to the Guinness can widget. Stumptown Coffee Roasters (their Nitro Cold Brew in 11oz cans, approximately $4 to $5 per can) is widely available and consistently high-quality. Rise Brewing Co. produces certified organic nitro cold brew in 7oz and 12oz cans at similar pricing. La Colombe Draft Latte uses a pressurised can mechanism that releases cold-frothed milk on opening, producing a latte-style drink distinct from pure nitro cold brew. All three are available in major supermarkets and online. Canned nitro cold brew delivers the cascading visual and creamy mouthfeel when poured into a glass but is more expensive per serving than making your own cold brew base.

Making the Cold Brew Base

For home nitro cold brew, the cold brew base should be made at a stronger concentration than ready-to-drink cold brew. A 1:4 to 1:5 ratio of ground coffee to water (by weight) works well as a concentrate that can be diluted or used neat for nitro infusion. Use coarsely ground coffee (similar to French press grind) to prevent over-extraction during the long steep and to make filtering easier.

Combine the coffee and cold water in a jar, pitcher, or purpose-built cold brew maker. Stir briefly to ensure all grounds are wet. Cover and refrigerate for 12 to 24 hours. Longer steeps (18 to 24 hours) produce a more concentrated, slightly sweeter brew; shorter steeps (12 hours) are lighter and brighter. Strain through a fine mesh strainer, then through a paper coffee filter or cheesecloth to remove fine sediment. The resulting concentrate keeps in the refrigerator for up to two weeks.

What Does Not Work: The SodaStream Problem

A common question from home brewers is whether a SodaStream or similar CO2 carbonation device can be used to make nitro cold brew. The answer is no, and the reason is fundamental to what nitro cold brew is. SodaStream devices use carbon dioxide, not nitrogen. CO2 dissolves readily in water and produces carbonation: the sensation is fizzy, acidic, and sparkling. This is pleasant in soda water but actively unpleasant in coffee, where it accentuates bitterness and produces a harsh, acidic mouthfeel. The creaminess of nitro cold brew depends specifically on nitrogen's low solubility and the ultra-fine bubble structure that only N2 produces through a restrictor plate. CO2 cannot replicate this. Coffee-carbonation experiments have been tried commercially (including by a few specialty coffee shops) and the product is categorically different from nitro cold brew: it is sparkling coffee, not creamy coffee.


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