Cocktail: Infusion Methods — Cold vs. Hot Botanical Extraction

Category: technique-process Updated: 2026-03-11

Cold spirit infusion at 20°C requires 12–72 hours. Sous vide at 60°C achieves equivalent extraction in 1–2 hours — Arrhenius acceleration of ~16× per 40°C increase. Higher temperatures extract more tannins and bitter compounds.

Key Data Points
MeasureValueUnitNotes
Cold infusion time (20°C)12–72hoursDelicate botanicals (herbs, citrus peel): 12–24 hr; seeds/bark/roots: 48–72 hr
Sous vide infusion time (60°C)1–2hoursVacuum-sealed bag submerged in 60°C water bath; significantly accelerated
Arrhenius acceleration per 10°C~2×extraction rate multiplierRule of thumb from Arrhenius equation; exact factor varies by compound
Tannin extraction (hot vs cold)3–5×more tannins at 60°CHigh-temp extraction pulls more tannins (astringency) from seeds, bark, skins
Volatile aromatic retention (cold)90–95% retentionCold infusion preserves volatile aromatics that would evaporate at high temp
ABV change during infusion~0–3% ABV dropBotanicals absorb some ethanol; minimal in practice with proper ratios
Sous vide infusion temp (spirits)55–65°CBelow ethanol boiling point (78.4°C); higher temps risk off-flavors from cooked aromatics
Optimal cold infusion temp (vodka base)18–22°CRoom temperature; refrigerator (4°C) significantly slows extraction

Spirit infusion is the process of extracting flavor compounds from botanicals into alcohol using the spirit as a solvent. The two primary variables are temperature and time: higher temperature dramatically accelerates extraction but alters compound selectivity. Understanding the chemistry of extraction allows cocktail makers to choose the method that produces the specific flavor profile they want.

Infusion Methods Compared

MethodTemperatureTimeClarityCompound Classes ExtractedAromatic RetentionBest For
Cold infusionRoom temp (20°C)12–72 hrHighEsters, terpenes, mild polyphenolsVery high (90–95%)Delicate herbs, citrus, cucumber
Refrigerator cold4°C48–96 hrHighEsters, terpenes (less than room temp)Very highExtended infusion without ABV loss
Hot (stovetop)70–80°C15–45 minMedium-lowPolyphenols, tannins, resinsMedium (volatile loss)Spices, bark, dried botanicals
Sous vide55–65°C1–3 hrHighPolyphenols, tannins, terpenesHigh (sealed bag)Precise, repeatable; all botanicals
Rapid (iSi/ISI)Room temp + CO₂5–15 minHighSurface aromatics, light terpenesHighQuick cocktail bar service
UltrasonicRoom temp15–30 minMediumDisrupts cell walls for extractionHighCommercial/advanced; expensive equipment

Compound Selectivity by Temperature

The reason temperature matters beyond just speed: different chemical classes have different activation energies. At cold temperatures, low-activation-energy compounds (volatile terpenes, esters) extract preferentially. At elevated temperatures, higher-activation-energy compounds (tannins, resins, polysaccharides) become accessible.

Practical example: cold-infusing jalapeño in vodka (24 hours, room temp) produces a bright, fruity pepper flavor with moderate heat. Hot-infusing jalapeño (sous vide, 60°C, 1 hour) produces a duller heat with more bitterness — the high-temperature extraction pulls additional chlorophyll, tannins, and bitter compounds from the pepper’s cell walls.

Alcohol Concentration Effect

Higher ABV spirits extract aromatic compounds more efficiently than lower ABV spirits, because ethanol is a superior solvent for lipophilic (fat-like) aromatic compounds. This is why overproof (57%+ ABV) spirits are often preferred as infusion bases — they extract more aromatic compounds from botanicals in less time, then can be diluted to drinking strength after infusion. Gin distillers use this principle: distilling with botanicals at high proof (70–80% ABV), then diluting to 40–47% for bottling.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Arrhenius principle and how does it apply to cocktail infusions?

The Arrhenius equation describes how reaction rates (including extraction rates) increase with temperature. For most compound extraction processes, a 10°C temperature increase roughly doubles the reaction rate. Applied to cocktail infusions: going from 20°C (room temp) to 60°C (sous vide) increases extraction rate by approximately 2^4 = 16×. This is why 2 hours at 60°C can match 24–32 hours at 20°C.

Does hot infusion produce a different flavor than cold infusion?

Yes, measurably so. Hot infusion extracts more polar compounds including tannins (from seeds, bark, skins) and some bitter compounds that cold infusion leaves behind. Cold infusion better preserves volatile aromatic compounds that would evaporate or degrade at elevated temperatures. Cold-infused spirits often have a brighter, more delicate aroma; hot-infused spirits have more body and sometimes more bitterness.

What temperature should I use for sous vide spirit infusion?

55–65°C is the optimal range. Below 55°C, acceleration is modest and you lose much of the speed advantage. Above 65°C, you approach ethanol's boiling point (78.4°C), risking evaporation of volatile aromatics and off-flavors from 'cooking' the botanicals. 60°C is the standard recommended temperature for spirit infusions in vacuum-sealed bags.

What botanicals work best with cold infusion?

Delicate aromatics that would be degraded by heat: fresh citrus peel (12–24 hours), fresh herbs like tarragon, chervil, or lemon verbena (6–12 hours), cucumber (4–8 hours), and floral ingredients like hibiscus or rose (4–12 hours). Hardy botanicals requiring more extraction — cacao nibs, coffee beans, vanilla, bark — benefit from either longer cold infusion (48–72 hours) or hot infusion for faster results.

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