Home-brew your coffee and your booze: Keurig at work on single-serve alcohol machine - Action News
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Home-brew your coffee and your booze: Keurig at work on single-serve alcohol machine

Keurig, the maker of the ubiquitous single-cup coffee maker, is now working on an at-home booze machine. The plan is for it to serve up everything from single servings of beer and spirits to cocktails and mixers.

Device aims to serve up everything from beer to cocktails

Keurig hopes to win customers over with a new concept: a single-serve machine that provides cocktails and beer instead of coffee. (Pixabay.com)

Imagine popping a single-serve pod into your Keurig machine and ta-dah! out pours a martini.

The idea is not far-fetched. Keurig Green Mountain the manufacturerof the popularsingle-cup coffee maker is now working on an at-home booze machine.

If all goes according to plan, it would be like having a personal bartender in your home, offering everything from single servings of beer and spirits to cocktails and mixers.

For the project, U.S.-based Keurig has teamed up with Anheuser-Busch InBev, a multinational beverage and brewing company.

"We can't wait to get started," says CEO of the joint venture, Nathaniel Davis, in a statement.

There's no word yet on how exactly the machine will work and if customers will have to buy boxes of beer or cocktail pods to make the system work. Keurig's coffee maker requires that customers insert a coffee-filled plastic pod to makeone cup.

No word yet if Keurig's planned single-serve at-home booze machine will require plastic pods to brew drinks like cocktails. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

For now, all that the partnering companies would reveal is that the alcohol drink machine will build on Keurig's Koldtechnology.

Keurig launched its Koldat-home soda-making machine in late 2015. It was a complete bust with consumers, and in less than a yearit was yanked from the market.

When it debuted, Keurig Koldretailed for a whopping $369.99 US,more than double the price of most Keurig coffee makers. A pack of four Coke pods typically cost about $5 US that's $1.25 per drink.

Critics claimed the machine was ridiculously expensive, slow and less convenient than opening a can of pop.

"As a consumer product, it's baffling,"concluded the technology publication Wired in 2015.

Keurig Kold a device that used flavour pods to serve up cold drinks was a flop with customers. (Keurig Green Mountain)

"I thought that was a horrible strategy," consumer behaviour expert Robert Carter says about the Koldmachine.

He believesan alcoholdrink makerwill also be a failure. Keurig's single-serve coffee systemappeals to consumers because it's more convenient than brewing an entire pot, says Carter, who is with NPDGroup in Toronto.

But he points out that people can already buy allsorts of ready-to-drink alcoholic beverages from craft beers to pre-mixed cocktails and keep them handy in their fridge.

"I don't think they're solving a problem that exists," says Carter. "They'rejustcreating more work for something that's already convenient."

He believes Keurig is trying to expand its market share because sales of its coffee machines and pods have flat-lined in North America.

But Carter saysa better strategy would be for the company to try to grow its hot drinkofferings by adding more innovative products such as specialty coffees.

"Stick to what you know," he says.

Last year, SodaStream announced the Beer Bar, which combines sparkling water and a beer concentrate. (SodaStream)

Keurig isn't the only one trying to cash in on the at-home boozemarket.

Last year, SodaStream announced a new home beer system, the Beer Bar. According to the Israeli drinks company, the device "enables consumers to concoct crafted beer in seconds" by adding a light beer concentrate called Blondie to sparkling water.

Keurig was bought by the privately held Germany conglomerateJAB Holding in 2015, but is still based in Waterbury, Vt.At the time of the takeover, Keurig was suffering from slowing sales and itsstock hadfallen nearly 61 per cent since the beginning of the year.