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Pot-Brewed Coffee with Raw Sugar and Spices (Café de Olla) Recipe
Pot-Brewed Coffee with Raw Sugar and Spices (Café de Olla) Recipe-February 2024
Feb 12, 2026 2:41 AM

  Today, Mexico's best coffee is ripened and dried along the roadways in the cloud-blanketed highlands of Chiapas and over through Veracruz and Oaxaca. The prime beans are usually roasted a little darker than ours — almost a Viennese roast — and they brew a nice, medium-bodied liquid with some spunk. They tell me it's the second-class beans that get roasted darker, to a mahogany black with a shining sugar coat.

  The steam-powered espresso machines in the city cafeterías extract a trio of ethnic brews: espresso, straight, foamy and Italian; café con leche, mixed with hot milk, French-style (but so common one would mistake it for purely Mexican); or americano, simply diluted with water. The more rural brew leans toward the Spanish, the history books say, but it seems like a Mexican-flavored campfire version to me. Café de olla at its best is pot-boiled in earthenware with molassesy piloncillo sugar and spices like cinnamon, anise or cloves. These days, many traditional city restaurants offer the dark, delicious drink more regularly, served in old-fashioned earthenware mugs at the end of the meal.

  

Ingredients

Makes 4-5 servings

  4-5 ounces piloncillo*, roughly chopped or 1/2 to 2/3 cup packed brown sugar, plus 1 teaspoon molasses

  2 inches cinnamon stick

  A few aniseeds (optional )

  2/3 cup (2 ounces) Viennese-roast coffee, medium to coarse grind

  *Unrefined sugar that is pressed into cone or disk shapes. Also called panela.

  

Step 1

Boiling and steeping: In a noncorrosive pan, combine 1 quart water, the sugar, cinnamon and optional aniseed. Bring slowly to a boil, stirring to melt the sugar. Stir in the coffee, remove from the fire, cover and steep for 5 minutes.

  

Step 2

Straining: Strain the coffee through a fine-mesh sieve into cups or mugs and serve immediately.

  Authentic Mexican: Regional Cooking from the Heart of Mexico

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