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How to Make Authentic Puerto Rican Coffee: The Complete Guide

woman drinking coffee

Reviewed and refreshed in May 2026 by Nadia Od.

Walk into a kitchen in Old San Juan around six in the morning and the same thing is happening that has been happening for more than a century. Water is heating on the stove. A small cloth sock stretched over a wire ring sits in a pot, dark coffee grounds already inside it. Someone pours the water through, slowly, until the coffee drips dark and almost black. Then they mix it with hot scalded milk and sugar. That is café con leche, and you can make it at home in about ten minutes if you know what you are doing.

Puerto Rican coffee is not a brewing method as much as it is a set of habits. The roast is darker than what most American supermarkets sell. The grind is fine, closer to espresso than drip. It gets brewed strong, sweetened heavily, and most often combined with hot milk. The traditional filter, the colador, is just a cloth sock on a handle. I first ran into it years ago in Brooklyn, when Maria, my upstairs neighbor, brought down a cup one morning because she “made too much coffee this morning.” It was years later that another Maria, in another neighborhood, finally sat me down and showed me the traditional method, slowly, the way her own mother had shown her.

A short history of coffee in Puerto Rico

Coffee arrived on the island in 1736, brought by Spanish settlers from the French Caribbean. The mountainous interior turned out to be exceptional growing country. By the late 1800s, Puerto Rico was one of the top coffee exporters in the world, and beans from places like Yauco and Adjuntas appeared on the tables of the Vatican and European royalty. Hurricanes, U.S. annexation, and the rise of sugar all hit the coffee industry hard in the 20th century. The growers who survived focused on quality. The names that come out of those mountains, Yauco Selecto, Alto Grande, Café Rico, are still some of the most respected in the Caribbean.

The colador method (the traditional way)

The colador de café is a small flannel or cotton sock stretched over a wire ring with a wooden or metal handle. You can buy one online or at any Latin grocery for under $10. If you take care of it (rinse in plain water, no soap, air dry), it lasts for years.

For two cups, you will need:

  • 4 tablespoons of finely ground dark-roast coffee (Yaucono, Café Bustelo, or any dark roast ground espresso-fine)
  • 2 cups (480 ml / about 16 oz) of water
  • Sugar to taste
  • Hot whole milk if you are making café con leche
  1. Heat the water in a small pot until it is steaming but not boiling. Boiling water makes the coffee bitter.
  2. Hold the colador over a second pot or cup. Pour the grounds into the sock.
  3. Pour the hot water through the grounds slowly, in a thin stream, letting it filter all the way through. This takes one or two minutes.
  4. The coffee that comes out should be dark, almost black, and smooth. Pour into small cups.
  5. Sweeten while it is still hot. Most Puerto Rican households use one to two teaspoons per small cup.

This is the base coffee. From here, you decide whether you are drinking café puya (black, no milk, just sugar), cafecito (a tiny strong cup with sugar), or café con leche (mixed with hot milk).

Cafecito: small, strong, sweet

Cafecito is the afternoon ritual cup. It is small, usually two to three ounces (60 to 90 ml), strong, and sweet. It is what gets offered to a guest the minute they walk in the door. The Cuban version of cafecito has a sugar foam on top called espuma, and you will see this in Puerto Rican kitchens too, especially when the coffee is brewed in a stovetop moka pot.

To make the espuma foam: when the moka pot starts to bubble, pour the very first drops of coffee (just a teaspoon or two) into a small cup with two heaping teaspoons of sugar. Whip it with a spoon until it turns pale and creamy. Then pour the rest of the coffee in over the foam. The whole thing turns into a thick, sweet, dark drink.

Café con leche: the morning standard

This is the cup that runs the morning. Made well, it is rich, smooth, and balanced, not as sharp as black coffee and not as flat as a latte.

The proportions matter. The traditional ratio is roughly one part strong brewed coffee to two parts hot milk. Some people prefer it equal parts. Whole milk is standard. Skim makes a thinner, less satisfying cup.

  1. Brew the colador coffee as described above, or use a moka pot for a more concentrated version.
  2. Heat the milk in a separate small pot until it is steaming, just below a boil. You want it scalded, not boiled. A skin on top is a sign you went a bit far.
  3. Pour about a third of a cup of strong coffee into a mug.
  4. Add the hot milk on top, about two-thirds of a cup.
  5. Stir in sugar to taste. One or two teaspoons is normal.

Some families add a pinch of salt to the brewing grounds. Some add a small piece of cinnamon stick or a strip of orange peel to the water. These are family-level variations, not strict rules.

If you do not have a colador

The closest substitutes, in order of preference:

  • Stovetop moka pot. A 3-cup Bialetti makes a strong, dark base coffee that is excellent for café con leche or cafecito. This is what most Puerto Rican kitchens use today, alongside or instead of the traditional colador.
  • French press. Use a fine grind and a 1:12 ratio (about 30 g of coffee to 360 ml of water). Press at four minutes. The body is not quite the same, but the strength is close.
  • AeroPress. Works well with a fine grind, double the coffee, and slow plunge. Concentrated and smooth.
  • Drip coffee maker. Use twice as much coffee as you normally would, ground fine. Not traditional, but workable.

Best Puerto Rican coffee brands

If you want the real thing, look for beans grown on the island. The major names:

  • Yaucono. The everyday brand. Dark roast, finely ground, sold in foil bricks. This is what you find in most Puerto Rican kitchens. Available in U.S. Latin grocery sections.
  • Café Crema. Smoother than Yaucono, slightly less bitter, also widely available.
  • Alto Grande. A premium Yauco-grown bean, served to popes and royalty historically. Worth seeking out for a single-origin cup.
  • Yauco Selecto. Another premium estate brand from the Yauco region, prized for balance and chocolate notes.
  • Café Rico. Older island brand, dark roast, sentimental favorite for many Puerto Rican families.

For more on choosing roasts in general, see our guide to coffee roast levels.

Is Café Bustelo Puerto Rican coffee?

No, but Puerto Ricans drink a lot of it. Café Bustelo started as a Cuban-style brand in New York in the 1920s. It is now owned by J.M. Smucker and produced in Florida and New Jersey, not Puerto Rico. The roast and grind are very similar to traditional Puerto Rican brands, which is why it works perfectly for café con leche and cafecito. If you cannot find Yaucono, Bustelo is a fine substitute. Just know that you are drinking Cuban-style coffee made in the U.S., not coffee grown on the island.

Frequently asked questions

Does Puerto Rico grow coffee?

Yes. The main growing regions are in the western mountains: Yauco, Adjuntas, Lares, Maricao, and Utuado. Most Puerto Rican coffee is high-altitude Arabica, hand-picked, and processed on the island. Production is small by global standards but quality is high.

What is the difference between cafecito and café con leche?

Cafecito is small, strong, and sweet, served black (or with a foam of whipped sugar on top). Café con leche is brewed coffee combined with hot milk and sugar, served in a normal-sized mug. Cafecito is an afternoon or after-meal drink. Café con leche is the morning standard.

Do Puerto Ricans really put cheese in their coffee?

Some do. The tradition is to dip a piece of queso de papa (a mild yellow cheese) or fresh white cheese into hot café con leche so it softens. It is a breakfast or snack thing, not something you find at restaurants. The salty cheese against the sweet milky coffee is excellent if you have never tried it.

How fine should I grind the coffee?

Fine, closer to espresso than drip. The colador can handle a fine grind because the cloth filters out fines that paper would let through. If you are using a moka pot, the grind should be fine but not powdery.

How do I clean a coffee sock?

Rinse with hot water immediately after use, no soap. Soap will leave a residue that you taste in the next cup. Once a week, boil the sock in water for a few minutes to deep clean. Air dry between uses. Replace every six months to a year depending on how often you use it.

Where can I buy a colador in the U.S.?

Latin grocery stores carry them, as do many U.S. supermarkets in neighborhoods with Caribbean populations. They are also widely available online for $5 to $15. Look for the brand name “Colador de Café” or just “coffee sock.”

Make it once on a slow morning. Heat the water, set up the colador, pour slowly, scald the milk, sweeten while it is still hot. The whole thing takes ten minutes and tastes like nothing else.

Written by

Senior Writer, Coffee Culture

Nadia Od covers coffee culture, regional traditions, and café life for TalkAboutCoffee. Originally from Odessa, she spent years in New York before returning to Eastern Europe, and her writing draws on the cafés, neighborhoods, and traditions she encountered along the way.