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Café Miel Latte — Easy Recipe at Home

Updated: 2/26/2026

cafe miel home recipe

If you’ve never made a Café Miel at home, you’re about to fix that. It’s one of those drinks that sounds fancy — and tastes fancy — but comes together in about five minutes with ingredients you probably already have.

“Miel” is the French (and Spanish) word for honey, so Café Miel translates simply to “coffee with honey.” In Spain it’s Café con Miel. Either way: espresso or strong coffee, steamed milk, honey, and cinnamon. No syrups, no artificial flavoring, no trip to Starbucks required.

Below you’ll find two full recipes — an espresso version and a drip coffee version — plus an iced variation, a Starbucks copycat breakdown, and how to make vanilla-infused honey if you want to take it further. New to espresso drinks? Our complete guide to lattes is a good starting point.

cafe miel

Cafe' Miel (Honey Cinnamon) Latte Recipe (Espresso Version)

The Honey Cinnamon Latte, or Café Miel, is a cozy, naturally sweetened twist on the classic latte. It blends bold espresso with warm milk, real honey, and a dash of cinnamon for a drink that feels both comforting and elevated.
Servings 1

Ingredients
  

  • 2 Oz Espresso
  • 8 Oz Milk
  • 1 Tbsp Honey
  • 1/4 teaspoon Ground Cinnamon
  • Optional: A splash of vanilla extract

Instructions
 

  • Add honey and cinnamon to the bottom of your mug.
    cup with honey and cinnamon at the bottom
  • Pull espresso shots directly over the honey. Stir until dissolved.
  • Steam milk to ~150°F. Froth to your preferred texture.
  • Pour steamed milk over espresso, holding back foam with a spoon.
  • Spoon foam on top. Dust with cinnamon. Serve immediately.
    finished cafe miel

Notes

A Few Notes on Ingredients

  • Honey: Raw, unfiltered gives the most complex flavor. Wildflower, orange blossom, or buckwheat all work — each gives a different character. Adjust quantity to taste; 1 tbsp is a good start.
  • Milk: Whole milk for best froth and texture. Oat milk is the closest non-dairy option. Almond milk works but produces lighter foam.
  • Cinnamon: Mix it in with the honey before the espresso hits — this helps it bloom and integrate rather than float on top. If you love cinnamon in coffee, our Cinnamon Dolce Latte is worth bookmarking too.
  • Espresso: Medium roast works best. Very dark roasts can overpower the honey. If your espresso tastes bitter alone, the honey won't fix it — brush up on how espresso differs from regular coffee if you're still dialing things in.
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

Frothing the Milk for Café Miel

The steamed milk is what makes a Café Miel feel like a café drink rather than just coffee with honey stirred in. You want it warm, slightly textured, and smooth — not bubbly or stiff. The honey and cinnamon sit better on a velvety pour than on a foamy one.

  • Steam wand: Submerge just below the surface and keep it moving. Heat to 150°F and stop — this drink is delicate and overheated milk will flatten the honey's flavor.
  • Electric milk frother: The easiest option for home. Heat your milk to around 130–140°F first, then froth for 20–30 seconds. You'll get a smooth, lightly textured pour that works perfectly here. If you don't have one yet, we put together a guide to the best milk frothers for home use — there are solid picks under $15 that are ideal for drinks like this.
  • French press or jar: Heat the milk, pour it in, and pump or shake until smooth. Less precise but it works fine for a cozy morning drink where perfection isn't the point.

One tip specific to Café Miel: stir the honey into the espresso before adding the milk. Hot espresso dissolves honey much faster than warm milk does — you'll avoid that clump of honey sitting at the bottom of the cup.

cafe miel - coffee brewer version recipe

Café Miel — Drip Coffee Version (Serves 2–3)

The original Café Miel — the traditional Spanish and French version — was made with strong brewed coffee, not espresso. This saucepan method serves 2–3 and is the easiest version to make. If you want to get the most out of your drip coffee as a base, that guide will help.

Ingredients
  

  • 2 cups freshly brewed drip coffee
  • ½ cup whole milk or heavy cream
  • 3–4 tbsp honey
  • ¼ tsp ground cinnamon
  • Dash ground nutmeg
  • Optional: ⅛ tsp vanilla extract

Instructions
 

  • Combine all ingredients in a small saucepan.
  • Warm over low heat, whisking until honey fully dissolves. Do not boil.
  • Once steaming and fragrant, remove from heat.
  • Pour into mugs. Garnish with a cinnamon stick or pinch of nutmeg.
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

How to Make It Without an Espresso Machine

espresso machine alternatives
  • Moka Pot: The closest thing to real espresso without a machine. Strong, concentrated, ~1–2 oz per brew. Best option for this recipe.
  • AeroPress: Use fine grind, less water, inverted method. Clean and bright — plays well with honey.
  • Strong French Press or Drip: Double your coffee ratio (~1:8 instead of 1:15). No crema but sufficient strength.
  • Instant Espresso Powder: Medaglia d’Oro or Café Bustelo dissolved in 2 oz hot water. Not fresh-pulled, but perfectly acceptable.

Optional Upgrade: Vanilla-Infused Honey

vanilla and honey extract

This is worth doing if you plan to make Café Miel regularly. You make a batch once and it lasts for months. The vanilla adds creamier, more complex sweetness — without the harsh alcohol note extract sometimes carries. If you’re generally exploring ways to add natural sweetness to coffee without syrup, that guide covers a lot of ground.

How to Make It

  1. Split 1–2 vanilla beans lengthwise and scrape out the seeds.
  2. Add seeds and pods to a small saucepan with 8–10 oz of honey.
  3. Warm over low heat — keep under 140°F / 60°C. Never exceed 160°F.
  4. Stir gently until seeds are evenly distributed and honey thins slightly.
  5. Remove from heat, cool, remove pods, transfer to a jar.

Iced Café Miel

iced miel latte

Just as good as the hot version — and if you enjoy any iced espresso drink, this will be a quick favourite. The key: dissolve honey into hot espresso before adding ice, or it sinks and clumps at the bottom.

  1. Pull espresso over honey + cinnamon. Stir until dissolved.
  2. Let cool 1–2 minutes (or pour over 1–2 ice cubes to chill faster).
  3. Fill a tall glass with ice.
  4. Pour cold milk over ice, then add the espresso mixture.
  5. Top with cold foam or a cinnamon dusting.

Starbucks Café Miel Copycat

espresso shot

As a former barista, I can tell you that a lot of drinks don’t make the menu, but, can still be made.  Cafe’ Miel is truly a secret menu item.

Starbucks uses honey & flavored simple syrup. The homemade version uses local  honey, which gives you a rounder, more natural sweetness that syrup can’t replicate.

Starbucks Homemade
Sweetener Honey blend syrup Real honey
Cinnamon Cinnamon dolce topping Ground cinnamon
Milk 2% or your choice Whole milk (recommended)
Cost per drink ~$6–7 ~$0.80–1.20
Customizable Limited Fully
💡 Into making Starbucks-inspired drinks at home? Try our Brown Sugar Shaken Espresso — no machine needed and just as satisfying.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Café Miel taste like?
Warm, subtly sweet, and lightly spiced. The honey gives it a natural sweetness that's rounder and less sharp than sugar. The cinnamon adds gentle warmth without dominating. Overall it tastes like a latte with character — more complex than vanilla, less sweet than caramel.
Can I make Café Miel without an espresso machine?
Yes — see the drip coffee version above for the traditional saucepan method. A moka pot or AeroPress are your best options for a concentrated base. Strong drip or French press works too if you double your coffee ratio.
What kind of honey is best for Café Miel?
Raw, unfiltered honey gives the most pronounced flavor. Wildflower and clover are the most neutral and widely available. For something more interesting, try orange blossom (light and floral) or buckwheat (bold, almost malty). Use a honey you'd eat on its own — the quality shows in the cup.
Is Café Miel the same as a honey latte?
Nearly — the difference is cinnamon. A honey latte is espresso, milk, and honey. Café Miel adds cinnamon (sometimes nutmeg or vanilla) which gives it more complexity and warmth. If you've had a honey latte and liked it, you'll like Café Miel more.
Does Starbucks make a Café Miel?
Starbucks has carried a Honey Latte on their seasonal menu, and baristas can often build a version off-menu on request. Their version uses a honey blend syrup rather than real honey. The homemade version uses actual honey, which produces a rounder and more natural sweetness.
Can I make an iced Café Miel?
Yes — and it's excellent. The key step is dissolving the honey into the hot espresso before adding ice, otherwise it sinks and clumps at the bottom. Pull your espresso over the honey and cinnamon, stir until dissolved, then pour over ice and add cold milk or cold foam.
What's the difference between Café Miel and Café con Miel?
Same drink, different languages. "Miel" means honey in both French and Spanish, so Café Miel is the French name and Café con Miel is the Spanish name. The Spanish version is traditionally prepared with brewed coffee rather than espresso, but the core ingredients — coffee, milk, honey, and cinnamon — are identical.

Rating

Prep Time: 5 Minutes

Servings: 1

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☕ Quick Takeaway

  • Also known asCafé con Miel (Spanish) or Latte Miel
  • 4 ingredientsEspresso, milk, honey, cinnamon
  • Naturally sweetNo syrups or artificial flavoring
  • No machine?Moka pot, AeroPress, drip — all work fine
  • Ready in5 minutes
Nick Puffer — Coffee Slang
Written by Nick Puffer

Former barista. Lifelong coffee obsessive. I started Coffee Slang to cut through the noise and share what actually matters — good recipes, honest gear takes, and a genuine love for the craft.

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