Coffee Culture

Cuban Colada Tradition

Cuban coffee is small, strong, sweet, and always shared. From the cafecito to the colada, explore how Cuban coffee culture turned espresso into a communal ritual and cultural symbol.

1 min read

Coffee, Cuban Style

Cuban coffee culture is loud, sweet, strong, and radically communal. In Miami's Little Havana and Cuban communities worldwide, coffee is a social event repeated several times daily, binding families, friends, and neighborhoods together.

The Cafecito

A single shot of espresso brewed with sugar mixed in, producing a thick, sweet shot topped with espumita — a caramel-colored foam.

The espumita technique: Add sugar to a metal cup. Capture the first few drops of espresso. Whip vigorously until a thick, pale paste forms. Pour the remaining espresso over it. The espumita rises to the top as a sweet, creamy foam. This emulsification creates a texture distinctly different from adding sugar to finished espresso.

The Colada

4-6 servings of cafecito in a single cup with small plastic cups. Designed to be shared — one person buys and pours for the group. In Miami workplaces, someone announces "colada!" and coworkers gather. At the ventanita (walk-up window), the Cuban equivalent of an Italian bar counter.

Other Drinks

Cafe con leche: Espresso mixed with hot steamed milk — a breakfast staple with buttered tostada. Cortadito: Cafecito topped with a small amount of steamed milk.

The Moka Pot

Cuba's economic restrictions meant espresso machines were scarce. The stovetop cafetera (moka pot) became the primary brewing device. Cuban brands — Bustelo, Pilon, La Llave — are designed specifically for moka pot brewing and the espumita technique.

Coffee and Identity

Pre-revolution Cuba had proud coffee culture. Post-revolution, coffee was rationed and sometimes mixed with roasted chickpeas. Cuban-Americans preserved and intensified their coffee culture as a link to identity. Sharing a colada says: we are together, we are Cuban, we share what we have.

Miami's Cuban Coffee

Versailles Restaurant's ventanita on Calle Ocho serves an estimated 1,000+ cafecitos daily. Miami Starbucks locations have had to offer cafe cubano — a concession to local culture seen nowhere else in the chain.

Embed on your site — BrewFYI

Add the widget to any webpage using a script tag.

<div data-brewfyi="guide" data-slug="culture-cuban-colada-tradition"></div>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/brewfyi-embed@1/dist/embed.min.js" defer></script>

Embed using a standard iframe — works in any CMS.

<iframe src="https://brewfyi.com/iframe/guide/culture-cuban-colada-tradition/" width="100%" height="480" frameborder="0" loading="lazy" title="BrewFYI guide widget"></iframe>

Paste the URL into WordPress, Medium, or any oEmbed-aware editor.

https://brewfyi.com/guides/culture-cuban-colada-tradition/

Add a badge linking back to BrewFYI.

<a href="https://brewfyi.com/guides/culture-cuban-colada-tradition/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">
  <img src="https://brewfyi.com/badge/site.svg" alt="BrewFYI" height="20">
</a>
Preview: BrewFYI

Use the BrewFYI WordPress plugin shortcode.

[drinkfyi-guide site="brewfyi" slug="culture-cuban-colada-tradition"]

Use as a native HTML custom element in modern browsers.

<brewfyi-guide slug="culture-cuban-colada-tradition" theme="light"></brewfyi-guide>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/brewfyi-embed@1/dist/embed.min.js" defer></script>

Powered by BrewFYI

Docs →