10 Weirdest Coffee Recipes From Around the World You Need to Try at Least Once in Your Life
Categories: Food and Drinks
By Pictolic https://mail.pictolic.com/article/10-weirdest-coffee-recipes-from-around-the-world-you-need-to-try-at-least-once-in-your-life.htmlThe army of coffee lovers around the world is quite impressive, recipes for this aromatic drink are passed from mouth to mouth, and each coffee lover has their own secrets for preparing the coveted cup of coffee, which they are in no hurry to share.
Our review features 10 coffee recipes from around the world, many of which may seem quite strange.
Cà phê trung, or Vietnamese egg coffee, is served in cafes all over Hanoi. First, egg yolk and condensed milk are whisked until they form a thick, creamy mixture, then bitter Vietnamese coffee is poured on top, allowing it to sink through the mixture. It tastes like a very smooth, custard-like coffee.
Chefs at one of Taiwan's most popular coffee chains, 85°C Bakery Cafe, serve sea salt coffee, which has become the best-selling drink since its introduction in December 2008. The unusual brew was inspired by the Taiwanese habit of sprinkling salt on fruit (usually pineapple and watermelon). It's often paired with corn-topped iced desserts and bread slathered in a sweet glaze with bits of pork.
Although the mixture of tonic and coffee may seem strange, it has become very popular around the world among people who need a quick pick-me-up. It is very simple to make - espresso is poured into a glass with tonic and ice.
In Asia, people often add oil (both butter and sunflower) to coffee. The Bulletproof Coffee company claims that you can drink a cup of coffee instead of your usual breakfast and lose weight. The secret is simple - you need to add both types of oil to your coffee. Bulletproof Coffee will provide a person with more energy than regular coffee.
Kaffeost is a Swedish tradition of adding cheese to coffee or drinking coffee with cheese. The coffee is usually topped with Lappish cheese, which is made in Finland and northern Sweden from cow, goat or reindeer milk.
Guillermo - coffee with lime - can be served both hot and cold. There is also another recipe for this coffee - espresso romano with the addition of fresh lemon zest. But this drink is not for everyone, since it has an extremely high acid content.
Can science make great coffee? Nate Armbrust has a new recipe for cold brew coffee with tiny bubbles that give it a rich, creamy flavor. It's made by pumping nitrogen into the coffee.
This coffee drinking ritual is almost unknown anywhere in the world, but is very popular in Australia. A regular hot coffee is placed in front of a person. Then two ends of a Tim Tam (a chocolate cookie with cream filling) are bitten. Then one end of the cookie is dipped into a cup of coffee and the drink is sucked into the person, like a straw, right through the cream.
More than 20 years ago, Quentin Tarantino's classic film Pulp Fiction was released. Its main character, Vincent Vega (played by John Travolta), loved vanilla Coca-Cola. That's how the coffee drink "Vincent Vega" got its name, which consists of a mixture of Coca-Cola, espresso coffee, vanilla syrup and ice.
Houndstoot Coffee in Austin, Texas serves an unusual combination: two espressos and two pints of beer. They are supposed to be drunk mixed.
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