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Spicy Mexican Coffee or Mexican Hot Chocolate

Spicy Mexican Coffee or Mexican Hot Chocolate
Home » Mexican food memories » Spicy Mexican Coffee or Mexican Hot Chocolate

This wonderful combination of chocolate, coffee, cinnamon, vanilla and chile spice is known as a Mocha Chile Coffee (aka Spicy Mexican Coffee). Best known as a warming drink in Winter, often with a shot of brandy, this combination of Mexican ingredients can also be turned into a hot chocolate drink if you don’t want the caffeine or the alcohol.

Mexican Mocha Spiced Coffee
Mexican Mocha Spiced Coffee

Jump to: RECIPE | Oaxacan Coffee | Mexican Hot Chocolate | Which Chile Peppers to Use? | Low Carb Substitutions

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How Spicy is Mexican Coffee or Mexican Hot Chocolate

When I first heard that Starbucks was offering a Chile Mocha Coffee, I rushed down to try one out, only to be sorely disappointed.  No heat!  

I was anticipating a spicy, cinnamon, chocolaty rich coffee topped with a fluffy whipped cream with soft peaks .  I asked the barista why I couldn’t taste any spice in my coffee and they said really there was just a little spice on the top, but mostly it was a coffee mocha.  Harrumph!

To the drawing board I went to try and meet my flavor expectations. After a lot of trial and error I came up with the recipe below for a blend that works with coffee or as a Mexican hot chocolate drink and I’m quite pleased with it.

It’s easy to customize to your own preference of heat and sweetness, and it is infinitely better than what you can buy pre-made.

Ingredients and Substitutions

Oaxacan Coffee/Mexican Coffee

The best Mexican coffee I’ve ever had was on a trip to Oaxaca, Mexico. Sadly, I won’t be going back any time soon, so I tried to copy it below. Most of the coffee I had in Mexico didn’t include much sugar but if you are used to Starbucks, you’ll probably want to add more sugar.

While not a “mocha” coffee, this Oaxacan coffee did have rich notes of cinnamon and orange.

Mexican coffee with cinnamon sticks as stir sticks.
Mexican coffee

Here are the key ingredients to play around with, whether you’re making a mocha or a Oaxacan coffee:

  • Chocolate
  • Cinnamon
  • Sugar
  • Coffee
  • Powdered chile peppers
  • Vanilla
  • Orange zest

The ratios are up to you and your preferences. I like a pretty spicy pepper and enough orange zest that the flavor comes through the more robust chocolate.

You can start with my recipe below and then customize.

Mexican Hot Chocolate

An “authentic” Mexican hot chocolate would involve heating milk and Mexican chocolate in a pot and vigorously beating the chocolate with a wooden molinillo until the chocolate was fully dissolved.

A Mexican molinillo used for whipping chocolate and several squares of Mexican chocolate.
Molinillo and Mexican chocolate

The recipe below uses powdered ingredients for a mocha-chile blend that you can keep in your pantry and use when you want a spicy, rich, complex mocha coffee or hot chocolate.

I have added it to just plain hot water and also to steamed milk (coconut or almond milk works well also). Whipped cream on top is always a nice option, especially for celebrations.

For an everyday drink to take the chill off, I add 2 teaspoons of the mocha-chile powder blend, a little more sugar and about 6 ounces of steaming hot water and then top it off with a little heavy cream.

In fact I’m having one right now as we speak as I just came in from Spring gardening.

Best Chile Peppers to Use

The powdered chile pepper is the most important variable to get right. It needs to be spicy enough to compete with the rich flavor of cocoa, yet not be overpowering.

If you are a true chile-head you’ll want to add the hotter chile powders like serrano or habanero.

If you want more complexity with a smoky chile powder, go for a chipotle powder or an Ancho powder.

You’ll need to be careful using a smoked chile powder. Smoked peppers don’t work with everything.

For example smoked peppers were great in Mexican moles and in a drink syrup for Old Fashions, but they did not work well at all in a Mexican ceviche. That required the brighter spice of chile peppers that were not smoked ( i.e., aji, habanero, serranos).

I tried smoked and unsmoked peppers in the Mexican coffee. In the end I preferred a combination of both. You can modify the homemade spice blend recipe below to your own tastes.

Variety of chile peppers that would work for a salsa garden
Variety of chile peppers that would work for a salsa garden

Can this Drink be Low Carb?

Cocoa and chile spice are both low carb ingredients, but the sugar will have to be a sugar substitute if you want to make it a low carb beverage. Either way, the chile spice and rich cocoa powder should shine through as the star ingredients.

Many (most) recipes can be modified to be low sugar if you are amenable to sugar substitutes. Lowering the sugar content of recipes is the most effective way to reach a low carb lifestyle in my experience.

Truvia is my choice of a sugar substitute, but there are alternatives. Check out this detailed post on sugar alternatives for a deeper dive into the pros and cons.

A variety of different sugar sources laid out on a cutting board.

The 100% cocoa powder, the chile spice, the cinnamon, the vanilla, the coffee or almond milk and the whipped cream are all low carb ingredients.

Just know that low carb does not necessarily equal low calorie. The whipped cream may take you over your calorie goals if you have too many of this wonderful concoction.

**Tip: a shot of brandy added to the Mocha Hot Chocolate takes the chill off of cold Winter nights!

Can you use this blend to make iced coffee?

Yes, you can but it will take heating it up first with the coffee, water or milk to dissolve the sugar and chocolate and spices together. After it cools, you can add ice and enjoy.

If you enjoy all types of Mexican food, check out this category of ALL Mexican recipes, where you will find over 40 Mexican recipes, from casual, to low carb, to fancy.

Mexican Mocha Coffee/Hot Chocolate

Mexican Mocha Spiced Coffee
This rich, spicy Winter drink will keep you warm and cozy during the chilly Fall or Winter months. There is a recipe for the DIY spice mix in the notes that is easy to customize.
5 from 3 votes
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 0 minutes
Servings 10
Calories 34

Equipment

Ingredients

The Powdered Cocoa-Spice Blend

  • cup 100% cocoa powder
  • cup sugar or sugar substitute such as Truvia
  • 1 ¼ teaspoons chipotle powder
  • ¼ – ½ teaspoon hot pepper powder cayenne, aji, habanero, etc. (not smoked)
  • ½ teaspoon kosher salt
  • ¾ teaspoon vanilla powder if available
  • ½ teaspoon orange zest dried
  • 1 ¼ teaspoons cinnamon

For the Coffee or Hot Chocolate

  • 6 ounces hot coffee, hot water, or hot milk use hot water or hot milk for the hot chocolate (or hot almond milk)
  • 2 teaspoons cocoa-spice blend
  • 2 teaspoons sugar or sugar substitute such as Truvia optional for coffee, but hot chocolate needs a little more
  • ½ cup whipped cream optional

Instructions
 

  • Add all 8 cocoa-chile dry ingredients to a bowl or a covered tupperware type of container. Stir together thoroughly or cover and shake if in covered container. Set aside in your preferred covered container for future use.
    1/3 cup 100% cocoa powder, 1 1/4 teaspoons chipotle powder, 1/4 – 1/2 teaspoon hot pepper powder, 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt, 3/4 teaspoon vanilla powder, 1/2 teaspoon orange zest, 1 1/4 teaspoons cinnamon, 1/3 cup sugar
  • Make coffee or heat up water or milk to boiling. Add 2 teaspoons of cocoa-spice blend to the hot liquid and 2 teaspoons or more sugar or sugar substitute such as Truvia if making hot chocolate. Stir or whisk until dissolved.
    6 ounces hot coffee, hot water, or hot milk, 2 teaspoons cocoa-spice blend, 2 teaspoons sugar or sugar substitute such as Truvia
  • Add cream or serve topped with whipped cream if desired, sprinkled with chocolate shavings or cinnamon.
    1/2 cup whipped cream

Notes

**Notes:
  1. The nutritional/calorie analysis is only for 1 serving of the spice blend. It does not include any additional sugar or cream that you add to the drink.
  2. If you want to make this drink low carb, you will need to switch out the sugar with a sugar alternative.  Truvia is my choice of a sugar substitute, but there are other options. Check out this detailed post on sugar alternatives for a deeper dive into the pros and cons.
 
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If you enjoy all types of Mexican food, check out this category of ALL Mexican recipes, where you will find over 40 Mexican recipes, from casual, to low carb, to fancy.

Nutrition

Calories: 34kcalCarbohydrates: 9gProtein: 1gFat: 0.5gSaturated Fat: 0.2gPolyunsaturated Fat: 0.03gMonounsaturated Fat: 0.1gSodium: 122mgPotassium: 50mgFiber: 1gSugar: 7gVitamin A: 75IUVitamin C: 0.1mgCalcium: 8mgIron: 0.5mg
Did you make this recipe?If you tried this recipe, please give it a star rating! To do this, just click on the stars above. Comments are always helpful also and I respond to all of them (except rude ones)

Online Diet/Health Coaching:

Although I am not currently taking clients for diet & health coaching, I was a coach for many years with the online service called coach.me. It is a great platform for all kinds of coaching – anything from specific diets, writing a blog, getting up early, or getting rid of that pesky procrastination.  

There are some wonderful coaches and the testimonials will tell you what you need to know.  Contact me at [email protected] to get a referral to some of the tested, experienced online coaches on Coach.me.

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