What Is Greek Coffee? Briki Brewing, Sugar Levels & Greek Frappé Guide

Greek coffee is finely ground coffee boiled with water (and optional sugar) in a small long-handled pot called a briki, then poured unfiltered into a demitasse so the grounds settle at the bottom and a thick foam called kaymaki sits on top. It’s similar in method to Turkish coffee but distinguished by its specific roast, grind, and ordering ritual built around four named sweetness levels. Greek coffee is the country’s national drink — and the foundation of a coffee culture that sustains hours-long social rituals. Greeks drink it slowly, letting the grounds settle, often pairing it with a glass of cold water and a piece of loukoumi (Turkish delight). On a hot day, the same beans get blended into a Greek frappé, the iced foam-topped instant-coffee drink invented by accident at the 1957 Thessaloniki International Fair. ...

April 26, 2026 · 10 min · Barista At Home

Coffee Frappe Recipe: How to Make a Frappe at Home (3 Methods)

A coffee frappe is an iced coffee drink made by blending or shaking coffee with ice and milk until cold and frothy. The classic Greek version uses instant coffee, water, and sugar shaken vigorously until foamy. The home barista version uses a double espresso shot instead — producing a richer, more complex flavor that instant coffee cannot match. There are three distinct frappes: the Greek original (instant coffee), the espresso frappe (home barista version), and the blended frappuccino style (ice cream or thick milk, blended smooth). All three are covered below. ...

April 22, 2026 · 7 min · Barista At Home