Vietnamese Iced Coffee (Cà Phê Sữa Đá): The Bold, Sweet Caffeine Hit You Need
Contents
Vietnamese iced coffee hits different.
That first sip—strong, sweet, ice-cold—wakes you up faster than any trendy cold brew ever could.
But here’s what stops most people: they think you need special skills or hard-to-find equipment.
You don’t.
I’m going to show you exactly how to make authentic Vietnamese iced coffee at home in about 10 minutes, using a simple Vietnamese phin filter and ingredients you can grab at any Asian grocery store.
No fancy machines. No complicated techniques. Just bold coffee, sweetened condensed milk, and ice.
Let’s get into it.
KEY INFO
Prep time: 3–5 minutes
Brew time: 4–7 minutes
Total time: 10–12 minutes
Servings: 1 tall glass (10–14 oz)
Difficulty: Easy
Dietary tags: Vegetarian (not vegan due to condensed milk), contains dairy and high caffeine
EQUIPMENT NEEDED
Here’s what you actually need:
- Vietnamese phin filter (the metal drip brewer—this is non-negotiable for authentic flavor)
- Kettle or pot to heat water
- Heatproof glass (8–10 oz) for brewing
- Tall serving glass (10–14 oz) for the final drink
- Measuring spoons
- Long spoon or stirrer
Simple alternatives:
No phin filter? Use a moka pot or pull double espresso shots and mix with condensed milk and ice. It won’t be traditional, but it’ll still taste incredible.
Need precise measurements? A coffee scale helps dial in the perfect ratio.
INGREDIENTS
For 1 serving:
Coffee:
- 2 slightly rounded tablespoons Vietnamese dark-roast ground coffee (12–14g)
- Metric: 12–14g | Imperial: 2 tablespoons
- Substitution: any dark-roast coffee works, but Vietnamese robusta gives that signature bold punch
Water:
- 3/4 cup hot water, just off the boil (180ml)
- Metric: 180ml | Imperial: 3/4 cup
- Temperature: 195–200°F (90–93°C)
Sweetened condensed milk:
- 2 tablespoons (30ml)
- Metric: 30ml | Imperial: 2 tablespoons
- Adjust 1–3 tablespoons based on your sweet tooth
- Substitution: coconut condensed milk for dairy-free version
Ice:
- 1–1.5 cups ice cubes (10–12 cubes)
METHOD
Step 1: Prep your glass (1 minute)
Drop 2 tablespoons of sweetened condensed milk into your heatproof brewing glass.
This goes in first—not after.
The hot coffee needs to drip directly onto the condensed milk to start dissolving it immediately.
Step 2: Load the phin (1–2 minutes)
Remove the internal screen from your phin filter.
Add 2 tablespoons of ground coffee to the chamber.
Tap gently to level—don’t pack it down like espresso.
Place the screen on top and press down gently to compress the grounds.
Screw or adjust until snug but not tight.
Step 3: Bloom the coffee (30–45 seconds)
Set the phin on top of your glass with condensed milk.
Pour just enough hot water to barely cover the grounds—about 1–2 tablespoons.
Watch them expand and bubble.
This bloom releases CO2 and primes the grounds for even extraction.
Wait 30 seconds.
Step 4: Main brew (4–7 minutes)
Pour hot water into the phin until it’s nearly full.
Cover with the lid.
Now wait.
You should see coffee dripping at about 3–4 drips per second.
Too fast? Your grind is too coarse or the screen is too loose.
Too slow? Grind is too fine or screen is overtightened.
The ideal brew time is 5 minutes.
Don’t rush this—good Vietnamese coffee takes patience.
Step 5: Mix thoroughly (30–60 seconds)
Once the dripping stops completely, remove the phin.
Stir vigorously with your spoon.
The condensed milk is thick and wants to stay at the bottom.
Stir until the color is uniform caramel-brown with no streaks.
Step 6: Pour over ice (1–2 minutes)
Fill your tall serving glass with ice.
Pour the coffee-condensed milk mixture over the ice.
Stir again—the cold will make the condensed milk thicken up.
Take a sip.
Adjust if needed: more condensed milk for sweetness, more ice for dilution.
CRUCIAL TIPS
Drip speed is everything:
- If your coffee drips too fast (under 3 minutes), it’ll be weak and watery
- If it takes over 7 minutes, it’ll be bitter and overextracted
- Adjust your grind or screen pressure, not your technique
Don’t skip the bloom:
- Those 30 seconds make the difference between flat coffee and complex, aromatic coffee
- Skipping it leads to uneven extraction
Use actual Vietnamese coffee if possible:
- Brands like Trung Nguyên or Café Du Monde
- Vietnamese coffee grounds have chicory and robusta that give the authentic flavor
- Arabica alone won’t taste right
Temperature matters:
- Boiling water makes it bitter
- Water below 190°F underextracts
- Just off the boil is perfect
STORAGE, SCALING & MISTAKES
Storage:
Vietnamese iced coffee doesn’t store well once made.
The ice melts, diluting everything into sad, brown water.
Make it fresh every time—it only takes 10
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