Coffee leaf brew and fresh cow's milk. Nothing else. All character comes from the quality of the leaf and the freshness of the milk. Traditionally given to lactating mothers and those with sensitive digestion.
| Ingredient | Local name | Amount (base 4 servings) |
|---|---|---|
| Coffee Leaf Brew | ||
| Mature coffee leaves, fresh | Buna Kitel | 225 g |
| Water | Woha | 1000 ml |
| To Add After Straining | ||
| Fresh cow's milk | Yelam Wotet | 400 ml |
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1
Harvest and wash leaves
Handpick mature leaves from the terminal tips of the coffee plant. Large green or slightly yellowing leaves are correct — avoid very young unfurled leaves. Wash in clean water in a flat tray.
The research documents that leaves are harvested fresh for each brewing session. Pre-harvested stored leaves are a substitution, not the traditional practice. -
2
Crush the leaves
Pound or crush leaves into small pieces using a traditional wooden mortar and pestle, or chop coarsely with a knife. Crushing exposes more surface area and improves extraction.
This step is consistent across all three methods. Do not skip it — whole leaves extract poorly. -
3
Boil and steep
Bring 1000 ml of clean water to a full rolling boil (100°C) in a clay pot (Jabena) or metal pot. Add crushed leaves. Cover to retain heat and aromas. Simmer 7–15 minutes.
Longer steeping produces a darker, more astringent brew. For a milder result, keep to 7–9 minutes. Taste at 7 minutes and decide. -
4
Strain completely
Pour through fine cloth or a fine mesh strainer. Discard all leaf material. Do not press or squeeze — just drain. The brew should be clear amber-to-brown. Pour into a clean pot.
This is the most critical step. Coffee leaves are fibrous and never consumed. Any residue makes the drink gritty and harsh. A clean strain is the difference between a good Engere and a failed one. -
5
Add milk and serve
Add 400 ml of fresh cow's milk to the hot strained brew. Stir gently. Serve immediately while hot.
The ratio of milk to brew is 1/3 to 1/2 litre per litre of brew. Adjust to taste — more milk gives a creamier, gentler drink; less milk gives a stronger, more leaf-forward character.
Coffee leaf brew, fresh cow's milk, and honey or sugar. A gentler, more approachable version. Documented as the preferred form for children and for first-time drinkers.
| Ingredient | Local name | Amount (base 4 servings) |
|---|---|---|
| Coffee Leaf Brew | ||
| Mature coffee leaves, fresh | Buna Kitel | 225 g |
| Water | Woha | 1000 ml |
| To Add After Straining | ||
| Honey or sugar | Mar / Sukkar | 30–45 g |
| Fresh cow's milk | Yelam Wotet | 400 ml |
- 1
Harvest, wash, crush leaves
Follow Steps 1 and 2 from Simple Engere. Identical base preparation.
- 2
Boil and steep
Bring 1000 ml water to boil. Add crushed leaves. Simmer 7–15 minutes covered. Strain fully.
-
3
Dissolve sweetener in hot brew
Add 30–45 g honey or sugar to the hot strained brew. Stir until fully dissolved. Taste — the sweetness should be gentle, not dominant.
Add sweetener before milk so it dissolves fully in the hot liquid. Honey is the traditional choice where available. Sugar is an accepted practical substitute. -
4
Add milk and serve
Add 400 ml fresh cow's milk. Stir gently. Serve hot immediately.
Leaves and spices brewed together in one pot. Quicker, fewer vessels. The spice flavour integrates more deeply with the leaf brew. Add spices in the last 3–8 minutes of steeping.
| Ingredient | Local name / Scientific | Amount (base 4 servings) |
|---|---|---|
| Coffee Leaf Brew Base | ||
| Mature coffee leaves, fresh | Buna Kitel · Coffea arabica | 225 g |
| Water | Woha | 1500 ml |
| Spices & Herbs (add last 3–8 min) | ||
| Ginger | Jingibil · Zingiber officinale | 10–15 g |
| Coriander seed | Dimbilal · Coriandrum sativum | 2.5–4.5 g |
| Ethiopian cardamom | Korerima · Aframomum corrorima | 1.5–2.5 g |
| Sacred basil | Besobila · Ocimum basilicum | 1.5–2 g |
| Lemongrass | Tejisar · Cymbopogon citratus | 5–8 g |
| Rue herb | Tena Adam · Ruta chalepensis | 1.5–2.5 g |
| Garlic leaf | Nechi Shinkurt · Allium sativum | 5–10 g |
| Fennel | Ensilal · Anethum foeniculum | 1–1.5 g |
| Bird's eye chilli | Mitmita · Capsicum frutescens | 0.5–1.5 g |
| Salt | Chew · Sodium chloride | 5–10 g |
| To Add After Straining | ||
| Fresh cow's milk | Yelam Wotet | 500 ml |
| Honey or sugar | Mar / Sukkar | to taste |
- 1
Harvest, wash, crush leaves
Handpick mature leaves, wash, and pound or chop coarsely. Grind or crack whole spices using mortar and pestle.
- 2
Boil leaves
Bring 1500 ml water to a full rolling boil. Add crushed leaves. Simmer covered for 7–12 minutes.
-
3
Add spices
Add the prepared spices and herbs to the same pot for the last 3–8 minutes of steeping. Longer spice contact = more intensity. Shorter = more delicate.
Start with 3 minutes if you are making this for the first time. Taste and adjust in future batches. - 4
Strain completely
Pour through fine cloth or fine mesh. Strain out all leaf and spice material. The brew should run clear. Pour into a clean pot.
-
5
Add sweetener, then milk
Dissolve honey or sugar in the hot brew first. Then add 500 ml fresh cow's milk. Stir gently. Serve immediately while hot.
Leaves and spices brewed separately in two pots, then combined. More control over spice intensity. Cleaner flavour separation. The preferred method when quality and precision matter more than speed.
| Ingredient | Local name / Scientific | Amount (base 4 servings) |
|---|---|---|
| Pot One — Coffee Leaf Brew | ||
| Mature coffee leaves, fresh | Buna Kitel | 225 g |
| Water | Woha | 1000 ml |
| Pot Two — Spice Brew | ||
| Water | Woha | 500 ml |
| Ginger | Jingibil | 10–15 g |
| Coriander seed | Dimbilal | 2.5–4.5 g |
| Ethiopian cardamom | Korerima | 1.5–2.5 g |
| Sacred basil | Besobila | 1.5–2 g |
| Lemongrass | Tejisar | 5–8 g |
| Rue herb | Tena Adam | 1.5–2.5 g |
| Garlic leaf | Nechi Shinkurt | 5–10 g |
| Fennel | Ensilal | 1–1.5 g |
| Bird's eye chilli | Mitmita | 0.5–1.5 g |
| Salt | Chew | 5–10 g |
| To Add After Combining | ||
| Fresh cow's milk | Yelam Wotet | 500 ml |
| Honey or sugar | Mar / Sukkar | to taste |
-
1
Brew leaves — Pot One
Boil 1000 ml water. Add crushed leaves. Simmer 7–15 minutes covered. Strain completely. Set aside.
-
2
Brew spices — Pot Two
Boil 500 ml water. Add ground or cracked spices. Simmer 5–10 minutes. This standalone spice brew allows you to control intensity independently.
Taste the spice brew before combining. If it is too intense, dilute with a little water. If too mild, simmer a few minutes more. -
3
Combine and briefly boil
Pour the strained leaf brew into the spice pot. Bring to a brief boil together — 2–3 minutes. Strain once more through fine cloth to remove all spice material.
-
4
Add sweetener, then milk
Dissolve honey or sugar in the combined hot brew. Add 500 ml fresh cow's milk. Stir gently. Serve immediately.
Equipment
Traditional and modern
Traditional Engere preparation uses specific equipment. These are not decorative choices — the materials and design are understood by communities to interact with the beverage in ways that preserve character. Modern substitutes work but represent a practical adaptation, not the traditional standard.
Milk — the critical ingredient
Which milk to use
The milk is not merely an addition — it defines Engere. The type of milk matters to both flavour and to the traditional character of the drink.
Quality checks
What a good Engere looks and tastes like
- ✓Colour: Warm amber to golden-brown. Slightly cloudy from the milk integration. Not pale, not black.
- ✓Texture: Smooth. No grittiness whatsoever. Any grittiness means incomplete straining — that batch should be discarded.
- ✓Aroma: Aromatic, coffee-forward, creamy. Spiced versions carry the warmth of whatever herbs were used — ginger and cardamom should be detectable but not overwhelming.
- ✓Taste: Balanced. The leaf brew and milk should integrate — neither dominating. Bitterness should be mild and soft, not sharp. Sweetened versions should taste gently sweet, not sugary.
- ✓Temperature: Serve hot. Not boiling — warm and comforting. Communities describe Engere as a drink that warms from inside.
- ✗Grittiness: Always a sign of incomplete straining. Not recoverable. Start again if this occurs.
- ✗Separated or curdled: Milk added to a brew that has cooled too far may not integrate properly. The brew must still be hot when milk is added.
Serving rules