Mexican Hot Chocolate
Updated Jan. 2, 2020

- Total Time
- 10 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 4cups whole milk
- 2(4-inch) cinnamon sticks (preferably Ceylon)
- ¼cup granulated sugar
- 1teaspoon vanilla extract
- 8ounces dark chocolate (preferably 70 percent)
Preparation
- Step 1
In a medium saucepan, combine milk, cinnamon, sugar and vanilla. Heat over medium until the mixture begins to steam, stirring occasionally, about 5 minutes.
- Step 2
While the mixture heats, cut or break up the chocolate into small pieces so it melts evenly. Once the milk is steaming, add the chocolate and whisk until it’s melted and incorporated.
- Step 3
Turn off the heat and discard cinnamon sticks. Use a molinillo or whisk to mix the hot chocolate vigorously until it's frothy, 3 to 4 minutes, or blend in a blender for about 2 minutes. Serve hot.
Private Notes
Comments
If there is an Hispanic grocery in your town, you should be able to find what is sometimes known as "Mexican cinnamon." It is a warmer, softer spice than the hard sticks you find in regular grocery stores. It's more fragile, often flaky, but worth getting (also tends to be very inexpensive). Try bringing coffee, water, brown sugar, and Mex cinnamon to a simmer in a pan, then filtering. Delicious!
Ceylon cinnamon (recommended in this recipe) IS Mexican (or as called in Mexico “canela”). c. verum (Ceylon) is not the same as the typical supermarket c. aromaticum, which is actually a cassia. Ceylon “true” cinnamon comes from Sri Lanka & is also preferred in European recipes, as well. Ceylon used to be used in USA, changed around approx 40’s era, and is finally making a comeback as cooks become more aware of differences. There are 4 cassias & have a harsher flavor.
The Mexican hot chocolate I've enjoyed also had a bit of chili in it. Ancho or guajillo chilis work well.
I make this by the cup in the microwave. Just adjust amounts to fit, whisk a little milk into the dry cocoa powder, add the remaining milk and other ingredients and heat on the beverage setting. Let it sit for a minute or two afterwards, stir/whisk and enjoy.
Growing up, my Nona put a pinch of instant espresso coffee in our hot chocolate.
try adding the zest of an orange, freshly grated or one nice strip, to steep with the milk and other ingredients.
