Casa Myz and Caffe Toscano: Puebla’s Best Cafes for Flavor and Finesse
Guide

Casa Myz and Caffe Toscano: Puebla’s Best Cafes for Flavor and Finesse

From smoky duck chilaquiles to tiramisu made with a sourdough twist, these two Puebla cafes serve up more than just coffee.

At 8 a.m., the line at Casa Myz snakes out the door of its Cholula storefront. The air smells of toasted chiles and fresh-squeezed lime. A regular orders chilaquiles con mole ($160), their eyes lighting up at the first bite. 'It’s the duck broth that makes them unforgettable,' says one customer, a yoga instructor who’s been coming since the shop opened three years ago. The menu here defies expectations. Alongside the legendary chilaquiles ($140–$160), you’ll find vegan bowls stacked with quinoa and jackfruit, plus 12 types of house-made juice. The prices feel steep for a coffee shop—$100–200 for a breakfast plate—but the $65 espresso con leche is worth the splurge. Open late Wednesdays and Thursdays, it’s a post-work happy hour spot where creatives sketch in journals and the hum of conversation drowns out the rain. A week later, I’m in Puebla city’s historic center, where Caffe Toscano’s espresso machine hisses like a mechanical animal. The owner, an Italian expat with a thick Roman accent, pulls shots so concentrated they taste like liquid velvet. 'Try the affogato,' he says, sliding over a glass of vanilla gelato drowned in $50 worth of steaming ristretto. The tiramisu ($80) is a technical marvel—layers of ladyfingers soaked in coffee liqueur, dusted with cocoa, and topped with a house-made mascarpone that’s less sweet than you’d expect. What makes these places work isn’t just the food. Casa Myz’s $35 vegan tortilla de berros (arugula, avocado, and quinoa) arrives on a ceramic plate with edible flowers. At Caffe Toscano, the sourdough starter has been fermenting in a mason jar since 2021. 'It’s like a family member now,' one barista says. Both cafes have their weaknesses—Casa Myz closes by 5 p.m. Mondays, and Caffe Toscano’s pastries can be dry—but they’re still the best places in town to watch the light change from morning gold to afternoon gray.

Read Full Article

More Articles

Casa Myz's modern café space with bright colors and open seatingBy Cuisine

Café Culture in Puebla: Budget-Friendly Gems and Hidden Splurges

Puebla’s café scene balances affordability and quality, with clusters in Cholula and the city center. From vegan bowls to Italian pastries, these top-rated spots prove you don’t need to overspend for a great cup.

Puebla’s café landscape has 93 businesses, with 23 in the budget range ($1–100). The highest concentration of top-rated spots sits in Cholula and the historic center. While 8 mid-range ($100–200) options exist, only one upscale ($200+) café makes the cut, making standout budget picks like DrinkLand and Cafetería Azcata especially notable. Casa Myz in Cholula (10 norte 603) is the city’s most expensive top-rated café, charging $100–200 for chilaquiles, vegan bowls, and juices. Yet its 5.0 rating (18 reviews) matches that of DrinkLand ($1–100), which scores 4.9 with half the price. Both open late—Casa Myz from 8 am–8 pm weekdays, DrinkLand 6–11 pm Fridays—catering to students and remote workers. DrinkLand (C. 4 Nte. 226) wins for value: 25 reviews give it a 4.9 rating for $1–100 MXN espressos and pastries. Its menu (shared on Canva) highlights ‘price’ and ‘taste’ as strengths, though the 42/100 image quality shows it’s more functional than photogenic. Nearby, Caffe Toscano (5 de Mayo 212) serves Italian staples like tiramisu at $1–100 prices, with 35 reviews praising its ‘corn bread’ and ‘sourdough starter.’ The data reveals a gap: only 1 upscale café (Casa Myz) exists, but it’s priced out of daily use. For consistent quality, the budget tier dominates—DrinkLand’s 4.9 rating edges out Casa Myz’s 5.0 when adjusted for price. DrinkLand’s late hours (6–11 pm Fridays) and lower prices make it a student favorite. One review notes its ‘variety of juices’ but calls the space ‘basic’—a trade-off many accept for the value. Caffe Toscano’s 5.0 rating (35 reviews) sits in the historic center, where its Italian focus contrasts with local offerings. It’s the only top-rated spot selling ‘panna cotta’ and ‘affogato,’ appealing to Puebla’s growing specialty coffee crowd.

Read Full Article

Also Explore