Skip to main content

Homemade coffee creamer recipe: Plus, how to customize it to your personal taste

Avoid the additives found in many coffee creamers

Coffee with cream
Miriam Alonso / Pexels

When I first heard of a “homemade coffee creamer recipe,” I immediately pictured a multi-step process requiring dozens of ingredients. As much as I love cooking, my hectic everyday work week doesn’t allow me time to experiment with complicated recipes.

Yet, I know that many store-bought creamers today contain many additives, such as lots of sugar or high fructose corn syrup, maltodextrin, and emulsifiers. Therefore, it’s easy to see the appeal of trying a homemade coffee creamer. To my surprise, making coffee creamer at home is uncomplicated. It’s way easier than it sounds. Many recipes, such as this homemade coffee creamer, require only four natural ingredients.

Recommended Videos

Homemade coffee creamer recipe

coffee with oat milk
Jakub Zerdzicki / Pexels

This homemade coffee creamer recipe will surprise you. The ingredients and the method are so simple that it will almost leave you questioning why you’ve purchased store-bought coffee creamer. While this recipe (made as follows) contains vanilla, the recipe is mild enough to use as a base to make other flavored coffee creamers. We’ll discuss variations and ways you can experiment with this recipe later, but here are the basics.

Ingredients

  • 3/4 cup of half-and-half
  • 14 ounces of sweetened, condensed milk
  • 1 cup of milk (skim, 2%, or whole milk can be used based on preference)
  • 2 to 3 teaspoons of vanilla extract

Method

  1. Mix all of the ingredients in a bowl.
  2. Whisk until well combined.
  3. Pour into an air-tight container/pitcher.
  4. Store in the refrigerator and shake well before each use.

This homemade coffee creamer recipe can be stored in the fridge for up to a week. If you don’t plan on using this much creamer in a week (such as in a single coffee-drinker household like mine), consider cutting the recipe in half to make a smaller portion.

Homemade coffee creamer recipes with flavors

Pouring cream in cold brew coffee
Magda Patsogianni / Pixabay

Homemade coffee creamer is an excellent option for all coffee drinkers, and that’s what I love about it. There’s something to be said about a classic creamer with a slight hint of vanilla, which allows you to enjoy the full-bodied flavor of your cup of coffee.

More often than not, I prefer my coffee creamer to be plain and simple, made just as in this standard recipe. However, there are also times when I feel like mixing things up with my coffee creamer. In those times, this homemade coffee creamer recipe can easily be modified with flavors such as chocolate, cinnamon, and caramel (or experiment on your own to develop something new).

Chocolate coffee creamer

Want to make a mocha-flavored coffee? Chocolate coffee creamer is an excellent addition to mocha coffee drinks. This coffee creamer recipe can be modified as a chocolate creamer using the same recipe by adding two tablespoons of cocoa powder.

Cinnamon coffee creamer

Cinnamon in coffee is a personal favorite of mine. (I always add a pinch of cinnamon to my coffee order at the Starbucks condiment bar.) You can enhance this homemade coffee creamer recipe by adding 1/2 to 1 teaspoon of ground cinnamon. If you want to elevate your coffee’s cinnamon flavor, you can add a cinnamon-flavored coffee syrup for an ultra-cinnamon taste.

Caramel coffee creamer

Modifying this coffee creamer recipe to include caramel is more involved but still super simple. Instead of using vanilla extract, you’ll use four tablespoons of brown sugar and four tablespoons of butter to create a caramelized flavor. This variation requires you to heat the milk, butter, and brown sugar over medium-low heat in a saucepan.

Why you should make homemade coffee creamer

coffee with cream
Alex Boyd / Alex Boyd

The most apparent reason to make your own creamer is to avoid artificial ingredients, additives, and extra sugar added to most pre-made coffee creamers. Homemade creamer recipes give you more control over what goes into your creamer and, therefore, the taste and nutritional content of your cup of coffee. As a bonus, you’ll also enjoy a fresher-tasting coffee with a more wholesome taste.

Making healthier coffee creams can reduce the sugar you consume and make avoiding additives easier. One commonly found ingredient in coffee cream is vegetable oil, which is used to help add texture and heaviness to the cream. However, seed oils ultimately lead to inflammation in your body (that’s not something you want to consume every morning in your coffee).

Store-bought creamers also contain preservatives that help them stay fresh on store shelves. Other additives, such as carrageenan, are linked to digestive problems, cancer, and a variety of different potential health risks.

Dietary needs

Another reason to make your coffee creamer is to meet specific dietary needs. Low-sugar and keto-dieters can swap the sweetened condensed milk in this recipe for zero-sugar condensed milk and swap milk for heavy cream.

Those who can’t consume dairy or are on a plant-based diet can also opt for dairy-free versions of homemade creamer. There’s a modification for every dietary restriction, which makes it much easier than hunting through grocery aisle shelves to find a creamer that meets your unique needs.

Emily Caldwell
Emily is a freelance journalist with a focus on food, travel, health, and fitness content. She loves to travel to new…
Non-Fiction Coffee blooms into spring with new single-origin coffees
Try these new springtime brews
Non-Fiction Coffee Guatemala - San Lorenzo,

In anticipation of the spring season, Alabama-based coffee roaster Non-Fiction Coffee has launched several new single-origin coffees. From the Guatemalan San Lorenzo roast to the Muyinga-Hafi roast from Burundi, these single-origin coffees are for coffee enthusiasts who want to try something new.

First up in the new offerings by Non-Fiction Coffee is the San Lorenzo medium roast bean, featuring flavor notes of black tea, sourced from the San Cristóbal, Alta Verapaz, and Cobán regions of Guatemala. This is Non-Fiction's first Guatemalan offering from producer, Luis “Wicho” Valdés III. San Lorenzo is located in the Cobán region, characterized by its humid weather and consistent rainfall throughout the year.

Read more
The surprising benefits of cold brew coffee you may not know about
Why you should you start drinking cold brew
Pouring cream in cold brew coffee

The distinctive brewing method of cold brew coffee sets it apart from every other type of coffee out there. Unlike traditional hot drip coffee or even iced coffee, cold brew coffee is brewed at a low temperature over many hours, giving it a truly one-of-a-kind taste. As a coffee connoisseur, I sometimes have to hold back a scoff when people interchange iced coffee and cold brew (they're really not the same thing). Unlike iced coffee, drinking cold brew offers a variety of unique benefits worth knowing about. These cold brew coffee benefits might just convince you to make the switch.
Cold brew coffee benefits: Taste

I get excited about the benefits of cold brew coffee, but the taste benefits excite me the most. I've always enjoyed drinking coffee in any cold form, but iced coffee always seems too bitter (especially when not appropriately made or with poor-quality coffee). To me, the reduced bitterness is one of the greatest benefits of cold brew coffee.

Read more
What is single-origin coffee? The unique advantages of drinking this brew
What to look for when shopping for single origin coffee
Person roasting coffee beans in a wok

If you read the label on your coffee bag long enough (and if you haven't read the label on your coffee bag, you really should), you'll find dozens of different terms that make up what I like to call "coffee lingo." Single-origin coffee is one term you'll want to understand. This coffee term is used only for coffee beans that are sourced from one single location (or origin, as the name implies). Drinking single-origin coffee delivers distinctive flavors, allowing coffee enthusiasts to connect more closely with their coffee. From traceability to complex flavor profiles, here's what makes single-origin coffee unique and some advantages to consider.
What is single-origin coffee?

Clay Parker, SVP of Commodities at Westrock Coffee (the world's largest manufacturer of private-label coffee and tea), shared his thoughts and expertise on this unique type of coffee. According to Parker, "Single-origin coffee is sourced from a single geographic area, which can be a single country, a defined region, or a single farm or cooperative. These beans typically share a similar taste profile that is influenced by the characteristics of the origin from which they are sourced."

Read more
OSZAR »