Taste of Ethiopia
Authentic Ethiopian cuisine · Family-owned in Metro Detroit since 2005

Drinks & Beer

The drinks menu at Taste of Ethiopia covers three traditions: the fresh-pressed juices that are a hallmark of Ethiopian cafés; the tej (honey wine) that has been served at Ethiopian celebrations for centuries; and a small, well-curated selection of Michigan craft beer. Plus, of course, the coffee ceremony — but that has its own page.

Fresh-Pressed Juices

All juices and smoothies are pressed to order. Most are dairy-free unless noted.

JuiceNotes
AvocadoThick, creamy, mildly sweet. An Ethiopian café classic — yes, as a drink.
MangoRipe, fragrant, served chilled.
SprisThe signature layered juice — avocado, mango, and papaya in distinct vertical layers. Drink it with a long spoon.
PapayaBright, lightly floral.
Mixed BerrySeasonal — usually strawberry, blackberry, and raspberry.
Ginger-LemonHouse cleanser; works exceptionally well after a berbere-heavy meal.

Smoothies

Same fruits as the juices, blended with banana and a small amount of yogurt or coconut milk. Ask for dairy-free.

Tej (Honey Wine)

Ethiopian honey wine, fermented from honey, water, and the leaves of the gesho plant (which act as a hop substitute). Slightly sweet, slightly tart, slightly funky. Served in a traditional rounded vessel called a berele. Alcohol around 7–11% depending on the batch.

If you've never had tej, order a small berele and decide for yourself. It pairs surprisingly well with doro wat.

Beer

We rotate a small selection of Michigan craft beer. Typical pours:

  • A Detroit-area pilsner or lager
  • A Michigan IPA
  • An amber or brown ale
  • One Ethiopian import (St. George Lager) when in stock

Ask your server what's currently on tap.

Soft Drinks & Tea

Standard soft drinks, sparkling water, and a small tea menu including spiced black tea (shai) brewed with cardamom, cloves, and cinnamon — the everyday Ethiopian afternoon drink.

Coffee

Coffee at Taste of Ethiopia is a full chapter on its own. Roasted at your table, ground by hand, brewed in a clay jebena, served in three rounds. See the coffee ceremony