Budget Friendly

Budget-Friendly Cafe in Passi: Real Vietnamese Coffee From ₱105

Good coffee doesn't have to come with a city price tag. At Yanna's Vietnamese Coffee, about 20 minutes from Passi City in San Enrique, our Black Coffee starts at ₱105 — and it's brewed the traditional Vietnamese way, through a phin filter, not instant or pre-mixed.

If you're looking for a budget-friendly cafe near Passi, here's what that gets you: Vietnamese Milk Coffee at ₱130, our bestselling Salted Cream Coffee at ₱160, and our signature Egg and Coconut Coffee at ₱175–₱185. Compare that to what similar specialty drinks cost in Iloilo City, and it's easy to see why people make the drive out to San Enrique.

Coffee isn't the only affordable option, either. Our matcha lattes start at ₱160, fruit teas are ₱110 each, and if you're hungry, our Vietnamese BBQ specialty sandwiches run ₱165–₱180, with crunchy egg fried rice from ₱115. It's a full menu built for regulars, not just one-off treats.

Being outside the city center lets us keep prices honest without cutting corners on the coffee itself — we still use real Vietnamese beans and the same phin brewing method you'd expect from a specialty cafe, just without paying for prime city real estate.

If you're near Passi City and want real Vietnamese coffee without stretching your budget, we're open daily from 8AM to 8PM along the Passi–San Rafael Road in San Enrique. Come see what your money gets you.

Ready to taste it yourself? We're open daily, 8AM–8PM, in San Enrique, Iloilo.

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The full price list, no surprises

Here's everything, so you can decide before you drive out.

Coffee — Black Coffee ₱105 hot / ₱120 iced. Vietnamese Milk Coffee ₱115 / ₱130. Salted Cream Coffee ₱160. Coconut Coffee ₱175. Egg Coffee ₱170 hot / ₱185 iced.

Matcha (16oz, iced) — Matcha Latte ₱160. Salt Matcha ₱175. Egg Custard Matcha ₱185.

Fruit Tea (22oz, iced) — ₱110, any flavour.

Food — BBQ sandwiches ₱165–₱180. Crunchy egg fried rice ₱115–₱145.

Kids — Mini fried rice ₱89–₱95. Chicken bites and rice ₱99. Chocolate banana toast ₱85.

Why the cheap cup is cheap, and the expensive cup isn't

The honest answer is that it's about labour and ingredients, not margin games.

Black coffee is ₱105 because it's phin-brewed concentrate and hot water. The concentrate takes twelve minutes to drip, but we brew it in batches each morning, so your cup doesn't cost twelve minutes of someone's time.

Egg coffee is ₱185 because the custard is whipped fresh from raw egg yolks every single morning and thrown out at close. It cannot be made in advance and kept, so what doesn't sell is a loss we absorb. That's what you're paying for — not a fancier bean, just a thing that can't be stockpiled.

That's the whole spread. Nothing on this menu is priced to punish you for wanting the good one.

The best value orders, ranked

1. Fruit tea (₱110). Twenty-two ounces. It's the biggest drink on the menu and the cheapest. If you're sitting for a while, this is the one that lasts.

2. Fried rice (₱115). A full meal — 250g of rice, 120g of meat, two eggs — for less than most sandwiches cost in the city. Nothing else on the board fills you up for this.

3. Black coffee (₱105). The cheapest thing we make and the purest expression of what a phin does. If you want to know whether you actually like Vietnamese coffee, this is the test.

4. Salted cream coffee (₱160). Not the cheapest, but it's the bestseller and it converts more first-timers than anything else. Worth the extra ₱55 the first time.

Two coffees and a meal, under ₱400

Realistically: black coffee (₱105), a fruit tea to nurse afterwards (₱110), and fried rice (₱115) comes to ₱330. That's a genuine afternoon — a drink, a second drink, a proper meal — with change from ₱400.

Two people sharing a sandwich (₱170) and taking a coffee each (₱210) is ₱380.

Paying

Cash or GCash. QRPh works, so most bank apps will scan it.