Here’s how to save money by reproducing a PSL at home. Starbucks has announced the precise date it will be returning its well-known seasonal pumpkin spice lattes for 2025.
Nothing more denotes the return of this season than Starbucks’ Pumpkin Spice Lattes, even though it may only be August.
The colossal coffee shop has announced that its Pumpkin Spice Lattes (previously known as PSLs) will be available to order starting today, August 26th, for around the £4 mark. These are milky, sweet coffees with added flavors of pumpkin, nutmeg, and cinnamon. However, making your own coffee can make a lot of difference if you want to save money. Here’s how…
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I had four supermarket sleep teas and a £1.50 purchase sent me right away.
A flavored coffee pod is the simplest way to experience this autumnal flavor at home. We adore Grind’s Pumpkin Spice coffee pods, priced at £15.75 for 30 pods, because they are completely compostable at home. You’ll need the best coffee pod machine, of course, because they work with either Grind’s own very stylish-looking model (we reviewed here), but at 53p per pod, it’s a lot less expensive than Starbucks.
If you instead have a Nescafé Dolce Gusto machine at home, you can try something nearer in taste to the original thing with Starbucks’ own Pumpkin Spice Latte Coffee Pods, £4.75 for six at Sainsbury’s, or currently £3.50 if you have a Nectar card – so costing from 58p a drink. Sainsbury’s shoppers are describing these as “perfect for those colder nights, pumpkin and a hint of spice” and “tasty, not too sweet, just the right amount of spices”.
Another simple way to experience PSL at home is by adding a flavored syrup to your regular coffee if you don’t have a coffee pod machine. On Amazon, you can purchase both the well-known brand MONIN Pumpkin Spice Syrup, which costs $ 7.99, and the low-calorie Skinny Food Co Pumpkin Spice Coffee Syrup, which has thousands of five-star reviews.
In your own kitchen, make creamy lattes and cappuccinos with milk frothers if you want to up your barista game even more. The Nespresso Aeroccino3 Milk Frother, which costs $79, has been around for years, and if it still works, this tiny handheld battery-powered milk whisk, costing $58.09, does the same thing.
Our beauty and wellness editor, Laura Mulley, a former Starbucks barista, has thoroughly reviewed the Nespresso Vertuo and praised its high-quality coffees.
Source: Mirror
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