The Story
Why it exists.
Qahwa is the Arabic word for coffee. That's the whole name, right there. Khamrah Qahwa, which translates roughly to "Coffee Elixir", is Lattafa's answer to a very specific craving: what if an evening coffee could become a fragrance? Perfumer Jordi Fernández built this 2023 composition as a gourmand reimagining of the original Khamrah, threading real Arabica coffee through every layer of the pyramid instead of just landing it in the base. The result is a coffee fragrance that doesn't apologize for being sweet. It leans into it. This is the version of the story where the coffee shop is also a little bit of a patisserie, and no one minds.
If this were a song
Community picks
La Vie en Rose
Ingrid Berthon-Moyan
The Beginning
Qahwa is the Arabic word for coffee. That's the whole name, right there. Khamrah Qahwa, which translates roughly to "Coffee Elixir", is Lattafa's answer to a very specific craving: what if an evening coffee could become a fragrance? Perfumer Jordi Fernández built this 2023 composition as a gourmand reimagining of the original Khamrah, threading real Arabica coffee through every layer of the pyramid instead of just landing it in the base. The result is a coffee fragrance that doesn't apologize for being sweet. It leans into it. This is the version of the story where the coffee shop is also a little bit of a patisserie, and no one minds.
Most coffee fragrances treat the note as a single destination, roasted, bitter, grounding. Khamrah Qahwa fractures the concept. The Arabica coffee sits in the base, yes, but it breathes upward through a heart of praline and candied fruits, which means the sweetness doesn't just sit above the coffee, it interweaves with it. The cardamom and ginger in the opening set up the tension: warm spice before sweet arrives. Tonka bean and benzoin then pull the whole thing into a powdery amber warmth that refuses to dissipate.
The Evolution
The opening hits like a spice market at midday. Cardamom and ginger arrive crisp and immediate, with cinnamon giving the whole thing a warm backbone before the sweetness even appears. Thirty minutes in, the praline and candied fruits take over, suddenly it's warmer, softer, the white blossoms threading through with an unexpected coolness that keeps the heart from becoming cloying. By the second hour, the spices have retreated and the real Khamrah character emerges: vanilla, benzoin, and tonka bean in a close, powdery embrace. The coffee note, subtle through the heart, finally announces itself around hour three, not as a sharp roasted note, but as a warm, almost lactonic sweetness that feels like the bottom of a coffee cup left too long on the burner. It stays intimate and close to the skin for hours after that. On fabric, the drydown can last into the next morning.
Cultural Impact
Khamrah Qahwa has earned a respected place among warm spice-gourmand enthusiasts, with a loyal following particularly among those seeking strong longevity and sillage. The consensus on wear occasions leans decisively toward fall and winter evenings, with cold night and date night dominating the usage data. It performs best in cooler weather when the benzoin and vanilla register as warmth rather than heaviness. The fragrance opens with a bold blend of cinnamon, cardamom, and saffron that immediately signals the cozy, spiced direction. Nutmeg adds a nutty, slightly resinous undertone that deepens the aromatic complexity.
The House
United Arab Emirates · Est. 1980
Lattafa Perfumes is the United Arab Emirates powerhouse that turned the fragrance world on its head. They offer a taste of Arabian luxury and high-end scent profiles without the exclusive price tag, making them a gateway for many into the world of perfumery.
If this were a song
Community picks
Late-night warmth. Think a dimly lit coffee shop where the espresso machine has been off for an hour and someone's left a warm cup on the table next to you. Rich without trying too hard. Moody, intimate, a little sweet, the sonic equivalent of staying longer than you planned.
La Vie en Rose
Ingrid Berthon-Moyan
























