Bristol is home to many coffee shops and cafes, serving a plethora of speciality drinks and giving customers a unique experience each and every time. Take a walk into the city centre and you are bombarded with many different cafes and shops to welcome you, especially on a rainy day.

Greytone Coffee, located on Dean Street in St Pauls, has built up a reputation for serving some of the best speciality coffee in Bristol, and Google reviewers gives the cafe a 4.9 rating out of five stars. Visitors rave about the unique coffees and the relaxed atmosphere at the shop.

One coffee in particular has made waves in Bristol for possibly being the most expensive in the city. The ‘Rose Coffee’ costs £12 and contains flavours that I’ve never seen in a coffee before. It contains beans from Panama and includes passion fruit, pink guava, candy floss and rose lemonade.

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The thing about Greytone’s Rose Coffee is that you won’t actually see it on the menu when you visit the cafe - so you have to know what you’re asking for. You also have to be willing to part ways with £12 for a coffee - which is triple the price of most lattes in the city.

When I visited earlier this week I found Greytone Coffee to have a genuinely nice and cosy atmosphere with a clean minimalist style which juxtaposed against the complex range of specialty coffees it provides. The staff were super friendly during my visit and talked me through the options.

Once the competition-filtered coffee was ready, I was quite surprised by how much coffee I actually had to drink. It arrived in the pitcher, ready for me to pour into my cup, and there was enough for one and a half servings. It had a lovely strong aroma, which was sweet in smell.

I had to wait for the coffee to cool down to taste it, and I have to say, I felt slightly underwhelmed by the first sip. I will add in here that I’m not a huge coffee connoisseur, but I expected a £12 specialty coffee to pack a bit of a punch.

It was actually quite weak, which wasn’t necessarily a bad thing as it wasn't overwhelming. The extraction method is designed to enhance the taste, and I did find that you could detect the individual flavours, although I found the fruity notes and sweetness left an aftertaste that needed washing down with water.

It was gentler than most coffees out there and did make me feel that little bit more soothed and chilled-out, unlike with something that packs a caffeine punch like an espresso. I also think the unusual ingredients made the drinking experience better than a typical coffee, which I can sometimes find quite bitter.

But I’m still unsure about the £12 price tag. Maybe I don’t know enough about coffee to appreciate it, but I was expecting something more. You do get a decent amount of coffee but you don’t get that 'wow' sensation.

I still really enjoyed my experience at Greytone Coffee, though. And if you’re looking for something that’s not coffee on the menu then I would definitely recommend the hot chocolate, as I couldn't resist trying that too and it was incredible.

I am sure there are some coffee experts out there that would find the ‘Rose Coffee’ delicious and worth every penny - but for me it was not worth the price. Perhaps why it's kept off-menu, only for those in the know.