Near T1 domestic gates, Doçaria Mineira is your Minas-style sugar stop.
This small spot in Terminal 1 leans hard into sweets from Minas Gerais, so expect doce de leite in everything from simple slices of cake to filled pastries. Prices run in the R$8–R$25 range for individual items, which is cheaper than most full cafés in BSB. It’s post-security in T1, so you can grab something after clearing the single main checkpoint used by most domestic flights.
The menu centers on brigadeiros, regional cakes, and doce de leite treats rather than full meals. A coffee and pastry combo usually lands under R$30, making it workable as a quick breakfast before early departures from T1. If you need real food, you’ll still be hungry after a slice of cake or a couple of sweets here, so pair it with something savory elsewhere in the terminal.
Expect standard Brazilian espresso-based drinks at typical airport pricing: around R$7–R$10 for an espresso and R$12–R$16 for milk drinks. That’s slightly below what you’ll pay at some chain cafés closer to the larger boarding areas in T1. Turnaround is fast; most reviewers mention walking away in under 5 minutes with coffee and a box of sweets, even at peak evening bank times.
Best bets: anything with house doce de leite, plus the simpler cakes that hold up well to airport display cases over several hours. Skip anything that looks too intricate or cream-heavy late at night; with many BSB flights leaving after 22:00, dessert cases can look tired by then. If your flight departs from the lower 20s gates in T1, pass by here before you head down to the quieter end of the concourse.
Tip: if you want to bring something home, stick to boxed sweets and wrapped items; they travel better on 1–2 hour hops from Brasília than anything with fresh cream.