Hanoi’s coffee culture
19:32
Sai Gon has coffee on high floor, and under ground, etc., whereas Hanoi
has street coffee and traditional cafeteria. The competition between
Trung Nguyen coffee system, modern Cappuccino coffee and traditional
coffee is still equal. This reveals that the Hanoians retain some
uniqueness of their ancient lifestyle.
Coffee and the Hanoians
The Hanoians drink a lot of the dark, caffeinated beverage and prefer
sipping their stronger blends outside in front of a small shop with some
sweet milk and a spoonful of sugar. Every morning, on hot days of
summer and cold and dull days of winter, you can easily see some here
with a cup of coffee in one hand and a newspaper in the other.
For many Hanoians, the most important factor of a café is not its
luxuriousness but the quality of the product. Old people love cafés
which have been around a long time, located on old streets or inside
deep alleys. Office workers like cafes with romantic and quiet styles
like those in Pho Co Quarter. Young people prefer the noisy and busy
atmosphere of modern and luxury or pavement cafés.
Street Coffee…
Soaking up the rhythms of the street and embracing Hanoi from all of its
sides, from old to new ones, and from traditional to modern &
quirky ones, you will tenderly recognize that, nothing can be better
refresh us after hardworking hours than a cup of coffee on a street near
Sword Lake (Hoan Kiem Lake).
Basking with sunshine in the afternoon when there’s less noise from
automobiles, Hanoi ends a day and opens a new paradise for culture
experiences. Taking over a legacy from bygone years with the involvement
of an irresistible French factor, the Vietnamese have embraced café
culture in a great way. There are so many famous coffee shops in Hanoi,
like Nang café (6 Hang Bac), Nhan (39D1 Hang Hanh), Quat (Quan Thanh),
Quynh (Bat Dan) to Giang (Hang Gai and Lam (60, 91 Nguyen Huu Huan)…
Chairs are small, literally child-sized, and are sometimes made of blue
plastic or painted wood. The tables are covered with glasses of ca phe
den (black coffee) or ca phe sua da (iced coffee), which come with their
own picturesque drip top. Not only just for connoisseurs, these places
are idea for having gossip, meeting old friends, talking to pass time
of day, stealing precious moments for romantics …
Now, let’s follow a coffee connoisseur…
A good example of the authentic Hanoi cafés is Hang Hanh, an atmospheric
slender street veering off the city’s central Hoan Kiem Lake. In the
afternoon, one may find himself inexplicably drawn to its’ wall-to-wall
cafés which unfold below the shady boughs of leafy trees. Here, the
annoying young and cool Vietnamese often sit and watch the world in
front of their eyes. In late afternoon, with the last rays of sunshine,
the place starts to buzz. At weekends, it is positively heaving with
dating couples or gangs of youths desiring to be couples.
If this sounds too frenetic, a more subdued place like Giang Café can be
chosen! Though situated in a busy tourist shopping street, the tiny
confined Giang Café attracts the serious permanent coffee lovers and
soccer addicts.
My next stop is Lam café - the perfect refuge for artists, poets and
thespians to refresh their minds for creativeness. Situated on a shaded
street, it will bring you the relaxed moments by the simple but
artistically-decorated bamboo furniture, colorful framed oil paintings
on the wall, ceiling fans as well as wooden table with a lot of tiny
china teapots.
Yet, if you ask me about my favorite one, I will not hesitate to answer
that it is Quynh Café. Down in a quiet side street, this unassuming
cafes’ entrance is marked by a simple red lantern and ornate ironwork
doors. Stepping inside, you not only see the bamboo furniture on tiled
floor but also the tiny plants adorn wooden shuttered windows. Looking
on damp-streaked walls, you may surprise with wooden arrows and
trumpets, farming implements and ancient hunting pistols. Breathing the
cool air from the antiquated table-fan, wallowing in soft French
background music, you will desire to stay longer...
Coffee drinking from another approach
The resurgence of tourism to these fragrant shores has led to the
resurrection of the wonderful old ambience of former colonial times in
many Hanoi cafés. Delightful cafés are now housed in elegant
French-style villas with exquisite silk prints, meticulously polished
wooden floors and pot-planted courtyards or serve delicious food all day
and evening. Street cafés like the La Terrasse du Metropole on Ngo
Quyen and Le Phung Hieu or Highlands Café, 84 Nguyen Du are the typical
examples!
Hanoi’s coffee culture calls on coffee addicts from every corner of the globe!
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