Kissaten: Inside Japan's Showa-Era Coffee Houses (Culture, Etiquette & How to Spot a Real One)
A kissaten (喫茶店) is a traditional Japanese-style coffee house — a quiet, often dimly lit room with Showa-era decor, hand-poured or siphon-brewed coffee, classical music or jazz playing low, and a small menu of toast, pudding, and Napolitan spaghetti. The word literally means “tea-drinking shop,” but kissaten serve coffee as their main drink, brewed slowly and served with deliberate hospitality. They are not modern cafés. They are not Starbucks. They are a separate genre of Japanese coffee culture, born in 1888 and shaped by the Showa era (1926–1989), and the best ones still operate the way they did sixty years ago. ...