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. ...

April 30, 2026 · 13 min · Barista At Home

Gibraltar Coffee: What It Is, How to Make It, and How It Compares to a Cortado

Gibraltar coffee is a double shot of espresso with approximately 2 oz (60 ml) of lightly textured, latte-style milk, served in a 4.5 oz Libbey Gibraltar glass. It was created at Blue Bottle Coffee in San Francisco in the early 2000s and is named after the glass it’s served in — not the Rock of Gibraltar. It tastes like a cortado but is distinctly tied to West Coast specialty coffee culture. ...

April 13, 2026 · 7 min · Barista At Home

Espresso Tonic: The Refreshing Sparkling Espresso Drink

An espresso tonic is a double espresso poured over ice and tonic water. The result is a bitter, effervescent, refreshing drink with a citrusy brightness that tastes nothing like iced coffee. It takes about 2 minutes to make and works surprisingly well as a hot-weather alternative to your standard espresso drinks. This drink became popular in Scandinavian specialty coffee shops around 2010 and has since spread worldwide. Most people who try it become immediate converts. ...

April 7, 2026 · 6 min · Barista At Home