You’ll dive straight into Hanoi’s vibrant coffee culture — smelling fresh beans, brewing six different styles (egg coffee is wild), sampling homemade fruit liquors, and laughing with local experts in a sunlit villa. Expect hands-on fun and flavors you probably won’t forget anytime soon.
The first thing that hit me was the smell — not just roasted beans, but something sweet and earthy drifting through this big old villa in Hanoi. I’d barely sat down when our host, Hieu, handed me a cup of herbal tea (I think it had lemongrass?) and grinned like he already knew I’d be wired by the end. The room buzzed with quiet excitement — you could tell most of us had no idea what we were getting into with this Vietnamese coffee workshop. There were beans everywhere, little glass jars lined up, and all these gadgets I’d never seen before. Hieu started talking about how coffee came to Vietnam along the “World Coffee Belt” and honestly, I stopped pretending to know anything about coffee right then.
We got to touch the green beans — they’re weirdly smooth, almost waxy — and Hieu passed around a handful so we could smell them before roasting. There’s something comforting about that part, like being let in on a secret recipe. When we tried making egg coffee (cà phê trứng), my attempt at whisking the yolk made Li, another guide, laugh out loud. “It’s okay,” she said in English, “everyone’s first cup is ugly.” I still think about that first sip: creamy but sharp underneath, nothing like what I drink back home. The coconut coffee was sweeter than I expected too — almost dessert but not quite.
By the time we tasted their signature brew with local jam and wine (that combo surprised me), everyone was chatting like old friends. Someone spilled a bit on the table and nobody cared; we just kept passing cups around. We even tried some homemade fruit liquors — plum maybe? — which went down a bit too easy after all that caffeine. The whole session felt more like hanging out at someone’s house than a class. And yeah, I left buzzing from both the coffee and all the stories they shared about fake vs real beans or how baristas train for years here.
You’ll make six different Vietnamese coffees under expert guidance.
Yes, complimentary local snacks and pastries are served during the session.
The workshop is held inside a spacious local villa in Hanoi with a garden.
Yes, several types of traditional homemade fruit liquors are included for tasting.
Absolutely—the guides walk you through each step regardless of experience.
The exact timing isn’t specified but expect a relaxed multi-hour hands-on session.
Yes, the entire workshop space is air-conditioned for comfort.
Yes—groups over 15 can be accommodated if arranged ahead; up to 100 people possible.
Your day includes unlimited mineral water, complimentary herbal welcome drink on arrival, dedicated butler support throughout the workshop, free luggage storage for up to three days if needed, all brewing tools provided for hands-on practice of six iconic Vietnamese coffees (like egg coffee and coconut coffee), several tastings of traditional homemade fruit liquors from fruits, plus delicious local pastries served in an air-conditioned villa setting guided by passionate cultural storytellers fluent in English.
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