Skip to content

Vietnamese Coffee Culture

Highland polyculture. Colonial resistance. Where Linh asked the question that started everything.

Scroll to discover ↓

The Question That Started Everything

"Do you know the hands that picked your coffee?"

Linh asked us this simple question while we sat on her veranda, watching mist roll across her polyculture farm. We didn't know. Most people don't. That question sparked Alice and Nick's entire journey—and brought us to understand Linh's remarkable approach to coffee farming.

Polyculture as Resistance

Linh's farm defies modern monoculture practices. Coffee trees grow alongside fruit trees, vegetables, and native plants—the way her grandmother farmed, the way that survived French colonial pressure to industrialize.

"They wanted us to clear everything for coffee," she explains, gesturing at the diverse canopy. "But my family knew: diversity is resilience. When one crop fails, others sustain us. The coffee tastes better too—it's not fighting the land, it's part of it."

Highland Wisdom

Vietnamese coffee culture developed its own distinct character—strong, bold, integrated into daily life through the ritual of cà phê sữa đá. But in the highlands where Linh works, traditions run deeper than tourist cafes in Hanoi.

Her processing methods combine French colonial influence with indigenous knowledge: sun-drying on raised beds, careful sorting by hand, fermentation times adjusted to the mountain humidity. It's a technique refined over three generations of resistance to shortcuts.

Experience Linh's Story

Every bag funds Alice & Nick's ongoing documentation work and supports Linh's polyculture farm directly.

Try Once

ÂŁ12

Buy Single Bag

Monthly Discovery

ÂŁ19/mo

Join Subscription

đź“–
🤔

Want to explore deeper? The academic research reveals fascinating historical connections...

🎓

🌱 Modern Impact

Research developed with historians, cultural experts, and coffee-producing communities.