Specialty Coffee in Taiwan: Alishan, Taipei Café Culture, Simple Kaffa, Fika Fika, and World Barista Champions
Taiwan does not appear in the top tier of global coffee-producing or coffee-consuming nations by volume. Its domestic coffee production, spread across mountain ranges in the centre and south of the island, amounts to a few hundred metric tons annually, a rounding error relative to Brazil or Vietnam. Yet in the specialty coffee world, Taiwan is discussed with a seriousness that is entirely disproportionate to its size. The island has produced World Barista Champions, contributed landmark roasters and café concepts that have influenced café design from Seoul to Melbourne, built one of Asia's densest and most sophisticated urban café cultures in Taipei, and developed a domestic coffee-growing industry at Alishan, Gukeng, and Dongshan that specialty buyers from Japan, Korea, and Europe actively seek out. Understanding why requires understanding Taiwan's position as both a consumer market of extraordinary refinement and a producer of limited but exceptional quality, a combination that appears in no other coffee country of comparable scale.
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View on Amazon →Domestic Coffee Production: Alishan, Gukeng, and Dongshan
Coffee cultivation in Taiwan has a longer history than most people expect. The first coffee plants arrived on the island during the Japanese colonial period (1895 to 1945), when the Japanese colonial government introduced arabica cultivation in several mountain areas. Coffee production declined after World War II and was minimal through the 1970s and 1980s. The revival of Taiwanese coffee growing began in the 1990s in response to rising domestic coffee consumption and the recognition that the island's mountain terrain offered genuinely suitable growing conditions.
Alishan, the famous mountain range in Chiayi County known internationally as a tourist destination for its forest railways, sunrise views, and tea cultivation, has emerged as the most celebrated Taiwanese coffee origin. Coffee farms at Alishan grow arabica at altitudes ranging from 800 to 1,400 meters in volcanic soils under the shade of cypress and cedar forest. The climatic conditions, cool mountain temperatures, frequent mist, and distinct wet and dry seasons, create a slow cherry development that producers and international buyers compare favourably to Central American and Ethiopian growing conditions. Alishan coffees have been described by specialty buyers as having delicate floral notes, bright stone-fruit acidity, and a clean sweetness that reflects the altitude and careful processing.
Gukeng, in Yunlin County, is the other major Taiwanese coffee district and has the longest continuous production history of any Taiwanese growing region, with some farms operating since the early 20th century. Gukeng sits at lower altitudes than Alishan (typically 400 to 800 meters) and produces a fuller-bodied, less acidic cup, more suitable for darker roasting and traditional café applications. The annual Gukeng Coffee Festival, held each November in Gukeng Township, draws tens of thousands of visitors and serves as the primary domestic showcase for Taiwanese-grown coffee. The festival was first held in 2002 and has grown into one of Taiwan's largest single-commodity food festivals.
Dongshan in Yilan County, in the northeast of Taiwan, is the youngest significant growing region and benefits from the county's distinctive cool, wet climate influenced by the Pacific Ocean. Dongshan coffees are processed using a variety of methods, including washed, natural, and honey processing, by a community of younger producers who have been more willing to experiment with post-harvest techniques than the older Gukeng generation. Several Dongshan farms have submitted lots to international competitions and achieved recognition in Asian specialty coffee circles from approximately 2018 onward.
Taiwan's total domestic coffee production remains small relative to its consumption. Taiwan imports approximately 35,000 to 40,000 metric tons of green and roasted coffee annually (Taiwan Customs statistics, 2022), while domestic production is estimated at 500 to 800 metric tons, covering less than 2 percent of consumption. Domestic coffee commands significant price premiums: Alishan green coffee trades at three to ten times the C-market price for comparable quality imported coffee, justified by local provenance sentiment, limited supply, and genuine quality that satisfies specialty buyers. A 200-gram bag of roasted Alishan coffee from a Taipei specialty roaster typically retails for TWD 600 to 1,200 (approximately USD 18 to 37 at 2024 exchange rates), the upper range of international specialty coffee pricing.
Taipei's Café Culture: Density and Distinction
Taipei has one of the highest café densities of any major Asian city, with estimates ranging from 2,500 to over 4,000 café establishments within the city's 271 square kilometres, depending on the definition used (cafés versus coffee-serving restaurants versus convenience store coffee counters, which are significant in Taiwan). The concentration of independently owned specialty cafés in neighbourhoods like Da'an District, Zhongzheng District, Yongkang Street, and the streets surrounding National Taiwan University is among the densest in Asia by any comparable metric.
Taiwan's café culture has a sociological dimension that distinguishes it from mainland China, Japan, and Korea. The café in Taiwan functions as a social and intellectual space with deep historical roots. During the Japanese colonial period, modern cafés (kissaten-style, in the Japanese tradition) were among the few urban spaces where Taiwanese intellectuals and Japanese administrators mixed informally. Post-war café culture continued this role as a space for discussion, reading, and intellectual life that was politically sensitive in ways that made public gathering in more exposed spaces uncomfortable. Contemporary Taipei cafés carry this heritage as spaces for laptop workers, students, reading groups, and informal business meetings, with a tolerance for long-duration occupancy that distinguishes them from the faster-turnover café culture of the United States.
The Taiwanese café industry has also been a significant incubator for café design concepts that have influenced the broader Asian café scene. Several Taipei cafés have been cited as design references by café operators in Seoul, Tokyo, and Singapore, particularly for their approaches to integrating specialty coffee with bookshops, plant nurseries, vintage goods, and other retail concepts. The "bookstore café" format, in which coffee service is integrated with a serious curated bookselling operation, has particularly strong Taipei representation, with establishments like Eslite Spectrum and numerous smaller independent hybrid formats.
Simple Kaffa: Taiwan at the World Stage
Simple Kaffa is the most internationally recognised Taiwanese specialty coffee institution. Founded by Berg Wu and Jessie Chou, the café and roastery has operated in the Da'an District of Taipei and has been consistently ranked among the World's 50 Best Cafés by various international publications. Berg Wu is a two-time Taiwan Barista Championship winner who represented Taiwan at the World Barista Championship (WBC) multiple times, achieving finalist placements. The café's competition-level coffee presentation, combined with its serious sourcing approach (including direct relationships with Ethiopian and Panamanian producers for Gesha and other premium varieties), established it as the reference point for Taiwanese specialty coffee quality.
Simple Kaffa sources coffees from across the specialty world and serves them through a range of preparation methods, with an emphasis on the precision and consistency associated with competition-level coffee service. The café offers flight-style comparative tastings, single-origin pour-overs, and a full espresso menu, with price points that reflect the cost of specialty-grade sourcing and the labour-intensive preparation. A specialty pour-over at Simple Kaffa typically costs TWD 280 to 380 (approximately USD 8.50 to 11.50), the upper range of Asian café pricing for single-cup specialty coffee.
Fika Fika Café: Nordic Principles in Taipei
Fika Fika Café, founded by James Tsai in Taipei's Zhongshan District, is named for the Swedish concept of "fika," the daily ritual of taking a coffee break as a social practice. The name reflects Tsai's explicit philosophy: Nordic coffee values applied in a Taiwanese context. James Tsai won the Nordic Roasting Championship in 2013, one of the few non-Scandinavian competitors to win a Nordic regional competition, and built Fika Fika on the light-roasting, origin-transparency, and scientific precision principles that characterise the Scandinavian specialty coffee approach.
Fika Fika's roasting philosophy emphasises light to medium-light roast profiles that preserve origin character, in deliberate contrast to the darker-roasted espresso tradition that dominated Taiwanese coffee culture before the third-wave influence. The café publishes detailed information about each coffee's origin, varietal, processing method, and roast profile, educating customers in the specialty coffee vocabulary in a manner consistent with Scandinavian consumer communication norms. Fika Fika has expanded to multiple locations in Taipei and has become a training reference for Taiwanese baristas seeking to develop specialty skills.
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View on Amazon →World Barista Championship: Taiwan's Outsized Record
Taiwan's performance at the World Barista Championship (WBC) and related World Coffee Championships is extraordinary relative to the country's size. Berg Wu (Simple Kaffa) represented Taiwan at multiple WBC finals. Sasa Sestic, while representing Australia, trained in Taiwan and acknowledged Taiwanese coffee culture's influence on his preparation for the 2015 WBC, which he won. More directly, Taiwanese baristas have reached WBC semifinals in multiple years and won regional Asia-Pacific championships with frequency that countries with much larger coffee industries have not achieved.
The 2016 World Brewers Cup was won by Australian barista Scottie Callahan, who trained extensively in Taiwan. Hung Hsin-Fu represented Taiwan at the 2018 World Brewers Cup. The consistent presence of Taiwanese competitors at elite international competition levels reflects several features of Taiwan's coffee training ecosystem: intense training culture, access to quality sourcing through established import relationships, a domestic competition circuit (the Taiwan Barista Championship, Taiwan Brewers Cup, etc.) that creates a competitive training environment, and the concentration of serious coaching and mentorship capacity in Taipei's specialty coffee community.
The WBC format rewards technical precision, coffee knowledge, and presentation skills, areas where Taiwanese competitors have consistently been strong. The island's educational culture, which emphasises technical mastery and competitive excellence, appears to translate effectively into competition coffee preparation. Taiwan has also benefited from close competition knowledge exchange with the Japanese specialty coffee community (which has also punched above its weight at WBC, with Tetsu Kasuya winning the 2016 World Brewers Cup), with whom Taiwanese baristas share training information and often compete alongside at Asian regional events.
The Specialty Import Market and Its Japanese Influence
Taiwan's role as a specialty coffee importer has been shaped significantly by its cultural and historical relationship with Japan. The Japanese kissaten tradition of carefully prepared, individually served coffee predates the specialty coffee movement as formally defined, and Taiwanese café culture absorbed Japanese coffee aesthetics (precision brewing, high-service etiquette, focus on the individual cup) before the third-wave movement arrived from the United States and Scandinavia.
Several of the most respected Taiwanese coffee importers and green coffee traders have close relationships with Japanese specialty roasters and have served as bridges between East African and Central American specialty producers and the Japanese premium market. This position in the supply chain has given Taiwanese buyers early access to new origins and producing relationships, and has contributed to the quality of Taiwanese specialty sourcing at the retail level.
Taiwan's green coffee imports include significant volumes from Ethiopia (both natural and washed Yirgacheffe and Guji are popular), Colombia (Huila and Nariño microlots), Panama (Gesha from Hacienda La Esmeralda and other Boquete producers), and Kenya (SL28 and SL34). The Taiwanese specialty market has a documented preference for floral, fruit-forward cup profiles, which aligns with the popularity of Ethiopian naturals and Panamanian Gesha, both high-price categories in global specialty trading.
Why Taiwan Punches Above Its Weight
The convergence of factors that makes Taiwan exceptional in specialty coffee, domestic production quality at Alishan, extremely dense and sophisticated urban café culture in Taipei, elite barista competition performance, and serious import market engagement, is not accidental. It reflects several structural features of Taiwanese society: high disposable income per capita (GDP per capita approximately USD 33,000 in 2023, comparable to Southern European levels), a highly educated urban population with exposure to international café culture through travel and media, a cultural emphasis on craft and quality in service industries, and a historical position at the intersection of Japanese, Southeast Asian, and Western cultural influences that has made Taiwanese food culture generally one of the most sophisticated and open to international influence in Asia.
For international specialty coffee enthusiasts, Taiwan is an underreported destination. Taipei's café scene rewards serious exploration. For specialty buyers and roasters, Alishan and Dongshan offer limited-volume but genuinely distinctive coffees from a growing region with a quality trajectory that resembles what Costa Rica and Kenya looked like in the early years of international specialty attention. For anyone interested in the future of Asian specialty coffee, what Taiwan has built since the late 1990s is a model that China, Vietnam, and India are all, in various ways, attempting to replicate.
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