
At a café on Phạm Ngũ Lão, the experiment of the week. Mango and coffee may sound like a bad decision until the first sip proves otherwise.

Sweet fruit cream against the dark bitterness of robusta, tropical and strange and somehow perfect for Saigon. It shouldn’t work, but it does. Like most things here.


This week tasted like crushed ice, condensed milk, and slow mornings under cloudy skies.
It started with the neighborhood coffee lady. No grand introduction, just small gestures, quiet smiles. In Saigon, coffee often begins not with the drink, but with the person handing it to you.

Then came the can of Nescafé Café Việt, coffee in its simplest grab-and-go form. Not romantic, maybe, but honest. Sweet, strong, practical. Feeling nostalgic for Japanese vending machines at times like these.

The darkest cà phê sữa đá of the week was on Nguyễn Trãi. Poured almost backwards—thick black coffee settling first, and then the condensed milk was poured on top.




Near Bến Thành Market, under a cloudy sky, the city moved in its usual way: scooters weaving, vendors calling, tourists pausing for photos, and somewhere in the middle of it all, another red plastic table and stool waiting for another coffee.

Back in my neighborhood, hẻm coffee reminded me why street coffee always wins. Crushed ice, quiet workers eating breakfast before the day really begins. Just the soft clatter of spoons against glasses and the hum of a city waking up.

This week in coffee was about noticing more rituals around it—the lady who questions my passion until she sees me grab a red stool with no intention of getting my coffee to go, the men and women eating their pre-work breakfasts in silence, the cafés hidden in alleys, the cloudy mornings near markets, and the accidental brilliance of mango and espresso.
I know I say some version of this every week, but it’s true. In Saigon, coffee is never just coffee.
It is routine.
It is geography.
It is conversation.
It is the city itself.
April 2026









































