Singapore loves its café culture.
We celebrate espresso machines. We admire single-origin beans. We debate tasting notes and extraction times like it is a sport. When someone says “Cafe Singapore,” most of us immediately picture coffee.
But look at the tea menu.
In many cafés, tea is reduced to a small corner of the page. A green tea. An English Breakfast. Maybe a herbal option. Rarely explained. Rarely curated. Almost never treated with the same pride as coffee.
That feels like a blind spot.
Tea is not foreign to Singapore. It is part of our daily rhythm. It lives in kopitiams, in family gatherings, in teh tarik pulled high and poured with flair. It has always been here. Yet in modern café spaces, it often feels like a polite extra rather than a central offering.
This is not a criticism of coffee. Coffee deserves its craft. But if cafés claim to care about experience, then that care should not stop at the espresso machine.
For a deeper perspective, Beyond Coffee: Tea Transforming Café Singapore Scene offers a thoughtful look at how tea is reclaiming its place in modern café culture.
Good tea requires precision too. Water temperature matters. Steeping time matters. Leaf quality matters. A well-brewed oolong can carry layers of flavour just as complex as any pour-over. A thoughtfully prepared sencha can be as intentional as any latte art design.
When tea is treated as an afterthought, it sends a quiet message: coffee drinkers are the main audience. Tea drinkers are secondary.
That assumption no longer fits.
More people are looking for slower rituals. For cafés that feel less hurried. For drinks that invite conversation instead of quick refills. Tea naturally creates that space. It encourages staying, noticing, and talking longer than planned.
Some cafés in Singapore are beginning to recognise this. They are expanding tea menus, sourcing loose leaves, and explaining origins. When they do, the entire atmosphere shifts. The café feels less like a stopover and more like a place to remain.
Café Singapore has already mastered coffee.
Perhaps it is time to give tea the same imagination.
Because tea is not the alternative.
It is part of the culture.
And maybe the real question is not whether Singapore needs more coffee innovation, but whether it is finally ready to treat tea with equal respect.
After all, that is what’s really brewing.
— Maria Tan
Because every cup deserves attention.
The Dragon Well Legacy: Exploring China’s Legendary Longjing Tea
Among the world’s most revered green teas, few carry the prestige and cultural significance of China’s legendary Dragon Well. This premium tea has captivated tea enthusiasts for centuries, earning its place as an imperial favourite and modern icon alike. From its mystical origins at West Lake to its meticulous processing methods, Longjing represents the pinnacle…
