Daily 10:00-18:00Public cafe
Koffee Mameya in Tokyo's Omotesando is the bean specialist counter behind a wooden door, with 15 to 25 roasts curated from Japanese and international roasters.
Tip: There is no menu; the barista asks what you like and matches you to a bean. Plan 15 minutes for the conversation.
Sources from: Ethiopia, Kenya, Colombia, El Salvador
How they serve: Pour over, Whole bean retail, Bean consultation
Daily 08:00-19:00Public cafe
Blue Bottle Coffee opened its first overseas roastery in Tokyo's Kiyosumi-Shirakawa in 2015. The converted-factory flagship roasts the beans you drink the same week.
Tip: Saturdays queue out the door by 10:00; weekday mornings are the calm window. The drip flight tastes three single-origins side-by-side.
Sources from: Ethiopia, Colombia, Guatemala, Kenya
How they serve: Espresso, Pour over, Whole bean retail
Daily 09:00-18:00Public cafe
Onibus Coffee in Tokyo's Nakameguro roasts imported beans on-site in a renovated wooden house by the Toyoko Line. Menu: espresso, americano, latte, drip.
Tip: Order an Ethiopia hand-drip and take it to the second-floor wooden bench by the open window above the train tracks.
Sources from: Rwanda, Guatemala, Ethiopia
How they serve: Espresso, Pour over, Whole bean retail
Daily 08:00-19:00Public cafe
Glitch Coffee in Tokyo's Jimbocho is Kiyokazu Suzuki's light-roast specialty room, surrounded by secondhand bookstores. The pour-over flight is the morning order.
Tip: The light roasts read more like tea than espresso. Order a Geisha pour-over and the staff will walk you through it.
Sources from: Ethiopia, Kenya, Costa Rica, Panama
How they serve: Pour over, Espresso, Whole bean retail