
From Tea To Espresso: Coffee Culture Grows In Tea-Loving Nepal
The Himalayan country is a major tea producer, as well as a major consumer. When people greet each other in the morning, they don't ask "how are you." They say "have you had your tea?"
Tea - usually served as a sweet, milky beverage in a piping hot glass tumbler - is as much a part of Nepal's culture as rice, a constant presence at homes, meetings and social gatherings.
But a growing number of Nepalis are warming up to coffee, as trendy cafes spring up street corners in cities and towns across the country.
One cafe in the capital, Kathmandu, is widely seen as the pioneer.
Gagan Pradhan began Himalayan Java as a single cafe in an alley, and it's grown to a chain with 84 locations in the country. Pradhan estimates there are around 7,000 cafes across the country, although so far international brands like Starbucks aren't in Nepal.
"There are lot of tea shops throughout the nation, but the kind of set up they have is still kind of old fashioned," Pradhan said. "I think with investors and people like us, when it comes to coffee shop we are more serious not only with machines, we are serious with everything like the lighting, the set up, the furnishings, the location."
Pradhan said tea shops usually offer just black tea or tea with milk, whereas a typical coffee menu has 10-15 hot beverages and about 10-15 cold beverages, he said.
Pradhan said it's an appealing business because the initial investment to open a cafe is very low, they're clean and simple enough for a single to family to run, and customers are willing to pay more for coffee.
Several of eastern Nepal's tea plantations in the mountains of east Nepal, famous for the tea, are joined by coffee plantations now.
Nepal is part of a regional trend. Coffee consumption has soared across traditionally tea-drinking countries in Asia as members of growing middle classes seek out novel flavors and adopt international trends.
Coffee is a premium drink in Nepal: it costs about $2 at Himalayan Java, which is enough to buy a meal at a local cafe in Kathmandu, or five cups of tea. Still, cafes bustle with officers workers on breaks and students looking for places to study.
"I think the idea of drinking coffee (in Nepal) was first triggered with people thinking it would elevate their standard of living, but then once they tasted coffee many people just liked it and continued to drink it," said Deep Singh Bandari, a social worker who is a regular visitor to the coffee cafes.
Most of the coffee drunk in Nepal is imported, but in the country's famous eastern tea-growing regions coffee plantations are springing up.
According to Nepal's National Tea and Coffee Development Board, about 400 tons of coffee was produced in fiscal year 2021-22, the most recent for which data is available. That's a drop in the percolator compared to the 26,000 tons of tea produced the same year, but the board predicts rapid growth.
"Both young and old people in Nepal just love coffee, and the number of coffee drinkers is growing every day. This trend is just going to grow," said Pradhan.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Mint
11 hours ago
- Mint
The Chinese coffee chain that's muscling In on Starbucks's turf
Luckin Coffee could have opened its first stores anywhere in America. China's biggest coffee chain chose a New York City spot less than 200 feet from a Starbucks. From there, Luckin is serving up coffee drinks from a flat white to a raspberry cold brew, really fast, ordered on its mobile app whose coupons may be as addictive as caffeine. Armed with iced coconut lattes, it has the makings of a deliciously audacious corporate rivalry. Luckin has just two U.S. stores, which opened June 30 in Manhattan, compared with Starbucks's 17,000 U.S. locations. Then again, in China, Luckin didn't exist when Starbucks arrived and spread coffee culture—and it overtook Starbucks in six years. 'This is just the beginning," Luckin said on Instagram. 'NYC, we're here." That Luckin has appeared in New York is pretty amazing. The company was left for dead in 2020 after an accounting scandal during which it faked more than $300 million in sales. That was the last time it made news in the U.S. Now, it's on Starbucks's home turf just as the American coffee giant is trying to turn around under new leadership after five consecutive quarters of declining same-store sales. Founded by Chinese tech entrepreneurs, Luckin is a master of the gamification that is common among Asian retailers. Luckin customers must order on its app, where they are showered with coupons, including $1.99 drinks for first-timers in New York. The app gives a pickup time and texts when the drink is ready (three-minute and five-minute waits on two recent morning orders). Customers pick up their drinks at the counter without having to interact with another person. 'This is just the beginning,' Luckin said on Instagram to mark the opening of its stores, including this one in Greenwich Village in Manhattan. Mobile app orders have been maddening for Starbucks leadership. Customers coming in to pick up their mobile orders were overwhelming its cafes ('a mosh pit," as Starbucks founder Howard Schultz complained) and spoiled the leisurely, premium vibe Starbucks thrives on. Still, they fueled much of the chain's business. When new Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol joined the company almost a year ago, he was frank: Mobile orders needed a makeover. Niccol said that he would better separate mobile pickup queues from cafe dwellers, and place some limits on how much people could doctor their drinks. More than 30% of Starbucks pickup orders are placed digitally. Trainer Unsworth, a 23-year-old tech salesman, tried Luckin in New York. He returned the next day for an iced latte. The latte had more of a milky taste than a coffee taste, but he didn't mind. He plans to come back as long as the app keeps feeding him coupons. 'Coffee is getting a little too expensive right now," said Unsworth, who usually pays about $6 for his coffee elsewhere. His Luckin iced latte was closer to $2. Luckin didn't respond to requests seeking comment. Starbucks declined to comment. Luckin likely wouldn't even exist if not for Starbucks. The American chain spread the idea of sipping lattes and lounging in cafes to China when it opened its first store in Beijing in 1999, bringing coffee culture to the traditionally tea-drinking country. About two decades later, in 2017, entrepreneurs from ride-hailing platform UCAR, Jenny Qian and Charles Lu, founded Luckin, part of a Chinese tech funding boom that propelled companies like TikTok-parent ByteDance and Jack Ma's Ant Group. Luckin's Chinese name, Ruixing, generally translates to 'auspicious luck." From the start, Luckin was a tech native. It built its strategy around a mobile app with the idea of having coffee available at any moment, through grab-and-go stores and speedy delivery. Stores were smaller than Starbucks's locations and they offered steep discounts. Profitability was less a concern than grabbing market share. It opened thousands of shops across China at a blinding pace—many just feet away from a Starbucks—and went public in less than two years. 'The market won't only have Starbucks. Every country has their own coffee brand," Qian told Chinese state media in 2018. Its meteoric rise came crashing down when the accounting scandal forced it to delist from the Nasdaq Stock Market in 2020 and pay a $180 million settlement with U.S. regulators. Luckin ousted Lu and Qian, its then chairman and chief executive, and later filed for bankruptcy. Jinyi Guo, an executive in charge of product and supply chain, took over as CEO. Beijing-based private-equity firm Centurium Capital, Luckin's largest shareholder and one of its earliest financial backers, poured money into the company to clean up the mess. 'We are trying to redeem ourselves because we want to repair the reputation of Chinese companies," Guo told The Wall Street Journal in a 2022 interview. By 2023, Luckin overtook Starbucks as China's biggest coffee chain by sales. That year, Luckin had about 16,200 stores in China—more than double Starbucks's 6,800 locations in the country. Today, Luckin has more than 24,000 stores across mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore and Malaysia. Many, especially in smaller cities, are just the size of kiosks. Luckin this year secured the exclusive rights to coconuts from a group of islands in Indonesia to use in its signature coconut latte. 'While cultivating coffee consumption habits, we aim to allow more customers to conveniently enjoy high-quality coffee experiences at very competitive prices, striving to make high-quality coffee become a part of everyone's daily life," Guo said on an earnings call in February. Its New York menu includes an iced coconut latte, pineapple cold brew, iced matcha latte, iced velvet latte and Pink Sunrise, made with coconut milk, mango juice and strawberry sweet cold foam. Like Starbucks, Luckin lets customers customize their drinks, but has somewhat fewer options. The Luckin app offers six types of milk for an iced latte, for example, and Starbucks has 11. Luckin has plotted its U.S. entry since at least last year, when it told investors that it was evaluating opportunities to expand to America. The company said it knew the U.S. would be a tough market to crack. 'Given the maturity, saturation and the competitiveness of the U.S. coffee market, we are intending to approach our expansion strategies there with careful consideration," Luckin's Guo said in an October 2024 investor call. Luckin recently hired or was seeking to fill at least a dozen corporate roles in Secaucus, N.J., and the broader New York metropolitan area, according to LinkedIn profiles, posts and job listings. China, Starbucks's second largest market, has become a headache for the company. Its market share fell to 14% in 2024, from more than 40% in 2017, as competition from Luckin and other local rivals grew, according to Bernstein Research. Starbucks is evaluating alternatives for its business, such as bringing on a local partner to help run it. Executives have said they remain committed to China and efforts to turn around the operation are starting to work. Adding to the competition, ousted Luckin co-founders Lu and Qian started a new coffee chain, Cotti Coffee, in 2022 and it now has more stores in China than Starbucks, according to Bernstein. Cotti has also entered the U.S., including a few stores in New York it opened weeks before Luckin. In China, Starbucks last month cut prices for more than 20 beverages, with the average decrease of a grande drink declining by 70 cents. The cuts are working, Starbucks said. New drink styles, like sugar-free options, are also broadening Starbucks's customer base and increasing sales, particularly in the afternoons and evenings. 'We try not to get distracted by things we can't control, like who's entering the market," said Brady Brewer, CEO of Starbucks International, in a prior interview. 'If we do our best to deliver coffee, our coffeehouse environment and great customer service, we usually win." For fiscal year 2024, Starbucks logged $36.2 billion in revenue, while Luckin reported $4.7 billion. Starbucks has a market value of about $106 billion; Luckin's is around $10 billion. In the U.S., Starbucks is pushing to return to being a place where people will pay premium prices for a cafe experience. Starbucks has struggled with speed, particularly as an increasing number of consumers have customized their drinks with syrups, foams and other additions. Niccol said earlier this year that about half of in-store orders take longer than four minutes. Technology rolling out in the U.S. is helping it shave an average of two minutes off wait times for in-store orders, helping it reach service time goals of four minutes for its cafe and drive-through business. On a recent Thursday morning in New York, Hailey Schindler and Tracy Fernandez tried Luckin for the first time. Schindler, 26, got a 'Pink Sunrise," a mango, coconut and strawberry drink. Fernandez, 27, ordered a blood-orange cold brew. The two, who work together at a creative agency across the street from Luckin, typically go out for coffee at Starbucks or Dunkin' a few times a week. Both said they would go back to Luckin. 'They have a lot of really neat flavors I've never had," Schindler said. A sign advertising $1.99 coffee lured Danny Goldberg, a 31-year-old motivational speaker, into the store the week after it opened. He downloaded Luckin's app and ordered a coconut cold brew. He liked the quick, cashierless system. Enticed by more coupons in the app, Goldberg returned the next day with his wife, 8-month-old baby and golden retriever to get another coconut cold brew, also for around $2. Since then, he has made six more visits and told his friends about Luckin. Bernstein analysts noted the number of repeat customers they found at the two New York pilot stores, and Luckin's heavy discounting. They estimate Luckin will be able to achieve profitability in the U.S. at the store level in the next 12 to 18 months if sales volumes increase and discounts moderate. The store number of its second U.S. location—written on the corner of the counter—wasn't 2. It was 00002. That, the analysts said, is a hint that Luckin has ambitions to become bigger in the U.S. Write to Hannah Miao at and Heather Haddon at


Time of India
20 hours ago
- Time of India
Freedom With Purpose and Poetry on Roads
1 2 Ranchi: In 2014, when Ranchi's Ankush Kasera set out alone to Raigarh Fort during his college days in Pune, he wasn't chasing a tourist checklist. He was chasing silence and found something far bigger. "At Raigarh, I understood life. It was poetic, spiritual, and also held a mirror in front of me. I went there alone but came back as a new person," he said. Since then, solo travelling has become his life's calling. From the cliffs of Meghalaya to the misty trails of Arunachal Pradesh, Ankush has wandered alone through the remotest corners of the Northeast. These journeys led him to pick up nature photography. "In the Northeast, I would trek alone in the rainforests, wait for the perfect light to fall on a bird's wing or a waterfall. Solo travel teaches you patience and sharpens observation," he said. Today, Ankush works closely with the Jharkhand govt, capturing forests, lifestyle, and tribal culture. He has solo-travelled to Gujarat's Kutch, explored Rajasthan's deserts, and continues to write poetry inspired by his journeys. Among Jharkhand's young adventurers, solo travelling is emerging as a powerful personal movement, driven by the urge to disconnect, reflect, and rediscover life beyond the routine. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like The Ultimate List: 30 Hidden Seaside Towns in Europe That Deserve the Spotlight Learn More Undo Some seek solitude, others chase a poetic high or spiritual clarity. For some, it's about bold storytelling; for others, it's about mental relief. Social media platforms have also opened many avenues. But at its core, solo travel is about freedom, self-love, and resilience, learning to be alone without feeling lonely. For Samir Ranjan, a Tata Steel employee from Muri, solo travelling started during a stressful phase of life but ended up becoming a lifelong practice. In 2019, after completing his apprentice training, Samir faced the classic transition pressure moving from student life to job responsibilities. Feeling stuck and tense, he booked an impromptu solo trip to Varanasi. "I was scared of this new life phase, earning, adjusting, and being responsible. But when I sat at Manikarnika Ghat watching corpses burn, I realised life will always be uncertain. There's no point carrying stress forever. That trip gave me clarity," Samir said. "In group trips, you're stuck between selfies, food debates, and time-wasting. I wanted to travel for clarity, not for social media posts," he added. Since then, Samir has solo-travelled to Ladakh, explored Odisha's hidden trails, and trekked alone to Pangarchulla Peak in Uttarakhand, a high-altitude summit that tested both his endurance and mindset. In a remarkable feat of endurance and courage, Kanchan Ugursandi, a senior pharmacist with the Govt of India, has emerged as the first solo woman rider from Jharkhand to cover 22 Himalayan passes, including some of the world's highest motorable routes all on her trusted Royal Enfield Himalayan 411cc motorcycle. Originally from Ranchi, and currently posted in Delhi, Kanchan's journey began from the Rann of Kutch, Gujarat, and stretched to the Uttarakhand-China border, passing through Gujarat, Rajasthan, Punjab, Jammu, Kashmir, Ladakh, Himachal Pradesh, and Uttarakhand. Among her most notable milestones are: Umling La Pass (Eastern Ladakh) at 19,024 ft, the world's highest motorable pass; Sasarla Pass (Siachen Sector) at 17,250 ft; Nurbula Top (Eastern Ladakh) at 17,421 ft Lipulekh Pass (Kailash Mansarovar Road, Uttarakhand) at 17,500 ft, near the Indo-China border. "I received immense support from the Ministry of Defence and Border Roads Organisation (BRO). Security forces ensured I had the guidance and safety needed to access restricted terrain. I want to encourage women to travel on their own," she said. While navigating treacherous terrains, unpredictable weather, and altitude sickness, Kanchan says mental strength was as important as physical preparedness. For women aspiring to travel solo, she advised: "Always inform your family about your route, carry satellite navigation tools, and wear full riding safety gear. Confidence is key, but preparation is non-negotiable." For 25-year-old Abhinav Yadav, solo travel is not just a hobby; it's his way of life. A resident of Sahibganj, Abhinav said he found his true calling not in classrooms or corporate jobs, but on the open road. "I shifted five jobs between 2018 and 2019. Nothing made sense to me. Then I took my first solo trip to Darjeeling and Sikkim, and I realised I didn't want to travel like a tourist, I wanted to explore as a traveler," he said. In the last five years, Abhinav has covered nearly 1.5 lakh km on bikes and another 20,000 km through hitchhiking. His hitchhiking routes have taken him from Kanyakumari to the Kartarpur Corridor in Punjab, the visa-free entry point for Indian pilgrims visiting Pakistan's Gurdwara Darbar Sahib, and also to African countries. Pranay Sinha, a passionate biker from Ashok Nagar in Ranchi, has become the first solo rider from Jharkhand to reach the world's highest motorable road in Chumar, Eastern Ladakh, a region secured by the Indo Tibetan Border Police near the China border. Pranay's biking journey began in 2017 with a group ride to Darjeeling. Motivated by travel shows and a deep interest in India's border cultures, he started solo riding in 2018, completing trips to Ladakh, Srinagar, Sikkim, Bhutan, Nepal, and Himachal Pradesh over the past 7–8 years. A mechanical engineering graduate from Delhi, Pranay originally aspired to join the Army or Merchant Navy. However, during a long waiting period, he began exploring remote terrains on his own, using self-drawn maps and riding gears. "Solo travel gives you a blank canvas. There's no one telling you where to go or how to feel. You create your own story," Ankush added. Samir agrees, "It teaches you that you're enough. You don't need a crowd to validate your happiness."


Indian Express
a day ago
- Indian Express
Tea-loving Nepal is warming up to coffee
Coffee hasn't always been an easy sell in Nepal. The Himalayan country is a major tea producer, as well as a major consumer. When people greet each other in the morning, they don't ask 'how are you.' They say 'have you had your tea?' Tea — usually served with as a sweet, milky beverage in a piping hot glass tumbler — is as much a part of Nepal's culture as rice, a constant presence at homes, meetings and social gatherings. But a growing number of Nepalis are warming up to coffee, as trendy cafes spring up street corners in cities and towns across the country. One cafe in the capital, Kathmandu, is widely seen as the pioneer. Gagan Pradhan began Himalayan Java as a single cafe in an alley, and it's grown to a chain with 84 locations the country. Pradhan estimates there around 7,000 cafes across the country, although so far international brands like Starbucks aren't in Nepal. 'There are lot of tea shops throughout the nation, but the kind of set up they have is still kind of old fashioned,' Pradhan said. 'I think with investors and people like us, when it comes to coffee shop we are more serious not only with machines, we are serious with everything like the lighting, the set up, the furnishings, the location.' Pradhan said tea shops usually offer just black tea or tea with milk, whereas a typical coffee menu has 10-15 hot beverages and about 10-15 cold beverages, he said. Pradhan said it's an appealing business because the initial investment to open a cafe is very low, they're clean and simple enough for a single to family to run, and customers are willing to pay more for coffee. Several of eastern Nepal's tea plantations in the mountains of east Nepal, famous for the tea, are joined by coffee plantations now. Nepal is part of a regional trend. Coffee consumption has soared across traditionally tea-drinking countries in Asia as members of growing middle classes seek out novel flavors and adopt international trends. Coffee is a premium drink in Nepal: it costs about $2 at Himalayan Java, which is enough to buy a meal at a local cafe in Kathmandu, or five cups of tea. Still, cafes bustle with officers workers on breaks and students looking for places to study. 'I think the idea of drinking coffee (in Nepal) was first triggered with people thinking it would elevate their standard of living, but then once they tasted coffee many people just liked it and continued to drink it,' said Deep Singh Bandari, a social worker who is a regular visitor to the coffee cafes. Most of the coffee drunk in Nepal is imported, but in the country's famous eastern tea-growing regions coffee plantations are springing up. According to Nepal's National Tea and Coffee Development Board, about 400 tons of coffee was produced in fiscal year 2021-22, the most recent for which data is available. That's a drop in the percolator compared to the 26,000 tons of tea produced the same year, but the board predicts rapid growth. 'Both young and old people in Nepal just love coffee, and the number of coffee drinkers is growing every day. This trend is just going to grow,' said Pradhan.