Specialty Coffee & Japanese Sweets

A Slow Cup in the Heart of Kyoto

Single-origin pour-overs, house-made wagashi,
and a quiet corner in an old Kyoto machiya townhouse.

Our Story

A 100-Year-Old House. A Very Good Cup of Coffee.

Mori Coffee opened in 2018 inside a preserved machiya townhouse in Kyoto’s Fushimi district — a building that has stood for over a century. We kept the latticed windows, the wooden beams, and the earthen walls. We added espresso machines and a pour-over bar.

The result is a place that feels neither entirely old nor entirely new — just comfortable, quiet, and worth finding.

Our Coffee

We roast on Tuesdays. Brew on Wednesday.

Every bean in our café is roasted in-house, 48 hours before it reaches your cup. We believe coffee is at its best in this narrow window — after the roast gases have settled, before the flavour begins to fade. We roast small batches on Tuesday mornings, and open the bags on Wednesday. If you visit on a Thursday, you are drinking Tuesday’s roast. That is how it should be.

Our Process

From Bean to Cup

Every cup of coffee at Mori travels thousands of kilometres and passes through eight stages of care before it reaches you. Here is what happens between the farm and your table.

01 · Origin
Farm & Harvest

Direct-trade farms in Ethiopia, Colombia & Guatemala. Hand-picked at peak ripeness.

02 · Process
Washing & Drying

Washed or natural process depending on variety. Sun-dried on raised beds for 3–4 weeks.

03 · Import
Green Bean

Sea-freighted in GrainPro bags to preserve moisture. Arrives at our Kyoto warehouse.

04 · Roasting
In-House Roast

Small-batch roasted every Tuesday in our 5kg Probat drum roaster. Light to medium profiles.

05 · Brewing
Barista Preparation

Pour-over, espresso, or cold brew — each method dialled in daily with a refractometer.

06 · Your Cup
Served to You

No paper cups. Always ceramic. Alongside a small seasonal wagashi made that morning.

Ethiopia · Yirgacheffe
Kochere Natural

Blueberry & jasmine. Our signature single-origin pour-over.

Colombia · Huila
La Palma Washed

Red apple & caramel. Balanced, approachable, ideal for first-timers.

Guatemala · Antigua
San Sebastian

Dark chocolate & brown sugar. Our espresso base.

Japan · Kyoto
Uji Matcha Blend

Ceremonial-grade Uji matcha sourced 15km from our café.

Menu

What We Serve

Coffee

Pour-Over Single Origin

Brewed to order in a Hario V60. Choose your origin — Ethiopia, Colombia, or Guatemala. Tasting notes on request.

¥880

Coffee

House Latte

Double shot of our Guatemala espresso with steamed Hokkaido milk. A gentle entry point to specialty coffee.

¥720

Matcha

Uji Matcha Latte

Ceremonial-grade Uji matcha whisked with hot water, then layered over cold Hokkaido milk. Intensely green, pleasantly bitter.

¥780

Sweets

Seasonal Wagashi

Two pieces of house-made Japanese confectionery, changing weekly with the season. Pairs with pour-over or matcha.

¥480

Our Sweets

Wagashi made this morning, eaten today.

Our wagashi — traditional Japanese confections — are made each morning by our pastry chef using ingredients that change with the season. Sakura an in spring. Yuzu jelly in winter. Chestnut and black sesame in autumn. Each piece is a small, edible portrait of the current moment in the Japanese calendar. We make only what we can sell that day. We never refrigerate, and we never repeat.

Sweets

Seasonal Showcase

Sweets

Nerikiri — Seasonal Shape

 Handcrafted from white bean paste and given shape by the season. Today’s form changes with the calendar — ask your host what’s in bloom.

¥380 / piece

Sweets

Uji Matcha Roll Cake

Soft sponge rolled around bean paste, scented with single-origin Uji matcha. Bright and grassy, with a gentle sweetness that doesn’t compete.

¥680 / slice

Sweets

Warabi Mochi & Kinako

Silky bracken-starch mochi, just firm enough to hold its shape. Finished tableside with toasted soybean flour and a drizzle of kuromitsu.

¥520

Sweets

Sakura Kanten Jelly

Set with agar from the Izu coast, lightly flavored with cherry blossom and a whisper of salt. Cool, clear, and quietly floral.

¥440

Gallery

The Café in Every Light

Reviews

What Visitors Say

★★★★★

The Ethiopia pour-over was the best coffee I had in Japan — and I tried many. The wagashi alongside it was a revelation. The machiya interior made the whole experience feel like stepping into another century.

Oliver K. — Germany

★★★★★

Hidden down a side street in Fushimi, this is exactly the kind of place you hope to stumble upon in Kyoto. The barista explained the bean origins in beautiful English. We stayed for two hours and wished we could stay longer.

Isabelle M. — Canada

★★★★★

I am a coffee professional and this is a genuinely excellent café. The roast profiles are thoughtful, the extraction is precise, and the wagashi pairing concept is inspired. Mori understands what a third-wave café should be.

Jin H. — South Korea

Visit Info

Find Us

Address○-○○ Fushimi, Kyoto (inside a machiya townhouse)
HoursWed–Mon: 9:00 AM — 6:00 PM (last order 5:30 PM)
ClosedTuesday
Seats20 inside · 8 outside (weather permitting)
ReservationWalk-in only. Busy on weekends — arrive early.
From StationFushimi-Inari Station — 8 min walk

Come Visit

A Good Cup Awaits.

No reservations needed. Just follow the smell of freshly ground coffee down the lane and look for the latticed wooden door.

Sample website Coffee & Sweets

© 2024 Mori Coffee & Sweets. All rights reserved.