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Did You Know: Kopitiam Culture In Malaysia Is Over 150 Years Old

An economic crisis after World War II led to its booming popularity.

Kopitiams are an integral part of the Malaysian identity.

But did you know that they have been around since the late 1800s?

Image via Gastronaut Diary

This interesting piece of history was shared by Facebook user and avid coffee lover SY Chia, who told SAYS to pass on the knowledge.

The history of kopitiams in Malaysia begin with the migration of Hainanese people from the Hainan island of southern China

Image via SAYS

They were among the last Chinese ethnic groups to migrate to Southeast Asia in the late 1800s

When they finally arrived, other major dialect groups such as the Hokkien, Cantonese, and Teochew had already settled and dominated the more lucrative industries in Malaya such as trade, agriculture, and mining.

Early Cantonese migrants worked in tin mines.

Image via Quora

Forced to look elsewhere to make a living, most Hainanese migrants became involved in hospitality

Many found work as chefs and staff at hotels, restaurants, and bakeries, while others became domestic servants for wealthy European and Peranakan families.

Some Hainanese people also took up jobs as cooks and canteen operators in British military bases and ship galleys.

Image via Pinterest

At the end of World War II though, there was an economic downturn and job opportunities in hotels and European households became scarce

At the time, property prices also dropped significantly.

Many Hainanese people who were working as chefs for the British quickly seized this opportunity, and with their savings, bought up places to set up small restaurants and kopitiams across the country.

And if you haven't realised it by now, the term 'kopitiam' is made up of two words – 'kopi' meaning coffee in Bahasa Malaysia and 'tiam' meaning shop in Hokkien.

Image via Pinterest

And thus began the popular social hubs for Chinese migrants to gather, eat, and keep up with local ongoing

The typical kopitiam catered to the average to low-income workers, and all had similar basic white marble tables and green floral porcelain ware.

The menu persists until today, showing the fusion between the Hainanese people's cooking skills and the style they had to adopt for their British employers: chicken chops with green peas and brown sauce, toast with butter and coconut jam, and roasted coffee sweetened with condensed milk.

They also sold tea, cakes, breads, and the quintessential soft-boiled eggs.

Kopitiams are still cooking the same food we see today.

Image via @yeejiao (Instagram)

The affordable food and social concept was so successful that kopitiams could be found in nearly every corner of Malaysia by the 1960s

And until today, most kopitiams are still run by families of Hainanese descent, with businesses being handed down from father to son.

Among the traditional Hainanese kopitiams still operating to this day in Malaysia include:
- Restoran Yut Sun – Taiping, Perak (1921)
- White House Kopitiam – Kota Bharu, Kelantan (1935)
- Kluang Rail Coffee – Kluang, Johor (1938)
- Chong Kok Kopitam – Klang, Selangor (1940)
- Kedai Kopi Hai Peng – Chukai, Terengganu (1940)
- Restoran Hua Mui – Johor Bahru, Johor (1946)

Kedai Kopi Hai Peng, Terengganu.

Image via Booking.com

Chia told SAYS that these original kopitiams have completely integrated with local communities and towns that they were started in, some even sporting halal certificates to now cater to Muslim patrons.

However, he sadly added that traditional kopitiams could be a dying heritage as new millennial cafes slowly take over our true national coffee culture.

Did you know much of what we know about Malaysia today has its roots from our colonial past? Read more about it here:

Malaysian Chinese have called Malaysia home since their ancestors settled here way back in the 15th century:

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