Lyon may be the gastronomic heartland of France, but most visiting foodies will tell you it's a hard road finding a decent coffee there - let alone a perfect one.
Enter Kiwi woman Roz Morris James and her Lyonnais partner, Sadry Abidi, who are spearheading a slow but steady coffee revolution in France's second biggest city.
The couple own Cafe Mokxa, a tiny coffee and cake shop in Les Pentes de la Croix Rousse, an edgy, multicultural area in the first arrondissement of central Lyon.
Their 29sq m hole-in-the-wall is at the foot of the famous silk-weaving district and part of a large Unesco World Heritage site in Lyon, which straddles the Rhone and the Saone and boasts some of Europe's most beautiful Renaissance architecture.
Cafe Mokxa, which has taken on a cult status in Lyon, and has also become known in Paris and other parts of France, since it opened in April 2011. But success did not come overnight. "It took six months after we opened to establish our clientele," Morris says. "The French did not understand what we were trying to do. I always joke that we had to train our customers."