Category Archives: coffee

Espresso profeta

If i’m going to spend $5 on coffee and a pastry shouldn’t i at least try to get a really good coffee at an independent coffee shop? Or go to coffee bean and tea leaf before i consider starbucks? Having a starbucks card for the past two years has warped my brain and twisted it in ways i cannot comprehend. I must untwist before i forget that ubiquity does not equal quality. In fact, ubiquity rarely equals quality.

Enough about corporate ubiquity and inequity…i ordered a macchiato northwest style which is a doppio wet instead of a doppio with 2 dollops of foam. The barista was nice enough to grace the espresso with a heart. No sugar, of course. That requirement was met by a loaf of white chocolate bread which looks like it comes from breadbar but i can’t be sure. The espresso was smooth, perfectly balanced by the milk, neither bitter nor sour. I may order macchiatos more often. I must admit, i never would’ve ordered one if i hadn’t had one at starbucks. Technically, starbucks is a better deal: for the same price you get 10 more ounces of milk. But it’s the difference between concentrated happiness versus diluted happiness. The caffeine is the same so if the coffee is better and you’re searching for fewer calories, isn’t it worth it? Besides, there’s also the pretension factor: starbucks’ macchiato is nothing like a *real* macchiato. I’m not just saying that because i’m here enjoying my drink; i’ve done my research. I *know*.

10 coffee places

i would be remiss if i didn’t record this info…

Coffee aficionados are no longer confined to Espresso Profeta, Caffe Luxxe or Conservatory for Coffee for a decent cup of joe.
LA Weekly’s 10 Places to Get a Damn Good Cup of Coffee

  • Espresso Cielo: Sure, the stretch of Main Street between Santa Monica and Venice has a few coffee shops (Urth, Peet’s-potentially-Starbucks), but keep going towards Venice until you happen upon this blue tinged-shop. It’s French by way of Canada. Serving coffee in distinctly blue cups, Espresso Cielo offers coffee from Vancouver’s 49th Parallel Coffee Roasters, one of the very few cafes outside of Canada to do so. 3101 Main Street, Santa Monica; (310) 314-9999.
  • Balconi Coffee Company: When Cafe Balcony lost its lease in a tucked-away spot at Centinela and Rochester in 2009, broken-hearted lovers of siphon-brewed coffee cried coffee-stained tears. Ray Sato re-opened his coffee shop earlier this year in this new location at Olympic and Sawtelle, much to the relief of his fans. Sato plans to offer a few beans at a time. On a recent visit, he was brewing beans from local roaster Cafecito Organico. Word to the wise: Sato wants to focus on the social aspect of coffee culture, so there is no wifi here. Take that as your sign to disconnect and re-connect. 11301 W. Olympic Blvd #124, Los Angeles; (310) 906-0267.
  • Coffee Commissary: Coffee Commissary’s décor is minimalist, allowing you to focus on the coffee. And what great coffee: one of the few places in LA that offers Portland’s Coava Coffee Roasters, the shop also offers coffee from Sightglass Coffee and Victrola Coffee Roasters. Coffee Commissary is located right next to soon-to-open butcher shop Lindy & Grundy, so it’ll likely become a two-shop stop when you visit. 801 N. Fairfax Ave., #106, Los Angeles; (323) 782-1465.
  • Farmers’ Markets: If you can find Starbucks at Vons, it’s only fitting that you can find an artisan coffee stand at your local farmers’ market. DripBar is a simple stand: two girls, a coffee cart, a few bags of San Francisco’s Blue Bottle Coffee beans and a few Hario V60 cones for pour-overs. Find them at the farmers’ market on Crenshaw, in Los Feliz and on the USC campus. Longshot Coffee was started by Mark Baird, who wanted to introduce us to the art of Australian espresso. He primarily caters to Hollywood sets and events, but starting April 7, you’ll be able to find Longshot at the Yamashiro Farmers’ Market in Hollywood.
  • Cafecito Organico: Cafecito Organico is one of the few coffee shops in LA to source and roast its own coffee. Its beans are carefully selected from sources who engage in sustainable, fair practices. Cafecito has two locations; the second one, on Heliotrope between Scoops and The Bicycle Kitchen, is the more coffee shop-py shop of the two, with plenty of seating. In both locations, the baristas can wax poetic about how South American coffee differs from, say, Indonesian coffee. 534 N. Hoover St., Los Angeles, (213) 537-8367. 710 N. Heliotrope Drive, Los Angeles, (213) 305-4484.
  • Spring for Coffee : To say that Spring for Coffee is small is a bit of an understatement. It’s all of 200 square feet, a tenth of the size of the 2,000 square feet CoffeeBar just a few doors away. Where CoffeeBar’s generous space invites you to stay, Spring for Coffee understands that you’re busy and need to go. Each cup is individually crafted, and you have your pick of coffee, including beans from Portland’s Stumptown Coffee Roasters and San Francisco’s Ritual Coffee Roasters. 548 S. Spring Street, Los Angeles; (213) 228-0041.
  • CoffeeBar: CoffeeBar is Intelligentsia without the pretension, Seattle without the rain (present weather excepted). This is is truly a coffee bar: the shop judiciously features multiple roasters so that on any given day, you can have your pick of specialty beans on tap. Recently, the shop had beans from Noble Coffee Roasters, Verve Coffee Roasters and Four Barrel Coffee. Oh, and CoffeeBar happens to have a very rare Slayer espresso machine, an $18,000 beast that, in the hands of the right barista, may give you the best shot of espresso you’ve ever had. 600 S. Spring St., Los Angeles.
  • Intelligentsia: With the exception of the aforementioned Espresso Profeta, Caffe Luxxe, and Conservatory for Coffee way over on the Westside, Los Angeles was arguably a coffee wasteland until Chicago’s Intelligentsia rolled into Silver Lake. The shop also has locations in Pasadena and Venice. For those who can’t make it out to any location (or for those whose conversion is so recent they prefer not to deal with Intelligentsia’s often holier-than-thou vibe), The Fix in Echo Park and Paper or Plastik in the Mid-City area all brew Intelligentsia beans. 3922 West Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles, (323) 663-6173. 1331 Abbot Kinney Blvd., Venice, (310) 399-1233. 55 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, (626) 578-1270.
  • Cognoscenti Coffee: When Yeekai Lim left his pop-up coffee stand at Blue Dot Acai & Yogurt in Eagle Rock and set up shop inside Proof Bakery in Atwater Village, most of his loyal customers followed him — with good reason. An architect-turned-barista, Lim is almost obsessive about details. Ask for a cortado and talk to him about how he decided which milk to use for his drinks. Cognoscenti brews beans from San Francisco’s Four Barrel Coffee. 3156 Glendale Blvd, Los Angeles; (323) 664-8633.
  • Cafe de Leche: Cafe de Leche is either the harbinger of gentrification or a much needed artisan coffee shop in Highland Park. Brewing beans from Stumptown Coffee Roasters, the shop offers the staples (lattes, macchiatos) as well as neighborhood specials like the horchata con espresso. 5000 York Boulevard, Los Angeles; (323) 551-6828.

Honorable mentions

  • Bru Coffee Bar : The coffee shop formerly known as Psychobabble in Los Feliz brews beans from Ritual Coffee Roasters on its La Marzocco machine. The shop is still young, the shots are a bit uneven and the latte art needs work, but give it a few months and it will likely be a contender. 1866 Vermont Ave., Los Angeles; (323) 664-7500.
  • Gelato Bar: While not strictly focused on coffee (it’s called Gelato Bar for a reason), this shop belonging to Gail Silverton (sister of Nancy) acquired a Synesso Cyncra espresso machine in 2009 and procured beans from Sonoma County’s Ecco Caffe. The baristas do a fine job with the machine and the coffee. The highlight is when Gail’s son, Nik Krankl, is in town and pops up behind the counter. Krankl is an award-winning barista, most recently competing in the Southwest Regional Barista Championship. Keep an eye on Gelato Bar’s Facebook page for updates on Krankl’s guest shifts. 4342 1/2 Tujunga Ave., Studio City; (818) 487-1717.

Typical

Ray at Balconi usually provides small, round cookies to accompany his coffee. Today, i got a sample of the pecan bar. M has always wanted to try this but we either get the apricot shortbread or nothing at all. In typical fashion, the pecan bar is excellent (dare i even say better than the apricot shortbread?) and i have been keeping m from deliciousness.

no cream no sugar

thanks to balconi coffee, i can now drink coffee without cream and sugar. like this morning, all 12 ounces of my freshly roasted kona (thanks, KCL and ML!) went down black, black, black. of course, it helps when you drink it with an ultra sweet breakfast…

balconi coffee company

cafe balcony has a new location and a new name. and it is only 2 blocks from my mechanic. sweet! i can’t wait for my next oil change…the owner said he’s not offering wifi. i’m glad – it’ll keep the riffraff out and make them head to starbucks. let the real coffee aficionados squat at balconi.

cafe sans sucre

last friday, saturday, and sunday, i drank 3 different coffees, each measuring about 4 oz and only added milk or half-and-half. no sugar. i could probably get used to that. earlier last week, i tried coffee sans sucre and sans milk. hmmmm, will need more time to get used to that.

funnel mill

Continuing my quest for good work/study places. Today I landed at Funnel Mill on Broadway between 9th + 10th. Great atmosphere. Free wifi. Siphon coffee. They also offer kopi but at $80/cup, I passed. I can buy it for much cheaper. Coffee is expensive ($4.05/cup) but comes in glass mug w/ cute little sugar serving ware and a cream demitasse. Perhaps that is the price you pay for siphon coffee. Unfortunaetly, no food, but I would definitely return.

roasting chronicles

this is the panama i just roasted this week. the difference in color is lousy in this photo, but what you can see is merely a 20 second difference.

IMG_0029 copy

18th St Coffee House

I’m currently sitting @ the 18th St Coffee House (I’ve given up on correcting my blackberry’s auto-caps function) and debating on whether it’s a good place to work/study. It has lots of seating (indoor + out) and except for all the movie execs (where do they come from?), m might even like it.

I’m having groundwork brazil and on my refill (ceramic cup gets 1 free refill), I may try the guatemalan. There’s no wi-fi, but that’s ok – ambiance is way better than starbucks.

the cashier says unurban @ pico/urban is a good wi-fi work/study place. And here’s what a blogging.la member has to say about other good work/study places.