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The Seattle Coffee Shop Awards – Part 6

The Seattle Coffee Shop Awards – Part 6

As you know Seattleites have the stereotype of being coffee drinking fools. This is no stereotype, we take our coffee seriously. And if you ask 20 different locals what their favorite coffee place is, you’ll most likely get 20 different answers.

These are our choices for Best Seattle Coffee Shop Awards. With two young’uns, we’ve had to trade in our frequency of night life in Seattle bars and pubs to morning life in a lot of Seattle coffee cafes.

In doing so, we’ve gotten to revisit a lot of coffee shops we hadn’t been to in a while and also got a chance to visit a lot of new places that had always been on our radar but never been able to go to.  We Seattleites are so lucky to have so many varieties of roasters and cafes in such a condensed area.

You’ll notice in our Coffee Shop blog posts we rarely mention how good the coffee is in each place, because we feel like it’s a given we’re going to get exceptional coffee.  If we happen upon a coffee shop in which the coffee is not good, we will not review it. This might be the reason you may not see a particular coffee shop on our blog.

See our other installments of Seattle Coffee Shop Awards:

Part 1 – Best Coffee Neighborhood, Most Popular, Most Underrated
Part 2 – Best Coffee Shops for Groups or You Want To Be Alone.
Part 3 – Best Seattle Coffee Drink Sets, Best Views
Part 4 – Best Seattle Coffee Shops to Impress Visitors, Impress Visiting Coffee Snobs, Make Visitors Feel Like Locals.
Part 5 – Best Seattle Coffee Shops for Food Options, Friendliest Service 

Best Seattle Coffee Shop With Most Character

Summary: People call me a Looker. I don’t mean that as in, “wow, that guy’s a looker!” but more like “wow, that guy likes to look at things a lot.” I love coffee shops that stand out from the rest with their quirky or original decor. You step in and think, “Wow, this place is one of a kind!”

  1. Ada’s Technical Book Cafe
  2. Cafe Vita – Pioneer Square
  3. Zeitgeist Coffee
  4. Seven Coffee Roasters
  5. Bauhaus

There’s no place like Ada’s Technical Book Cafe. It’s part coffee shop, part restaurant, part retailer, part working space and community space. You can enjoy your coffee while sitting at their various display tables which could literally double as museum pieces. You can browse the extensive STEM focused books, puzzles and models. It’s also got a warm inviting vibe. All the Caffe Vitas in Seattle have different atmospheres.

Ada's Technical Books
Ada’s Technical Books Cafe

Our favorite is the Caffe Vita in Pioneer Square. This location has a lot of cool things to look at-the coffee grinder in the front window, their huge siphon, and even the floor tiles(see below), which are definitely original to the building. The architecture has an industrial look with huge steel supports, a huge metal staircase and bar stools made from camshafts.

Caffe Vita - Pioneer Sq
Caffe Vita – Pioneer Sq

Zeitgeist Coffee also located in Pioneer Square, has so many interesting features to look at as you enjoy your drink-the art deco clock above the cashier/barista, the old fan hanging from the wall, the vintage percolator signage right behind the cashier, the massive hanging lights, the old school newspaper/magazine stand, the ornate steel partition above the magazine stand(remnants of a bank teller?),the dictionary displayed above a map drawer that contain all sorts of little goodies, the small little counter in the middle of the space that has a banker’s lamp on it.  It’s so out of place, but it’s not. Even the toaster near the coffee station is an older mode.

Zeitgeist Coffee
Zeitgeist Coffee

Seven Coffee Roasters is literally a general store with local snacks, local wines and beers and happens to be a roaster.  It’s got a mellow neighborhood vibe in the middle of Ravenna. It’s got outside seating in front, a separate patio and seating inside.  Enjoy your coffee while perusing all the local wares or sit outside and enjoy the tree lined street of Ravenna.

Seven Coffee Roasters
Seven Coffee Roasters. Est 1922!

 Bauhaus Strong Coffee You can read about the tumultuous history of Bauhaus in the our review. The “library coffee shop” has unique features such as vintage pieces from yesteryear such as encyclopedias, slide projectors, globes, typewriters and old TVs.  Also there’s a orange imac which is considered vintage in technology years.

Bauhaus Coffee
Bauhaus Coffee

Best Coffee Shop Overall 

We’re not going to go into detail on each of these coffee shops. You can read our glowing reviews of each of them in the links.  But you will notice that many of them were mentioned multiple times in our award lists.

We can tell you a few things they have in common are these characteristics:

  • When we go here, we feel like we can relax, decompress and talk for long periods. And we want to stay there for long periods.
  • Good food options
  • We enjoy the atmosphere, decor and the little original details of each place.
  1. Mr West Café Bar
  2. Cherry Street Public House
  3. Preserve & Gather
  4. Café Allegro
  5. Ada’s Technical Book Cafe
  6. Seven Coffee Roasters
  7. Lighthouse Roasters
  8. La Marzocco Cafe
  9. Anchorhead Coffee Co,
  10. Zeitgeist Coffee
Mr West Cafe Bar
Mr West Cafe Bar
Cherry Street Public House
Cherry Street Public House
Preserve and Gather
Preserve and Gather
Cafe Allegro
Cafe Allegro
Seven Coffee Roasters
Seven Coffee Roasters
Lighthouse Roasters
Lighthouse Roasters
La Marzocco
La Marzocco
Anchorhead Coffee
Anchorhead Coffee
Zeitgeist Coffee
Zeitgeist Coffee

We’ll continue to scour Seattle for coffee shops and we’ve already visited a few new ones that will definitely make this list in the future.

See our other installments of Seattle Coffee Shop Awards:

 

Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Seattle Coffee Shops
Part 1 – Best Coffee Neighborhood, Most Popular, Most Underrated
Part 2 – Best Coffee Shops for Groups or You Want To Be Alone.
Part 3 – Best Seattle Coffee Drink Sets, Best Views
Part 4 – Best Seattle Coffee Shops to Impress Visitors, Impress Visiting Coffee Snobs, Make Visitors Feel Like Locals.
Part 5 – Best Seattle Coffee Shops for Food Options, Friendliest Service 

The Seattle Coffee Shop Awards – Part 4

The Seattle Coffee Shop Awards – Part 4

As you know Seattleites have the stereotype of being coffee drinking fools. This is no stereotype, we take our coffee seriously. And if you ask 20 different locals what their favorite coffee place is, you’ll most likely get 20 different answers.

These are our choices for Best Seattle Coffee Shop Awards. With two young’uns, we’ve had to trade in our frequency of night life in Seattle bars and pubs to morning life in a lot of Seattle coffee cafes.

In doing so, we’ve gotten to revisit a lot of coffee shops we hadn’t been to in a while and also got a chance to visit a lot of new places that had always been on our radar but never been able to go to.  We Seattleites are so lucky to have so many varieties of roasters and cafes in such a condensed area.

You’ll notice in our Coffee Shop blog posts we rarely mention how good the coffee is in each place, because we feel like it’s a given we’re going to get exceptional coffee.  If we happen upon a coffee shop in which the coffee is not good, we will not review it. This might be the reason you may not see a particular coffee shop on our blog.

Part 1 – Best Coffee Neighborhood, Most Popular, Most Underrated
Part 2 – Best Coffee Shops for Groups or You Want To Be Alone.
Part 3 – Best Seattle Coffee Drink Sets, Best Views
Part 5 – Best Seattle Coffee Shops for Food Options, Friendliest Service 
Part 6 – Seattle Coffee With Most Character, Best Seattle Coffee Shops Overall.

Best Seattle Coffee Shops to Impress Visitors

We tried to pick cafes that are close to Seattle’s main attractions, but have really nice ambiance and atmosphere and would make any visitors Seattle coffee experience memorable. We wouldn’t mind taking our visiting parents or high school age nephews/nieces, because we think they’d feel comfortable in these cafes.

  1. Storyville Coffee in Pike Place Market – Secret place in Pike Place Market.
  2. La Marzocco Cafe – Located in the Seattle Center.
  3. Cherry Street Public House – In Pioneer Square near Occidental Park
  4. Mr West Café Bar– Wow, I want to hang out here.
  5. Café Allegro– Oldest cafe in Seattle and hidden in an alley

The number one spot(for now) goes to Storyville Coffee in Pike Place Market. It’s located in the number one attraction in Seattle and although the first Starbucks is also located here, we usually take our visitors to Storyville Coffee.  It’s hidden from the crowds, it’s a very cozy and has an inviting atmosphere and the view of the market and Puget Sound can’t be beat.

The number two spot goes to La Marzocco Café.  It’s in the major tourist attraction, the Seattle Center, so you’ll most likely end up near the café anyways. The Seattle Center includes the Space Needle, International Fountain, Chihuly Garden & Glass, Museum of Pop Culture, Pacific Science Center and the Seattle Children’s Museum. La Marzocco Café is a huge café that shares space with Seattle radio station, KEXP.  It has a rotating coffee roaster that keeps things fresh, so multiple trips throughout the year will bring different experiences. This historic espresso machine maker was founded in 1884 and this is their only café in the world!  Visiting here is like visiting a museum with their various espresso machine iterations.

Pioneer Square is another destination for visitor. It’s the oldest neighborhood in Seattle and the architecture of the buildings in the area showcase this. Right on the main walking thoroughfare of Occidental is the Cherry Street Public House. It’s bright and big and not only can you enjoy a coffee there, but they have alcohol and serve food there too. It’s a newer construction so the place is modern and well thought out. The owner actually won the US Barista Championship in 2014. Baller.

Mr West Café Bar is near the main shopping area in downtown and always impresses with their service, the décor, the seating arrangements(bar, window counter, patio, comfy chairs or separate tables) and atmosphere.  They have a good selection of food as well as alcoholic beverages. I don’t know how to explain it, but it’s just a place you want to hang out.

Café Allegro is near UDUB(University of Washington). It’s the oldest café in Seattle and also has the “secret hidden” café thing going for it that visitors seem to love.  Although there are throngs of students normally there, it’s a very big place with an adjacent seating section and an entire 2nd floor with a patio if the main café area is crowded.

Storyville
Storyville
La Marzocco
La Marzocco
Cherry Street Public House
Cherry Street Public House
Mr West Cafe Bar
Mr West Cafe Bar
Cafe Allegro
Cafe Allegro

Best Seattle Coffee Shops to Impress Visiting Coffee Snobs

So the previous award for Best Seattle Coffee Shop to Impress Visitors were for general visitors who want a nice café close to various Seattle attractions, enjoy the atmosphere/décor and want a good cup of coffee.   The places listed below are for the visitors to Seattle who are coffee snobs and who say things like, “I keep hearing that Seattle is the Center of Coffee Universe and the coffee is all that. Well, prove it to me!”  Location, café décor, service quality and atmosphere are all secondary. They want to be impressed by the coffee.  This is where you should take them:

  1. Slate Coffee Roasters
  2. Elm Coffee Roasters
  3. Broadcast Coffee
  4. Milstead & Co.
  5. Ghost Note Coffee

When we walk into these places, it just feels like they take their coffee game seriously. They all have that minimalist vibe to their cafes and we’d like to think it’s because they want you to really concentrate on their coffee with a minimum amount of sensory distraction. We have three roasters, one multiroaster and one coffee shop that makes coffee concoctions like a mad scientist.

Slate Coffee Roaster has three locations around Seattle-Near UW, Capitol Hill and one in Ballard. It’s home to the Deconstructed Latte, which is a good way to not only learn about the coffee, but also about the dairy they use in their drinks. They seem to really care about the experience of drinking their coffee and are enthusiastic about telling you all about it. I genuinely felt like I was in a Coffee 101 class.

Elm Coffee Roasters located in Pioneer Square does their roasting right on the premises, so you know it’s fresh. Roasting is done on Tues, Thurs and Sundays. You can get one of their combos here, the One of Everything, which gives you a chance to have a Macchiato, espresso and a brewed coffee. You’ve got their roasters mere yards away from where you’re drinking their coffee. What coffee snob, wouldn’t be impressed by that?

The Broadcast Coffee in Roosevelt is my personal favorite place to work on my laptop. And are they serious about their coffee? You can read our Broadcast Coffee blog post when the barista made my espresso three times because she wasn’t happy with the quality. Somebody left the door open, which she believes altered the pressure in the café that affected the espresso.

Milstead & Co are known nation-wide as a top notch multiroaster.  They employ two La Marzocco espresso machines to keep things moving along and a rotation of featured coffee roasters to keep things fresh. You want to brag to your coffee snob visitor? You can tell them that Food & Wine rated Milstead & Co a perfect 5 out of 5 on the Coffee Snob Factor for Seattle cafes. To give you an idea, Slate only got a 3.

Ghost Note has a custom built espresso machine that with the push of a button attempts to replicate the characteristics of a pour over in only 90 seconds.  That would impress the coffee snob in all of us, but they go a step further and serve their coffee in fancy glasses and have very progressive concoctions you might imagine that a coffee mad scientist created. For example, Sun Ship- Espresso, smoked grapefruit rosemary syrup, coconut water, sparkling water, lime. Cold.   The menu notes…..”alterations politely declined”  <<<

Elm Coffee Roasters

Elm Coffee Roasters

Slate
Slate Coffee Roasters
Broadcast Coffee
Broadcast Coffee
Milstead
Milstead
Ghost Note
Ghost Note

Best Seattle Coffee Shops to Make Visitors Feel Like Locals

The Best Seattle Coffee Shop to Impress Visitors Award was for general visitors near Seattle attractions. The second was for serious Coffee Snob Visitors. This one is for the visitor who perhaps has already been to all the Seattle attractions and just came to Seattle to visit us and just wants to relax and chill and catch up. They want to see what a normal day looks like as a regular Seattleite and where we might spend time drinking coffee in our normal life. These are the type of coffee shops that we enjoy taking visitors to the most. In a lot of ways, these places feel like an extension of our home.

  • They are typically in the middle of neighborhoods off of main streets(Preserve & Gather, Analog Coffee, Lighthouse Roasters, Seven Coffee Roasters)
  • You find that most people that frequent these spots are walking in from the neighborhood. No dedicated parking spaces for any of these places.
  • You get the feeling there’s a real sense of community. It was not unusual to see multiple families with kids here. It was common for baristas greeting visitors by their first name and ringing them up without asking for their order, because they already knew it by heart.
  • It felt comfortable to leisurely enjoy our drinks over conversation without being hurried.
  • Most importantly, these places were vibrant and alive and not like a library full of zombies working on laptops in total silence.
  1. Analog Coffee
  2. Lighthouse Roasters
  3. Seven Coffee Roasters
  4. Zoka Coffee Roasters – Tangletown
  5. l Diablo Coffee(RIP)
  6. Preserve & Gather

Analog Coffee, Lighthouse Roasters and Seven Coffee Roaster all have that “neighborhood general store” vibe and are all right in the middle of neighborhood on side streets. Analog has that “stay a while” vibe with it’s newspaper and magazines available for your reading pleasure clipped against the walls, ample seats both outside and inside and the barista part-timing as a DJ on their turntable. We also can’t forget about their stack of comic books. You could be there all day.

In our original Lighthouse Roasters review, we mentioned how our time there felt like a scene out of the movie, Doc Hollywood(small town feel).  You could tell it was part of people’s daily routine to come here for their coffee-the baristas greeted the customers by name, customers recognized other customers and proceeded to small talk, and so many people were there reading newspapers just passing the time.

Seven Coffee Roaster has that “general store” vibe because it really is a general store, but they also happen to be a coffee roaster. This really is one of the hidden gems in Seattle. There place is really small, but they do have an outdoor bench in front of the store and an attached patio. Because it’s a general store, we can enjoy our coffee, while we can get snacks or ice cream for our kids. Everybody’s happy!

Zoka Coffee Roasters in Tangletown has been around for as long as I can remember and they definitely have a loyal following. Although the space is huge by Seattle coffee shop standards, it’s always crowded. It’s pretty much the only coffee shop in this neighborhood which might explain it. This is one place that can get overrun with students and laptops, but the crowd and seating arrangements make it a prime spot for neighbors to just hang out.

El Diablo is another neighborhood gem up on Queen Anne Hill.  There is a plethora of coffee shop on the hill, but this one stands out for it’s unique quality of being in a house. The space is one of the biggest in Seattle and for us parents, the dedicated room for kids is a god send. It also has two patios one in the front and one on the second floor balcony. Yes, there is a whole second floor! It’s a perfect place for big gatherings(It won our Award for Top Coffee Shop for Groups). Perhaps it’s the quality of being in a house, that makes you feel your getting a local’s experience.

The last place is Preserve and Gather. We liked everything about this place-the fact that they made all their pastries in house, the numerous and varied types of seating, the general décor, how much pride the workers seemed to have in keeping the space clean and of course, the community feel.  I believe it garnered one of our highest rating scores with a 4.9 out of 5.0. I have no idea the origin of the name, but we’d like to think they are “preserving” the act of getting together and catching up over coffee and are offering their space to “gather”. Clever, huh?

Analog Coffee
Analog Coffee
Lighthouse Roasters
Lighthouse Roasters
Seven Coffee Roasters
Seven Coffee Roasters
Zoka Coffee Roasters
Zoka Coffee Roasters
El Diablo Coffee
El Diablo Coffee
Preserve and Gather
Preserve and Gather

See our other installments of Seattle Coffee Shop Awards:

Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Seattle Coffee Shops
Part 1 – Best Coffee Neighborhood, Most Popular, Most Underrated
Part 2 – Best Coffee Shops for Groups or You Want To Be Alone.
Part 3 – Best Seattle Coffee Drink Sets, Best Views
Part 5 – Best Seattle Coffee Shops for Food Options, Friendliest Service 
Part 6 – Seattle Coffee With Most Character, Best Seattle Coffee Shops Overall.

The Seattle Coffee Shop Awards – Part 1

The Seattle Coffee Shop Awards-Part 1

As you know Seattleites have the stereotype of being coffee drinking fools. This is no stereotype, we take our coffee seriously. And if you ask 20 different locals what their favorite coffee place is, you’ll most likely get 20 different answers.

These are our choices for Best Seattle Coffee Shop Awards. With two young’uns, we’ve had to trade in our frequency of night life in Seattle bars and pubs to morning life in a lot of Seattle coffee cafes.

In doing so, we’ve gotten to revisit a lot of coffee shops we hadn’t been to in a while and also got a chance to visit a lot of new places that had always been on our radar but never been able to go to.  We Seattleites are so lucky to have so many varieties of roasters and cafes in such a condensed area.

You’ll notice in our Coffee Shop blog posts we rarely mention how good the coffee is in each place, because we feel like it’s a given we’re going to get exceptional coffee.  If we happen upon a coffee shop in which the coffee is not good, we will not review it. This might be the reason you may not see a particular coffee shop on our blog.

Part 2 – Best Coffee Shops for Groups or You Want To Be Alone.
Part 3 – Best Seattle Coffee Drink Sets, Best Views
Part 4 – Best Seattle Coffee Shops to Impress Visitors, Impress Visiting Coffee Snobs, Make Visitors Feel Like Locals.
Part 5 – Best Seattle Coffee Shops for Food Options, Friendliest Service 
Part 6 – Seattle Coffee With Most Character, Best Seattle Coffee Shops Overall.

Best Seattle Coffee Shop Neighborhood  – Pioneer Square

Caffe Umbria - Pioneer Square         

There are only really two choices. Capitol Hill and Pioneer Square.  South Lake Union has ton of satellite branches of local Seattle cafes, but they’re mainly in the lobby of Amazon buildings and don’t have the atmosphere that most cafes have.  I also don’t consider Downtown Seattle a neighborhood.  We’re giving the nod to Pioneer Square.  You’ve got Convoy Coffee, Slate Coffee RoastersElm Coffee Roasters, Zeitgeist Coffee. In our opinion you have the best Caffé Vita, Caffe Umbria and Cherry Street Public House locations in Pioneer Square. You also have a wide variation of styles. You’ve got the old cafes with tons of character in Caffé Vita and Zeitgeist Coffee. You’ve got the more modern cafes with great views in Caffe Umbria and Cherry Street Public House. You’ve got the bright little start up spot of Convoy Coffee.  You’ve got the hardcore roasters of Slate Coffee Roasters and Elm Coffee Roasters.

Most Mentioned/Most Popular Seattle Coffee Shops  –  Espresso Vivace and  “The Caffes”

When talking favorite coffee shops with local friends, there four names continuously pop up.  These are the granddaddies of the Seattle Coffee Shop scene.

This actually makes sense because they all have an empire of multiple locations and all have been around for a longggggg time.  And of course they have great coffee and roast their own beans. In no particular order……

  • Espresso Vivace– 3 Seattle locations. Established 1988.
  • Caffé Vita– 6 Seattle locations. Established 1995.
  • Caffe Ladro– 15 locations in the greater Seattle area(incl Bellvue, Kirkland, Edmonds, etc). Established 1994.
  • Caffe Umbria– 3 Seattle locations. Established 2002 , but family behind Umbria has been involved in Seattle cafes since 1986.
Espresso Vivace
Espresso Vivace
Caffe Vita
Caffe Vita
Caffe Umbria

Caffe Umbria

Most Underrated Seattle Coffee Shops  –  Tempsta Coffee, Convoy Coffee, Ghost Note Coffee

These are the exact opposite of the popular coffee shops. We never hear anybody mention these coffee shops.

Tempesta
Tempesta
Convoy Coffee
Convoy Coffee
Ghost Note
  1. Tempesta Coffee (RIP)
  2. Convoy Coffee
  3. Ghost Note Coffee
  4. Realfine Coffee
  5. Seven Coffee Roasters
  6. Anchorhead Coffee Co
  7. Analog Coffee

We believe these places are never mentioned, because they have never been visited by most people.  There are a lot of reasons why. Here are our theories. In the case of Tempesta Coffee (RIP), they’re in a super small unassuming space in the middle of Belltown. It’s so small there’s not even a single seat, but damn, do they have good Americanos. Convoy Coffee is also a small place and might be drowned out in a sea of great more established coffee places in Pioneer Square(see above). Most people know them as the bicycle coffee bar at the University and Ballard Farmers Markets.  Ghost Note Coffee is off the main streets of Pine and Pike in Capitol Hill and is relatively new. And although Realfine Coffee is not new to West Seattle, it’s very new to Capitol Hill and perhaps just gaining it’s footing. Seven Coffee Roasters is roaster in the middle of the Ravenna neighborhood and is disguised as a general store. Most people pass it and don’t even know it’s a roaster. Anchorhead Coffee Co is probably the most Instagrammable of the bunch, but it’s also relatively new being open for only two years. Lastly, I think Analog Coffee has actually gotten a lot of accolades and publicity, but nobody ever seems to mention it. Perhaps because it’s also in the middle of a neighborhood and not on a main avenue.  We’re totally fine with these places being underrated and undiscovered, so we have them all to ourselves.

Realfine Coffee
Realfine Coffee
Seven Coffee Roasters
Seven Coffee Roasters
Analog Coffee
Analog Coffee

 

Next: Stay tuned for our next installment of The Seattle Coffee Shop Awards.

Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Seattle Coffee Shops
Part 2 – Best Coffee Shops for Groups or You Want To Be Alone.
Part 3 – Best Seattle Coffee Drink Sets, Best Views
Part 4 – Best Seattle Coffee Shops to Impress Visitors, Impress Visiting Coffee Snobs, Make Visitors Feel Like Locals.
Part 5 – Best Seattle Coffee Shops for Food Options, Friendliest Service 
Part 6 – Seattle Coffee With Most Character, Best Seattle Coffee Shops Overall.