Skip to content

America’s Coffee Capital Serves Flavors From Around the World

Take your coffee or tea with a heap of tradition from another culture.

By Naomi Tomky December 28, 2017

turk-tea

This article originally appeared in the December 2017 issue of Seattle magazine.

For decades, Seattle has been renowned for its coffee: its cool coffeehouses, perfect beans and the smoothness of the roasts. But now, the city is moving beyond the well-known (European, Japanese and Chinese) coffee and tea traditions long found here and incorporating styles introduced by our lively and growing multicultural communities. From Ethiopian-style brewing to the best roasters from around the globe, local shops bring a world of coffee and tea to the table.

TURKISH

Coffeemind
Rows of metal Turkish coffee pots shine from the shelves, and imported textiles add bright patterns to a cozy corner. Part direct-import shop from Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar, part coffee shop, Coffeemind brings a curated version of Turkey to Seattle, complete with snacks, drinks and stunning decor. The dark-roasted Turkish coffee ($3.50) is unfiltered, served in the appropriate tiny mug with a nugget of Turkish delight, and goes perfectly with the Turkish feta-cheese-stuffed pastry called börek ($4.80). Queen Anne, 1907 10th Ave. W; 206.717.2147.

Tip: Turkish coffee tradition dictates that the sugar is added in the cooking process, rather than after, so order the number of sugar cubes you want when you order your coffee.

THAI

WannYen Cafe
Owner picha pinkaow re-creates the Thai street-corner stands of her Bangkok youth in this tiny, L-shaped University District shop. In her hometown, she explains, everyone customizes their Thai iced tea order by sweetness and strength as they stop on their way to work and school in the bustling metropolis. To imitate those stands, Pinkaow prepares Thai iced tea ($3) using the traditional “sock” method—pouring hot water back and forth through a mesh bag full of black tea between two pitchers, rather than infusing it. The result is a uniquely aerated, frothy, surprisingly orange drink—so colored from the added star anise, roasted tamarind seeds and cardamom. It’s made all the brighter when poured over ice, with the addition of condensed milk and a tiny bit of half-and-half before serving. University District, 1313 NE 43rd St.; 206.432.5902.

Tip: Though WannYen is billed as a Thai dessert shop, its small menu features a slew of traditional takes on tea and coffee, along with a few rotating food specials each day. 

 


Photograph by Angela Ciccu; Café Avole’s traditional Ethiopian coffee service centers around a refillable jebena pot.

ETHIOPIAN

Café Avole
Owner solomon dubie wants Americans to learn to drink coffee like Ethiopians do: in a leisurely way and over meandering conversation. From within the bright-green walls of this remodeled South End mini mart, he brings the Ethiopian attitude of taking life slowly—and with plenty of coffee—to Seattle. Ethiopian coffee ceremonies, often many hours long, start with the fragrant roasting of the beans, before they’re ground and brewed directly in the coffee pot. At Avole, the coffee and food menus offer American and Ethiopian options, but to soak in the community atmosphere, bring at least one friend and order a shareable, refillable pot, called a jebena, of Ethiopian-style brew ($8). Brighton, 6630 Rainier Ave. S; 206.359.1271.

Tip: In keeping with Ethiopian tradition, Avole will refill your jebena three times, resulting in a progressively weaker brew as the session wears on.

Photograph by Angela Ciccu; Cederberg Tea House makes its rooibos tea lattes as they are made in South Africa: pulled through an espresso machine, with a side of koeksister.

SOUTH AFRICAN

Cederberg Tea House (CLOSED)
Sure, even starbucks joined the rooibos tea latte train for a while, but at Cederberg, the red latte ($3.70–$4.85) is made like it is in South Africa—pulled through an espresso machine. From a small space at the bottom of an apartment building, flowers and floral patterns evoke the feeling of tea time—minus the twee—at this South African shop. Cederberg is named for the region famous for growing rooibos—which isn’t actually tea, but a dried herb from the legume family. That’s the main focus here, but the pastries and snacks offer little bites from a cuisine rather uncommon in Seattle. Queen Anne, 1417 Queen Anne Ave. N; 206.285.1352.

Tip: For extra authenticity, sip it alongside a koeksister ($3.70), a braided, syrup-soaked doughnut.


Photograph by Angela Ciccu; The La Marzocco Cafe shares space with the KEXP-FM radio station.

The Showroom

A strange group of bedfellows share a Seattle Center space: a record shop, the KEXP-FM radio station and an Italian espresso machine manufacturer’s café. Yet the La Marzocco Café and Showroom has quickly become a favorite hangout of music junkies and the coffee curious. Each month, the café features a different roaster, serving only the beans and drinks of that company’s home café, giving repeat visitors a master class in the latest and greatest in the global coffee scene. Because the menu changes each month, any given day could involve Mexico City’s Buna serving horchata cold brew or the signature beans of this month’s roaster, the local Italian-style roaster Caffè Umbria.

 

Follow Us

Restaurant Roundup: Game-Day Brunch and Last Calls 

Restaurant Roundup: Game-Day Brunch and Last Calls 

Here’s what was served up recently in the Emerald City.

January is a month of reinvention and fresh starts—and Autumn Seattle in Phinney Ridge is taking that idea and running with it. The restaurant’s last day of service will be tomorrow (Jan. 17), but in the first week of February, it will reopen as GH Pasta & Pizza. Executive chef and restaurateur Brian Clevenger wants…

Restaurant Roundup: Mocktails, Blindfolds, and an Oyster Soiree

Restaurant Roundup: Mocktails, Blindfolds, and an Oyster Soiree

Here’s what was served up recently in the Emerald City.

Making dinner reservations, like New Year’s resolutions, means looking ahead and committing to something without being entirely sure of the outcome. To help you know what you’re signing up for in your forays into Seattle’s dining scene, the newly minted Resy Hit List has some valuable tips on where to focus your efforts. Taking the…

5 Things to Eat in January 

5 Things to Eat in January 

Make trying a neighborhood restaurant your New Year's resolution.

It was a long wait to get into Kabul, Wallingford’s longtime favorite Afghan restaurant. This was the last week of service before it shuttered. I have passed by this place for years and even worked at a restaurant across the street. Kabul’s mural of the National Geographic Afghan Girl cover—an image that has come to…

Restaurant Roundup: Christmas Dining and Copine Closing

Restaurant Roundup: Christmas Dining and Copine Closing

Here’s what was served up recently in the Emerald City.

Sometimes the best gift you can receive (or even treat yourself to) is to not have to cook during the holidays, so why not take advantage of the restaurants that are staying open? From Blue Water Bistro in Leschi to Ben Paris downtown and Maximilien in Pike Place Market, there are plenty of options on…