Monthly Archive for July, 2008

Coffee & Pirates?

One of the neat things about our website is that we can see what sites refer traffic here.  We can also see what search results people used to find us (or accidentally found us based on some searches).  Today I logged in and saw a bunch of referrals coming in from the Pittsburgh Post Gazette.  I followed the link and found myself reading yesterday’s Pirates Q&A.  I missed it because I haven’t had the time to follow the Pirates too closely this season, but I really enjoyed reading Dejan Kovacevic’s columns when he used to do the Penguins Q&A.  Anyway… if you scroll all the way to the bottom he talks about what makes Pittsburgh great:

Thing No. 100 that makes Pittsburgh great: (And who will not appreciate such accidental symmetry with this final old-fashioned Q&A?) The 2100 block of the Strip District.

The most frequent requests to this forum, though almost always unpublished, have not been related to baseball but to the Pittsburgh feature, and it usually has gone like this: Me and my so-and-so are coming to the city for such-and-such time for only a day or two. What is the one thing someone there would recommend other than the usual Incline, Point State Park, riverfront fare?

So, consider this the answer …

Drive or walk into the Strip, anywhere between the 2000 and 2100 blocks between Smallman and Liberty, and just get lost. Go anywhere. Left, right, up, down, into alleys, over the main drags, even in places where you think there could not possibly be any interesting. You will find no fewer than four of the region’s five best coffee places. That includes La Prima, the very best I have found anywhere in the country, and that means the main store on 21st Street as well as the open-to-the-public warehouse where they roast the beans right in front of you. (Best smell on the planet, even when you live a mile up river and it makes its way to your front porch each day around 4:30 when the bulk of the roasting is done.) There are enough Italians in the place, speaking the native language and complaining about soccer, that the ATM across the corner offers Italian as one of its language options. And there are other coffee places, too, including one that claims to have the widest selection of exotic — and expensive — coffees anywhere in the city on the corner of 21st and Smallman. It is called 21st Street Cafe, and it recently claimed to sell a pound of “the very best coffee in the world” for $50. Yes, someone bought it. (Not me.)

One also can find the best, freshest foods at Pennsylvania Macaroni and other adjacent markets, one of the neatest restaurants anywhere in Kaya, the alley-bound Enrico Biscotti, the used-book depository Bradley’s right across the street, the homemade soups at the mini-grocery Alex’s International, and … honestly, I could list pretty much everything within a stone’s throw.

Nothing I write here will do it justice. Check the site, set aside some time and go for yourself. It is quintessential, indispensable Pittsburgh, and I miss it more than any other place when away from home …

Be a friend

The next time the bomb squad is parked in front of our shop- someone please give us a call.

Seriously- the number’s on the big brown awning.  Be a pal.

Frick Coffeebar 1, Strip District Shop 0

Our Frick Building coffee bar got some media props today, putting it amongst the downtown Pittsburgh pantheon of coffee juggernauts.   The next step is to get our name right… from today’s Tribune Review:

Downtown and its fringe areas have a large selection of coffee houses, besides Crazy Mocha.

Among them are nine Starbucks locations, including one each on the South Side and at Station Square; seven Cool Beans Coffee Co. locations, including one in Allegheny Center, North Shore; six Au Bon Pain Co. Inc. shops; a 21st St. Cafe in the Frick Building; a Dunkin Donuts in Market Square; and a coffee bar opened by Nicholas Coffee, also in Market Square.

7/26/08 + 21st Street = FREE DRINKS

I can’t believe we’ll soon be in our “new spot” for a year already.  It’s coming up and we wanted to do something to thank all our great customers for their loyalty and support.

Who: Our customers, friends and family

What: FREE 8oz COLD BREWED ICED COFFEE or 8oz FRESH BREWED ICED TEA (no purchase necessary, for the first 100 customers)

When: Saturday 7/26/2008… usual hours 8am to 5pm, but the free stuff will be gone quick

Where: The Strip District - 50 21st Street (corner of 21st and Smallman)

Why: To celebrate the one year anniversary of our new digs and new name- one whole year of “21st Street Coffee and Tea” awesomeness

How: Let’s recap. We open at 8… put ice into cup with free beverage of your choice… you enjoy it… let’s not make this difficult.

20oz Drinks < Smaller Drinks?

Intelligentsia’s in the Chicago Tribune today… effective August 1st, they’re taking the 20oz size off their drink menu- drip, espresso drinks, etc.  GONE!

We almost pulled our 20oz sized drinks with the new menu, but we decided against making too many additional changes (after eliminating singles, blended coffee drinks, and scaling back our pre-brewed coffee program) and risk alienating people.  At this point we’ll recommend you get the smaller drinks, but I can pretty much guarantee the next version of our menu will not have a 20 oz coffee on it, and most definitely will not have a 20oz espresso drink on it.  It’s about making the drinks in the sizes and proportions that best represent the coffee and allow it to be enjoyed in a temperature range that tastes good for a reasonable amount of time.  I think this is a great move by Intelli and shows a lot of respect for the product they serve.

Since there is an army of internet trolls out there at any given time, Intelli and Doug Zell took a real spanking… much of it is HILARIOUS.  Read the comments.  Doug finally chimes in to explain the shift in sizes.

Hi folks. Doug Zell here. Just to set the record straight… the Chicago Tribune called me after we put up an 8” x 10” sign in our Chicago coffeebars that said, among other things, that as of August 1st we will be eliminating our 20 oz drink size as we feel it does not best represent what we do and does not make for the best tasting beverages. So, no press release was sent and I can assure this is not a “publicity stunt”. Frankly, we are stunned and flattered that all of you care so much about this. Quality, taste and not financial considerations are why we are doing this. You will not see the price of our other beverages go up on August 1st. Also you will see us re-introduce the 8 oz beverage into coffeebars because honestly, we think it is a great size and we love how it tastes. When my wife and I first opened our first coffeebar thirteen years ago on Chicago’s Northside, we offered 8, 12, and 16 oz beverages. In the meantime we got a little swept up in things like blender drinks and increasingly large sizes. We do not want to dictate the sizes people chose, but rather we want to present the coffee at its best. We have eliminated the blender drinks and are thrilled to be getting the focus where it should be, on delivering great coffee to our customers. After paying the growers above fair trade prices at source and working side-by-side with them to develop great coffees and then carefully roasting the coffees, our only goal is to assure that our customers enjoy them in what we believe is the best way possible. For those of you we may have offended, my apologies. For those of you that have shown support, thank you. To us it’s never just a cup of coffee. Thanks for listening.

Respectfully,

Doug Zell
Founder
Intelligentsia Coffee

P.S., And no, I am not related to Sam Zell, owner of the Tribune. My parents are named Donald and Daisy and they live in Milwaukee, where I grew up.