Over the two months Iāve been here, I went to 25 cafĆ©s recommended on r/AskNYC and r/nyc. These are my opinions. The reviews are based solely on the espresso and the pour over/drip.
- La Cabra (East Village): 5/5. La Cabra has the best coffee in New York. The espresso is incredibly smooth while delivering on the tasting notes, and the pour over was equally fantastic. This place also had great service, Iād add (but that does not factor into my rating). Thereās a theme here: cafĆ©s that have a PUQpress (a $1k automatic tamper) seem to brew great espresso (which is not to imply itās because of the PUQpress).
- St Kilda Coffee (Hellās Kitchen): 5/5. St Kilda has extraordinary coffee, both drip and espresso. And for the prices, itās incredible value. For $12 + tip, I got an espresso, a drip, and a flat whiteāand all of them were fantastic. The Brazil drip from Traffic Coffee in MontrĆ©al with notes of strawberry and watermelon was particularly good and I highly recommend it!
- Coffee Project (East Village): 5/5. Absolutely extraordinary cups and roasts. If youāre looking for a treat thatās not the usual chocolatey notes, this place boasts coffee with notes of kiwi, passionfruit, and much, much more.
- Culture Espresso (Garment District): 5/5. Culture has very zingy coffee, itās a pleasant surprise. The espresso is particularly enjoyable, and the drip had notes of lemon. By preference, I donāt like lemon notes in my coffee, but that doesnāt make the coffee bad.
- Sweetleaf Coffee Roasters (Hunters Point, Queens): 4.5/5. Sweetleaf has a very approachable, delicious espresso and a nice drip thatās great to sip while working. Sweetleaf is excellent to spend alone time or work at (although I wouldnāt take audio calls here) with its views and WiFi. While youāre here, try the strawberry iced tea too.
- Suited (Financial District): 4.5/5. The coffee at Suited is all about balance. While there is some acidity, itās mild; there is some sweetness, but itās not overpowering. There is, of course, a distinct lack of bitterness. This makes Suitedās cups extraordinary to drink while working. Suited also uses the DE1 to make their pour overs, something I only recently learned Scott Rao was working on. The espresso felt a bit watery, even though Iām told it was pulled at a roughly 1:2 ratio.
- East One Coffee Roasters (Chelsea): 4.5/5. East One wouldāve been a 5, if it werenāt for the bar set by the above cafĆ©s. The espresso is quite unique in its flavor profile, and the drip was well-extracted. Itās not your typical cherry notes, but itās also not super exotic like the ones at Coffee Project. The frustrating thing here though is that the notes listed on their bags are not very helpfulāone bag listed āstarfruit, genmaicha, conversantā, and I was not closer to understanding what to expect.
- Kaffe 1668 (Tribeca): 4.5/5. I love this recommendation! The espresso was very fruity and super enjoyable. Iāve been told the iced mocha is great, and I believe it based on that flavor profile. I got the Chely pour over, which was very unique. I got lots of green grape and fresh pear, with a little earthiness in the back. Overall, a very unique taste profile. This place also does lots of breakfast foods, so itās a fantastic way to start your day.
- Third Rail Coffee (Greeenwich Village): 4.5/5. Third Rail has a very balanced espresso and a good pour overāif a little hollow. Itās a great place to grab a coffee before walking in Washington Square Park.
- AbraƧo (East Village): 4.5/5. This is not the place you go to sit down and workāitās far too noisy for that. However, their espresso itself is delicious and fruity. Interestingly, they offer both a piccolo latte and a cortado (cafĆ©s will typically pick one). If I had to nit, the finish on the espresso isnāt the smoothest, but the flavor itself is great.
- Ninth Street Espresso (East Village): 4.5/5. Thereās a good way to do boring, chocolate notes in coffee, and Ninth Street has it figured out. If youāre into chocolate and cocoa notes, thereās no better place. On the specific day I went, both the espresso and the drip used the same Brazilian coffee (and shocker, they tasted very similar), and both were very well-brewed cups. Relative to other cafĆ©s, this is quieter, and a good place to work.
- Little Collins (Midtown East): 4.5/5. Little Collins had a great single-origin espresso, and it was served with a biscotti that paired very well. The pour over was also served with the biscotti, oddly, but Iām not complaining. With tons of florals, the pour over was exactly as advertised, if ever so slightly weak for my taste.
- Think Coffee (SoHo): 4/5. Think has good espreso and pour over (which was slightly overextracted), but the real highlight here is the sandwiches. Grab one of those and a milk beverage, and youāll have a good time. It is tricky to find a seat here, though, so donāt go in expecting to work.
- Maman (Upper West Side): 4/5. Maman had a super approachable, fruity espresso. However, the drip was cold, which is rather unacceptable.
- Black Fox (Chelsea): 4/5. Black Fox has extraordinary espresso with strong red apple notes. Unfortunately, their pour over is not as good, and was a bit overextracted. Definitely visit for the espresso, though.
- Devocion (Flatiron): 4/5. Devocion limits themselves to Colombian coffee, which can go either way depending on your preference. Both the pour over and the espresso are good, but theyāre definitely a little more expensive than theyāre worth.
- Plowshares Coffee Roasters (Upper West Side): 4/5. Plowshares has solid coffee and a surprisingly good drip. The espresso was a medium roast, which is darker than I prefer; that said, it was well-extracted. The barista was super knowledgeable too, which is always a plus.
- Irving Farm (Upper West Side): 3.5/5. This is the quintessential NYC cafĆ©: a fruity espresso thatās a touch harsh, and a roasty drip whose main notes are toast.
- Ground Support (SoHo): 3.5/5. Ground Supportās coffee is on the darker side for both drip and espresso, and as such the drip is roasty with no real origin characteristics, and the espresso has generic chocolate notes.
- Everyman Espresso (East Village): 3.5/5. Everyman lacks in variety: both the espresso and the drip used āThe Originalā by Black & White Roasters. As such, you get a generally well-extracted, if boring, cup of coffeeābut sometimes boring is good.
- Laughing Man Coffee Co. (Tribeca): 3/5. Laughing Man is a sprawling space with a lot of seating. The drip is pretty goodāa crowd pleasing, medium roast that has mild acidity and notes of toast. The espresso has more fruit to it, but also more bitterness (which seems to come from the roast level as opposed to brewing technique).
- Joe Coffee (Upper West Side): 2.5/5. Meh. The espresso had notes of dark chocolate and some roastiness, and the drip was also a darker roast with no real discernable profile.
- Espresso 77 (Jackson Heights, Queens): 2.5/5. Espresso 77 has coffee thatās just good enough that you wonāt complain. Itāsā¦fine, but thatās as much as you can say about the place.
- Bluestone Lane (Tribeca): 2/5. Bluestone Lane just did not seem to get it right for black coffee drinks. Both the espresso and pour over had rather significant levels of bitterness. The espressoās fruity notes quickly get masked by this bitterness, making it a pretty bad experience.
- Coffee Project (West Village): 1/5. On the other end of the spectrum from the East Village location was this rare find, with the worst coffee Iāve ever had (and Iām not exaggerating). With delightful notes of ashtray, ashtray and (surprise) even more ashtray, this location served me the worst iced pour over Iāve ever had, all for the bargain of $10.50 + tax. I donāt know if this was a one-off blunder, if this location is always this bad, or if I had a lucky experience at the other location, but Iām not finding out by going here again.
You must log in or # to comment.
Thanks so much for taking the time to type, format, and write each review! Cannot wait to explore these.
Sharing a cozy little cafe for you: Le Phin on the Lower East Side. Curious how youād like it!