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#latte kuma designs
nightmarereverie · 16 days
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“Latte Kuma Design Character Keychains” by Gashapon and Sanrio ―୨୧⋆ ˚
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jellyangxl · 1 month
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Sanrio Latte Kuma Design Keychains 🐻 ―୨୧⋆ ˚
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norts-trolls · 8 months
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We're Open!!
The midnight menu is here! These adopts we're made by me and my pal @sicnin! Each of these drinks have been mixed to perfection for our lovely customers!!! The payment is through p*ypal USD only!! For an extra 15USD I will draw an Icon for them as well!! Dm if interested and please read the rules!!
Kuma Latte(30): SOLD
Boba Tea(30): OPEN
Rose Refresher(30): SOLD
GingerAle(30): SOLD
Cherry Coca-cola(30): OPEN
Grapefruit Lacrox(30): SOLD
Mimosa(30): SOLD
Jolly rancher shot(30): SOLD
Peach long island tea(40): SOLD
Lavender Earl Gray(30): SOLD
Smores Hot Cocoa(30): SOLD
BlackBerry Margarita(40): SOLD
Rules!
Please keep the design recognizable. But we don't mind changes.
Please credit us for the design when you post them DO NOT CLAIM THE DESIGN AS YOURS
IF THE ADOPT IS POC DO NOT CHANGE THAT DETAIL
Blood color and gender up to you
We don't mind if you change their species
Please do not resell. Gifting is fine.
WE can hold for 3 days max
Any future commissions of adopts brought from me will have discount.
PLEASE DO NOT USE THE ADOPTS FOR GROSS STUFF ( hate messages, racism, N/FTS etc etc use common sense)
ADOPTS WILL NOT BE USED FOR COMMERCIAL USE. (you can however buy commercial use license)
ABSOLUTELY NO USE OF AI WITH ANY OF OUR WORKS
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itsonlyfoxforcefive · 5 years
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1. Bar Zingaro: A frequent collaborator with fashion brands including Louis Vuitton, Uniqlo and Billionaire Boys Club, Takashi Murakami has opened his very own bar-café in Nakano. From lattes to burgers to alcoholic milkshakes, the Japanese artists floral motif can be seen everywhere. You’ll also be able to shop exclusive goods like flower-shaped plush toys at this location. For an extra dose, take a stroll around Nakano Broadway, where there is a vending machine and a retail shop where you can purchase more of his merchandise
2. A to Z Cafe: Nestled among the glitzy stores of Aoyama is this spacious restaurant-bar created in collaboration with Japanese contemporary artist Yoshitomo Nara. Expect to see photographs and paintings of Nara’s signature sweet-yet-sinister girls as well as a collection of his art books which you can peruse at your leisure. After getting acquainted with Nara’s disconcerting paintings, head up to the rooftop bar for a panoramic view of Aoyama while sipping on a fresh-fruit cocktail, a glass of wine or something stronger. The menu also offers an extensive food selection, ranging from standard bar snacks and Japanese set meals to western classics such as salads and pastas
3. Design Festa Cafe & Bar: It’s easy to miss this hidden cafe-bar-gallery in the backstreets of Harajuku, but it’s worth seeking out for its art, food and drinks. Design Festa – which also hosts an eponymous art festival several times a year – is segmented into 71 different exhibition spaces over East and West buildings, showcasing works by a roster of artists and creatives. In between these two buildings you’ll find the semi-al fresco café and bar terrace, which is adorned with many colorful wall paintings and murals as well as a large pomegranate tree
4. Roar Coffee House and Roastery: As long as your drink has milk, Roar's baristas can transform your coffee into an iridescent work of art. First, choose either their signature latte or a honey version. For the base, you have the option of letting them pour in the coffee before or after creating the picture; the former results in a coffee-colored base, while the latter means a white background for your image
5. Kurogi: Operated by Yushima kappo restaurant Kurogi, this eponymous wagashi specialist is hidden away on Tokyo University's campus, inside the Kengo Kuma-designed Daiwa Ubiquitous Research Building. The stylish interior matches nicely with the artistic sweets on offer. The innovative kakigori selection combines playfulness and finesse in seasonal creations like the Milk and Five Grains. This marriage of azuki beans, walnut, sesame, raspberry syrup and rock salt is a masterpiece in itself, but paired with a cup of Sarutahiko coffee, it reaches almost divine heights
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michaelfallcon · 5 years
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A Coffee Drinker’s Guide To Cincinnati
Cincinnati may not be the first city that you think of when you think of a destination coffee city. That honor might go to Berlin, Melbourne, or Portland, Oregon, and with good reason. But as one of the fastest-growing cities in the midwestern United States, Cincinnati has increasingly more and more to offer to the specialty coffee lover. The city also has a strong history in beer brewing, and in recent years, new craft breweries like Rhinegeist and Madtree have led the charge to put Cincinnati on the map in the world of craft beer. This has opened up a market for other craft beverages, and the coffee scene here has also grown a great deal in the past decade. Where there once were only a couple of local roasting companies, more and more are popping up each year, and the number of cafes serving acclaimed roasters from around the country is also growing. From excellent roasting companies to highly curated multi-roaster cafes, each of these businesses brings something unique to Cincinnati’s coffee scene.
Deeper Roots
When talking about Cincinnati, it’s hard not to begin with Deeper Roots. In the seven years they’ve been roasting coffee, Deeper Roots has done more to convert the coffee drinkers of Cincinnati than any other single company. Though it began as a wholesale roasting operation and still supplies many cafes and businesses around Cincinnati, Deeper Roots now has two cafes of its own. The first is in the Oakley neighborhood, and the second cafe, their most recent, is located across the street from Cincinnati’s historic Findlay Market (featured here in Sprudge). This location is unique in that customers can sit on the same side of the bar as the baristas and be up close and personal for every step of their coffee’s preparation. In order to help showcase their brewing process, Deeper Roots is using a La Marzocco GB5 customized by the wizards at Pantechnicon Design, a selection of grinders from Mahlkönig and Anfim, and an absolutely beautiful Modbar pour-over setup, also customized by Pantechnicon. Deeper Roots places a strong emphasis on community and education, and this cafe is an excellent venue for ensuring that customers are invited into a conversation and an experience.
Deeper Roots Coffee Findlay is located at 1814 Race St, Cincinnati. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
  Rohs Street Cafe
Rohs Street is the original specialty coffee shop in Cincinnati. Located in the city’s Clifton Heights neighborhood, this cafe serves the University of Cincinnati’s student body every day of the week but Sunday. The large cafe space is shared with the church next door, and it’s been used to host live music, open mic nights, and other events for the local area. Rohs Street puts the local community first, but that doesn’t mean its coffee is an afterthought. They serve Deeper Roots as their house roaster and over the years have featured a number of excellent guests, including Vancouver’s 49th Parallel, Columbus’s Mission Coffee, and Wilmington, Delaware’s Brandywine Coffee Roasters. The bar setup is anchored by a well-loved La Marzocco GB5 and a fleet of Mahlkönig grinders. Rohs Street is cozy and inviting, and hanging over the bar is a “Filter Coffee Not People” poster from Department of Brewology. It’s easy to see why this cafe is a favorite of Clifton locals and the student population alike.
Rohs Street Cafe is located at 245 W. McMillan Street, Cincinnati. Visit their official website and follow them Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
  Collective Espresso
When Collective Espresso opened in 2012, it was immediately clear that the shop owners were  up to something special. In their small space on a side street in Over the Rhine, co-owners Dustin Miller and Dave Hart were quietly brewing up some of the best coffees around the country. The menu is anchored by house coffees from Quills Coffee Roasters in Louisville, and they have an extensive guest roaster program that’s featured many nationally renowned companies, including Hex, Kuma, Madcap, Sweet Bloom, and more. The bar setup is simple but effective: a two-group La Marzocco Strada MP, a pair of Mazzer Major espresso grinders, and a Mahlkönig EKK43. Collective also operates a second location that’s even smaller than the first in Cincinnati’s Northside neighborhood. It’s hidden down an alleyway strung with lights and features a beautiful courtyard. Though Collective’s cafes are small, they have a huge presence in the local coffee scene, and it’s common to find the bar seating full of local baristas on their days off, drinking espresso and catching up. It’s worth trying their pastries too—the owners of Collective own Mainwood Pastry, a baking company that supplies many of the cafes on this list along with their own cafes.
Collective Espresso is located at 207 Woodward, Cincinnati. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
  Carabello Coffee
Carabello Coffee started out with little more than a popcorn popper, a few pounds of green beans, and a dream to help support struggling communities in coffee-producing countries. 10 years later, the company has grown to a large cafe and roasting space just across the river from Cincinnati in Newport, KY. Carabello also has a strong network of wholesale accounts spread around both sides of the Ohio River and beyond. A couple of years ago, Carabello opened the Analog bar, a second bar space within its cafe.
Though it only has six bar stools, Analog is well equipped with a Synesso MVP Hydra espresso machine, a pair of Mahlkönig K30 grinders, an EK43, and a bevy of manual brewing equipment. It serves a different coffee menu than the main bar at Carabello, with a focus on monthly selections of signature drinks and single-origin coffees. In the short time it has been open, Analog has already gained a reputation for excellence. That space also hosts bar takeovers from local and out of town roasters as well as coffee training courses both for Carabello’s many wholesale accounts and the general public.
Carabello Coffee is located at 107 E 9th St, Newport. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Twitter.
  Urbana Cafe
Though Cincinnati is an eclectic city, it’s still surprising to see a baby blue three-wheeled truck serving coffee, but that’s exactly where Urbana Cafe began. After working for years in the corporate world, owner Daniel Noguera decided to strike out on his own and devote his life to serving Italian-style espresso off the back of a Piaggio Ape. He began at Findlay Market, and all his coffee is still roasted at their stall in the market on a Diedrich roaster. Though his trucks still roam the city and serve at various events and markets, Noguera has also opened two cafes under the Urbana name. The first, in Pendleton, is a beautiful two-story space that’s a favorite of freelancers and people looking to meet for coffee outside the hubbub of downtown. The second opened last year in East Walnut Hills, a neighborhood just north of downtown. This cafe is smaller and has a more intimate approach. Noguera chose to eschew Wi-fi in favor of a turntable and a crate of records. He hopes for the space to be a hub for the community, where people come to have engaged conversation rather than simply surf the net.
Urbana Cafe is located at 2714 Woodburn Ave, Cincinnati. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram.
Landlocked Social House
Landlocked Social House is the most recent addition to the Cincy scene on this list, though they already seem like a pillar of the coffee community. Landlocked was started by two transplants from Dayton, Ohio who set out to create an all-day spot in between Clifton Heights and East Walnut Hills. In the morning, Landlocked serves coffee from Wood Burl Coffee in Dayton, Ohio from a signature yellow La Marzocco Linea Classic. Landlocked also offers incredible breakfast sandwiches alongside pastries from Mainwood, mentioned above. In the evenings, the cafe serves an extensive menu of beers from small craft breweries from Ohio and elsewhere. They pride themselves on serving a menu that you can’t find elsewhere with a particular focus on wilder ferments. Each Monday, they have a food pop-up with a local chef, and they regularly host events both for baristas and the community at large, including a latte art throw down for womyn and non-binary individuals on Galentine’s Day.
Landlocked Social House is located at 648 E McMillan St, Cincinnati. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Alex Evans is a freelance writer and coffee professional based in Cincinnati, Ohio. Read more Alex Evans for Sprudge.
The post A Coffee Drinker’s Guide To Cincinnati appeared first on Sprudge.
A Coffee Drinker’s Guide To Cincinnati published first on https://medium.com/@LinLinCoffee
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shebreathesslowly · 5 years
Text
A Coffee Drinker’s Guide To Cincinnati
Cincinnati may not be the first city that you think of when you think of a destination coffee city. That honor might go to Berlin, Melbourne, or Portland, Oregon, and with good reason. But as one of the fastest-growing cities in the midwestern United States, Cincinnati has increasingly more and more to offer to the specialty coffee lover. The city also has a strong history in beer brewing, and in recent years, new craft breweries like Rhinegeist and Madtree have led the charge to put Cincinnati on the map in the world of craft beer. This has opened up a market for other craft beverages, and the coffee scene here has also grown a great deal in the past decade. Where there once were only a couple of local roasting companies, more and more are popping up each year, and the number of cafes serving acclaimed roasters from around the country is also growing. From excellent roasting companies to highly curated multi-roaster cafes, each of these businesses brings something unique to Cincinnati’s coffee scene.
Deeper Roots
When talking about Cincinnati, it’s hard not to begin with Deeper Roots. In the seven years they’ve been roasting coffee, Deeper Roots has done more to convert the coffee drinkers of Cincinnati than any other single company. Though it began as a wholesale roasting operation and still supplies many cafes and businesses around Cincinnati, Deeper Roots now has two cafes of its own. The first is in the Oakley neighborhood, and the second cafe, their most recent, is located across the street from Cincinnati’s historic Findlay Market (featured here in Sprudge). This location is unique in that customers can sit on the same side of the bar as the baristas and be up close and personal for every step of their coffee’s preparation. In order to help showcase their brewing process, Deeper Roots is using a La Marzocco GB5 customized by the wizards at Pantechnicon Design, a selection of grinders from Mahlkönig and Anfim, and an absolutely beautiful Modbar pour-over setup, also customized by Pantechnicon. Deeper Roots places a strong emphasis on community and education, and this cafe is an excellent venue for ensuring that customers are invited into a conversation and an experience.
Deeper Roots Coffee Findlay is located at 1814 Race St, Cincinnati. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
  Rohs Street Cafe
Rohs Street is the original specialty coffee shop in Cincinnati. Located in the city’s Clifton Heights neighborhood, this cafe serves the University of Cincinnati’s student body every day of the week but Sunday. The large cafe space is shared with the church next door, and it’s been used to host live music, open mic nights, and other events for the local area. Rohs Street puts the local community first, but that doesn’t mean its coffee is an afterthought. They serve Deeper Roots as their house roaster and over the years have featured a number of excellent guests, including Vancouver’s 49th Parallel, Columbus’s Mission Coffee, and Wilmington, Delaware’s Brandywine Coffee Roasters. The bar setup is anchored by a well-loved La Marzocco GB5 and a fleet of Mahlkönig grinders. Rohs Street is cozy and inviting, and hanging over the bar is a “Filter Coffee Not People” poster from Department of Brewology. It’s easy to see why this cafe is a favorite of Clifton locals and the student population alike.
Rohs Street Cafe is located at 245 W. McMillan Street, Cincinnati. Visit their official website and follow them Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
  Collective Espresso
When Collective Espresso opened in 2012, it was immediately clear that the shop owners were  up to something special. In their small space on a side street in Over the Rhine, co-owners Dustin Miller and Dave Hart were quietly brewing up some of the best coffees around the country. The menu is anchored by house coffees from Quills Coffee Roasters in Louisville, and they have an extensive guest roaster program that’s featured many nationally renowned companies, including Hex, Kuma, Madcap, Sweet Bloom, and more. The bar setup is simple but effective: a two-group La Marzocco Strada MP, a pair of Mazzer Major espresso grinders, and a Mahlkönig EKK43. Collective also operates a second location that’s even smaller than the first in Cincinnati’s Northside neighborhood. It’s hidden down an alleyway strung with lights and features a beautiful courtyard. Though Collective’s cafes are small, they have a huge presence in the local coffee scene, and it’s common to find the bar seating full of local baristas on their days off, drinking espresso and catching up. It’s worth trying their pastries too—the owners of Collective own Mainwood Pastry, a baking company that supplies many of the cafes on this list along with their own cafes.
Collective Espresso is located at 207 Woodward, Cincinnati. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
  Carabello Coffee
Carabello Coffee started out with little more than a popcorn popper, a few pounds of green beans, and a dream to help support struggling communities in coffee-producing countries. 10 years later, the company has grown to a large cafe and roasting space just across the river from Cincinnati in Newport, KY. Carabello also has a strong network of wholesale accounts spread around both sides of the Ohio River and beyond. A couple of years ago, Carabello opened the Analog bar, a second bar space within its cafe.
Though it only has six bar stools, Analog is well equipped with a Synesso MVP Hydra espresso machine, a pair of Mahlkönig K30 grinders, an EK43, and a bevy of manual brewing equipment. It serves a different coffee menu than the main bar at Carabello, with a focus on monthly selections of signature drinks and single-origin coffees. In the short time it has been open, Analog has already gained a reputation for excellence. That space also hosts bar takeovers from local and out of town roasters as well as coffee training courses both for Carabello’s many wholesale accounts and the general public.
Carabello Coffee is located at 107 E 9th St, Newport. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook and Twitter.
  Urbana Cafe
Though Cincinnati is an eclectic city, it’s still surprising to see a baby blue three-wheeled truck serving coffee, but that’s exactly where Urbana Cafe began. After working for years in the corporate world, owner Daniel Noguera decided to strike out on his own and devote his life to serving Italian-style espresso off the back of a Piaggio Ape. He began at Findlay Market, and all his coffee is still roasted at their stall in the market on a Diedrich roaster. Though his trucks still roam the city and serve at various events and markets, Noguera has also opened two cafes under the Urbana name. The first, in Pendleton, is a beautiful two-story space that’s a favorite of freelancers and people looking to meet for coffee outside the hubbub of downtown. The second opened last year in East Walnut Hills, a neighborhood just north of downtown. This cafe is smaller and has a more intimate approach. Noguera chose to eschew Wi-fi in favor of a turntable and a crate of records. He hopes for the space to be a hub for the community, where people come to have engaged conversation rather than simply surf the net.
Urbana Cafe is located at 2714 Woodburn Ave, Cincinnati. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram.
Landlocked Social House
Landlocked Social House is the most recent addition to the Cincy scene on this list, though they already seem like a pillar of the coffee community. Landlocked was started by two transplants from Dayton, Ohio who set out to create an all-day spot in between Clifton Heights and East Walnut Hills. In the morning, Landlocked serves coffee from Wood Burl Coffee in Dayton, Ohio from a signature yellow La Marzocco Linea Classic. Landlocked also offers incredible breakfast sandwiches alongside pastries from Mainwood, mentioned above. In the evenings, the cafe serves an extensive menu of beers from small craft breweries from Ohio and elsewhere. They pride themselves on serving a menu that you can’t find elsewhere with a particular focus on wilder ferments. Each Monday, they have a food pop-up with a local chef, and they regularly host events both for baristas and the community at large, including a latte art throw down for womyn and non-binary individuals on Galentine’s Day.
Landlocked Social House is located at 648 E McMillan St, Cincinnati. Visit their official website and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Alex Evans is a freelance writer and coffee professional based in Cincinnati, Ohio. Read more Alex Evans for Sprudge.
The post A Coffee Drinker’s Guide To Cincinnati appeared first on Sprudge.
from Sprudge http://bit.ly/2VHjOt2
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Text
New York City List
Places I want to hit up (not in any order):
>>Updated 1/9/2022: And just like that, I’m back in NYC. Stay tuned!
>>Updated 6/25/2021: Back state-side. Will update as I re-visit NYC!
>>Updated 1/27/2017: Sadly, I lost access to my previous Tumblr account, Justacup2hitthespot, so I had to rebuild the blog onto this account. Also, I left NYC! I’ve moved abroad, but whenever I visit NYC, I will keep posting about new shops that I discover there.
Thanks for following!
Now that my friends and have all moved to various boroughs, we have more shops to visit!
12 Corners
2Beans
500 President Gorilla Coffee
About Coffee
Abraço [CLOSED]
Ad Hoc Collective
Alice’s Tea Cup
Amorino Gelato
Andrew’s Coffee Shop
Anesis Cafe
Angelica Kitchen [CLOSED]
Aroma Espresso Bar
Artopolis Espresso
Astor Row Café
Astoria Coffee
Au Bon Pain
Au Breve Espresso
B Cup Cafe
Bakeri
Bank Square Coffeehouse (Beacon)
The Bean Cafe NYC
Bean Scoop: La Gelateria Caffe
Bee’s Knees Bakery
Bell’s Coffee & Design
Berkli Parc
Besfren
Betola Espresso Bar
Bibble & Sip
Billy’s Brew
Birch Coffee
Blu Cafe
Blue Bottle Coffee
Blue Spoon Coffee
Bluebird Coffee Shop
Bluestockings
Bluestone Lane Coffee
The Boba Guys
Bonsignour
Bosie Tea Parlor
Bourbon Coffee
Box Kite Cafe
Bowery Coffee
Breadbox Cafe
Bread & Butter
Bread Factory Cafe
Búdin
Buongiorno Espresso Bar
By Suzette
C&B Cafe
Café Angelique
Cafe Bacio
Cafe Green
The Cafe Grind
Café Grumpy
Cafe Integral
Cafe Jax
Cafe La Cerra
Cafe M
Cafe Mocha
Cafe Noi Espresso Bar
Café Orlin
Cafe Panino Mucho Giusto
Cafe Pedlar
Cafe Pick Me Up
Café Regular du Nord
Cafe Reunion
Cafe Tarantin
Cafe Via Espresso
Cafe Zaiya
Cafetal Social Club
Cafetiny
Caffe Bacio
Caffé Bene (2)
Caffe Dante
Caffe Reggio
Caffe Vergnano
Caffe Vita Coffee Roasting Co.
Cammareri Bakery & Cafe
Cassetta
Cha-An
Chalait (2)
Charter Coffeehouse
Chat N Chew
Chikalicious Dessert Club
The Chipped Cup
Chock Full of Nuts Cafe
Chocolate Bar
Chokolat Patisserie
Ciao for Now
City Bakery
City of Saints Coffee Roasters
Classic Coffee Shop
Cocoa Bar
Coffee Foundry
Coffee Rx
COFFEED
Coffee House Club
The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf
The Coffee Project NY
Come Buy
Connecticut Muffin
Corso Coffee
Counter Culture Coffee
Crazy Bananas
Creme Cafe
Croissants Rica
Culture 36
Culture Espresso
Cup & Cup
D'Espresso
DAVIDsTEA
De Luxe
DEMARCO Coffee
Devocion
Dillinger’s
Dos Coffee
Double Dutch Espresso Harlem
Doughnut Plant
DraftFCB Coffee Bar
DTUT
dub Pies
Earth Cafe
El Cafecito
El Rey
The Elk
Elsewhere Espresso
Empire Coffee & Tea Company
Eric’s Coffee Shop
Espresso 77
Express Yourself Barista Bar
Everyman Espresso
FAB Cafe
Fair Folks & a Goat
Fantastic Tea Shop
Felix Roasting Co.
FIKA Espresso Bar
Five Leaves
Four Barre
Francois Payard Bakery
French Roast
Frisson Espresso
Gasoline Alley Coffee
Gentle Brew (Long Island)
Gimme! Coffee
Gizi Chocolate, Wine, Cheese, Espresso Bar
Gong Cha
Gossip Coffee
Gourmesso Coffee
Grace Street
Green Nature Coffee House
Gregory’s Coffee
The Grey Dog
Ground Central Coffee
Ground Support Coffee
Grounded
Happy Bones Coffee
Harney & Sons Tea
Hi-Collar
Hole in the Wall Coffee
Home Espresso Bar
Honeyhaus
House of Small Wonder
Housing Works Bookstore Cafe
The Hungry Ghost Coffee Bar & Cafe
I Am Coffee
Iconic Coffee
Il Caffe Latte
Intelligentsia
Ippodo Tea Co.
Irving Place Coffee & Tea Bar
Jack’s Stir Brew Coffee
Jack’s Wife Freda
Java Joe
Java Tea
Joe The Art of Coffee
The Jolly Goat Coffee Shop
Juan Valdez Cafe
Kaffe 1668
Kahlua’s Cafe
Kahve
Kamakura Coffee
Kava Cafe
Kobrick’s Coffee Co.
Koko Loko Coffee (New Jersey)
Konditori
Kopi Kopi NYC
Kopitiam
Kuro Kuma Espresso & Coffee
La Colombe Torrefaction
La Maison du Croque Monsieur
Landbrot Bakery
Laughing Man
Lavazza Café
Le Café Coffee
Le Pain Quotidien
Le Petit Café
Léna
Lenox Coffee
Limited
Little Collins
Liquiteria
Lost Weekend in NYC
Love Cafe
Lucid Cafe
Luna 29 Cafe
Macchiato Espresso Bar
Madman Espresso
Maialino
Maison Kayser
Mapi Espresso & Sandwich Bar
Mariebelle
Martha’s Country Bakery
MatchaBar
Matcha Cafe Wabi
MAZA Espresso Bar
McNulty’s Tea & Coffee Co.
Mia Chef Gelataria
The Mill Coffee Company
Momofuku Milk Bar
Monkey Cup
Mud Truck
Muddy Waters Cafe
Mudspot
myWayCup Coffee
Naked Earth
Native Bean
New York Film Academy Café
Newsbar
Ninth Street Espresso
NY Film Academy Café
O Cafe
Oren’s Daily Roast
Oslo Coffee Roasters
Ost Cafe
Padoca
Pamela’s Diner
Panya Bakery
Paradigm Cafe
Paradis To Go
Partners Coffee Roasters
Path Coffee (not a coffee shop, but brand)
Pause Cafe
Peet’s Coffee & Tea
Penelope
Pennylane Coffee
Perk Kafe
Perpetuum Cafe
Petite Shell
Physical GraffiTea
Piccolo Cafe
Pip’s Place
Plowshares Coffee Roasters
Podunk
Porto Rico Importing Co.
Ports
Press Tea
Prodigy Coffee
Propeller Coffee
Pushcart Coffee
The Queens Kickshaw
Rebel Coffee
RBC NYC
Rex
Rise & Grind
Roasting Plant Coffee
Roastown Coffee
The Roost
Rosella Coffee Shop
RouRou Cafe
Rustico
Saint’s Alp Tea House
SAMO Coffee
Saturdays Surf NYC
Seven Grams Caffe
Simon Sips
The Smile
Smith Canteen
SpaHa Cafe
Spot Dessert Bar
Spreadhouse Cafe
Starbucks Coffee
Steeplechase Coffee Shop
STIX
Stumptown Coffee Roasters
Sullivan Street Tea & Spice Company
Sweatshop
Sweetleaf
Sweet Corner Bakeshop
Sweet Revenge
Tarallucci E Vino
Taylor Street Baristas
Tea & Symphony
Tea Drunk
Teado
Teany
Teariffic
Teaus
Telegraphe Espresso Bar
Ten Ren’s Tea Time
Think Coffee
Third Rail Coffee
Three Seat Espresso & Barber
TKettle
Toby’s Estate Coffee
Tous Les Jours
Triple Shot World Atlas Cafe
Two Hands
Underline Coffee
UR Cup
URBO Grind
Vagabond Cafe
Van Leeuwen
Via Quadronno
Veniero’s Italian Bakery
VIP Cafe and Bakery
Vive La Crepe
Vivi Bubble Tea
Voyager Espresso
WTF Coffee Lab
Wave Hill Cafe
Wayside Coffee
Whynot Coffee
Wonder City Coffee & Donut Bar
Yippie Museum Cafe
Zibetto
Zinc Bar
Zucker Bakery
Zulu’s
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