Some dark cafe
Requiem for the cafes of yore
Listening to Joni Mitchell’s iconic song The Last Time I Saw Richard, I was struck by the references to “dark cafes.” I was struck because in my part of the world, which is the San Francisco Bay Area (the East Bay, or Oakland, to be precise), the dark cafes have disappeared. Also, the vast ones with multiple rooms and forty-year-old plants twining to the ceiling. Also, the quirky ones with blue-checked floors and balconies.
I don’t consider Peets (and certainly not Starbucks) “cafes.” And Blue Bottle coffee shops seem to haunt me. Blinding white and blue, they’re as clinical as a chemist’s workshop, and annoyingly ubiquitous, and nearly $7. for a cappuccino served in a very small mug just upsets me.
I tried a new cafe near my soon-to-be new flat, but it’s not going to work for me. The first time I went, over the weekend, I ordered a coffee “for here.” I reminded the young lady at the espresso machine that it was “for here, in a mug or ceramic coffee cup, please.” A few minutes later, I was handed a paper cup of coffee capped by a plastic lid.
This happens frequently, and it’s disappointing.
I asked from whom the pastries were sourced. Both employees shrugged. “The owner’s sitting over there. Maybe she can tell you.”