Cafes,
Espresso, Greek Coffee and Frappe
There was a time I didn't drink coffee. I
can still sort of remember it. The sun
still came up in the morning. The birds
still sang. Little children played in the
park. Then I met Andrea Jerome. She was a coffee
fanatic. She had to be coaxed from the
bed with quadruple espressos and inspired
to keep working with semi-hourly
installments. I thought I could cure her.
Guess what. Now I am just as bad. Yes, the
sun still comes up, the birds still sing
and children still play in the park. But
not until I have had my first
cup of coffee.
It used to be that going to Greece was a
step back to the stone age as far as
coffee went. We could drink a Greek
coffee, you know the stuff they used to
call Turkish coffee until 1974 when the
Turks invaded Cyprus and even the harbor
of Turkolimino became Microlimino. But
Greek coffee has to be made right and
there was a period when many places that
served it, with the exception of the most
die-hard old men cafeneon, did not put
that much care into it. Plus, drinking it
takes time. You literally have to wait for
the dust to settle and you can only drink
it to a certain point. Any further and you
are chewing coffee. Yeah it can get you
off and that is, after all, our intention.
But the cups are so small and my lips and
appetite so big that there is a
psychological factor that makes it less
satisfying for me in the morning.
Afternoon is a different story and after
early ouzo with the rest of a long day
ahead, a well-made Greek coffee can't be
beat.
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Frappe's are the lifeblood of Greek
society. Made with instant Nescafe mixed
with milk, water lots of sugar and ice, a
frappe will provide you with a chemical
buzz like caffeine only more intense and
under it's effects you are likely to have
very profound thoughts as the dust is
shaken off synapses long retired from
duty. The Greeks drink these all day and
never leave the cafes. Maybe the reason so
much wine and whisky is consumed in Greece
is directly related to the frappe
consumption. But there is something
decadent about starting the day with a
frappe rather than a cup of coffee. So you
have hot Nescafe. Same nervous buzz, but
for me that means doing the Greek
equivalent of the 3 martini lunch,
the
one carafaki ouzo
mesimeri.
Yes things were tough for us in the old
days. We used to bring our coffee with us,
ground in sealed bags which took up
valuable luggage space along with our mini
espresso maker and gas burner. But you
never knew if you were going to be able to
find a decent cup of coffee and we had to
be prepared. Who wants to be in the most
beautiful country in the world feeling
lousy?
There were places you could find an
espresso like the Grande Bretagne Hotel and a
couple of the very fancy cafes and
restaurants. But just because they were
expensive did not mean they were going to
be any good. And who wants to drink coffee
in a place where you feel uncomfortable if
you did not bring your own butler and
chauffeur?
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Then just as in the USA,
espresso began being served everywhere.
Some of the old cafe's bought new espresso
machines and more and more coffee bars
began opening. Now you can find
cappuccino, espresso and something called
fredo which is iced cappuccino, a sort of
snob-frappe, almost
everywhere. But do people know how to make a decent
cappuccino in Greece? That is the question
because who cares if you can get it on
every corner if it does not get you off?
In many places you can get great espresso.
Maybe better than in the USA. Whether it
is better than in Italy I don't know. But
cappuccino, we have discovered, are more a
matter of chance. But leave it to Andrea
to come up with a plan that insures that
there will be enough caffeine in your
coffee drink to get you to the next cup,
whether that is in 5 minutes or in five
hours. When we wake up in the morning we go to
one of our favorite cafes and each order a
double espresso. Then, (this is the
important part), we order
zes
toe
ga
la
ksekorees
ta
. That means 'hot milk on the side'. Then
you can pour it in to your double espresso
for the desired taste to go with the
required potency. A couple of these and
you can climb the Acropolis several times
if you have to. if you start dragging in
the afternnoon just one of these will get
you to dinner where the wine can take
over.
Memorize it:
Thee
ploh
es
press
o meh
zes
toe
ga
la
ksekorees
ta (Double
espresso with hot milk on the side) |
But there is more. This is something I
invented many years ago and I think it is
delicious. But in 15 years of attempts I
have only been able to convince one of my
American friends, Steve Gratz, to try it.
And even with his testimony combined with
mine, I can't convince any of my Greek
friends that this is one if the greatest
and most practical drinks on the planet. I
called it
Frapouzo. You order a
frap
pe
me
ga
la,
meh
trio
, which is an iced Nescafe with milk and
sugar
(
meh
trio
means one-to-one but implies not too sweet
which in Greece is pretty
sweet.
Skeh
to
means no sugar.
Glee
ka
means sweet but to me is virtually un-drinkable).
You also order an
ouzo
skeh-to. As soon as the waiter turns his back
pour the ouzo into the frappe. You won't
believe how good it tastes and the feeling
is not bad either. If you are feeling low
and don't want to waste precious vacation
time being depressed, one or two of these
will do the trick. Any more and you are on
your own. Note:
Lonely Planet liked my Frapouzo so much they put it in their World
Food-Greece book (but they spelled my name wrong and messed
up the name of my website.)
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So we may as well face that some of us are
seriously hooked on coffee and the thought
of going somewhere that good, strong
coffee is not available fills us with a
kind of angst. Maybe once we were strong,
independent and caffeine free, but now we
must face the fact that a good strong cup
of coffee is required to motivate us to
experience the wonders that Greece has to
offer. We can always take the steps to
quitting our addiction when we return home
where we have familiar surroundings and
plenty of psychiatrists to get us through
those first difficult weeks, months or
years. But to quit drinking coffee in
Greece is like trying to quit smoking in
Greece, or giving up food and sunlight. In
Greece we drink coffee. And there is
plenty of coffee for
everyone.
Athens
is loaded with coffee shops. These are
some of my favorites...
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When I am staying at the Hotel Attalos it is usually right when I have arrived in Greece so I wake up long after the breakfast room has closed. But if I walk out the door I have a lot of options. If I
turn left there is a small cafe on the street called Bet Cafe. It is called that because it is owned by the guy who
owns the betting shop next door where all the gamblers spend their day looking at screens and counting money and smoking cigarettes. I would not even mention this place except they make good coffee and the kids who work there are nice, and if you are tired from a flight and hung-over from your first night in Athens you want to get caffeine-ated fast. There are a couple more bakery/cafes on the same block. But if I have a little more energy I cross Athinas and walk up to Aeolou Street where there are a number of small cafes, usually in tree shaded areas, all with good coffee and free
wireless internet if you just ask for the password. If you follow Aeolou towards the Acropolis to the church of Agia Irini and take a left into the square and there are a number of cafes with great coffee, tables on the square, and friendly waiters. You could sit here all day. There are cafes opening all the time on Aeolou and the whole area around the church and up every side street between here and Syntagma. Around Syntagma there are dozens of cafes on Voulis Street, and because they cater mostly to Greek businessmen they make strong coffee that is capable of inducing panic attacks and near-psychosis, just the way we serious coffee drinkers like it.
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Andrea's favorite cafe
is
Eliasporo
(also known as Katerina's, the name of the owner) in Psiri on the corner of Maoulis and
Palados at Iroon Square. Convenient because
it is also an ouzerie with great mezedes so you can spend the whole
day there. Also try the traditional zacharo plasteion (sweet shop) right across the street from the Taverna Psiri on Ag Nikolaos Street which is one of the streets that connects to the square. If you cross the square and walk down Agion Anargiron Street there are a number of cafe/bars mixed in with restaurants, especially as you get towards the end of the street. If you stay long enough you can move up the street to
Nikitas for lunch or any of the great restaurants in the Psiri neighborhood. Or you can stay right where you are and have lunch and dinner there. Psiri used to be known for its nightlife and was kind of dead in the daytime but no more. There are cafes everywhere and great pastry shops too.
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Another good place
to drink coffee is the square right by Hadrian's Wall at the beginning of Aeolou Street. Also the cafe called Kapni Karea
Hristopoulou street (alley actually) between Ermou and
Metropolis street right by the small Church of Kapni
Karea. If you stay there long enough in the afternoon people arrive for ouzo, mezedes and live rembetika music. My wife likes the Cafe Central which is a big Parisian style cafe on Metropolis street right next to the main cathedral, the one that has been under scaffolding for the last twenty years. There used to be a bunch of nice cafes around the square on Kydathineon Street in the Plaka. I go to Oionos because it is off the main street but you still have a view of the people and they have a large menu so you can easily transition from coffee to lunch to ouzo and meze and to wine and dinner. They are owned by the Plaka Taverna so their Greek dishes come from there and the breakfast, pizzas, pastries and other stuff come from their own kitchen. The waiters are pretty cool too.
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The
Cafe
Dioscouri
is at 39 Andrianou right in the flea
market. If you are going to the Sunday
market come here early because it fills
up. They make excellent coffee and it is a
good spot to watch the people go by. If
you are coming from the Plaka you will
have to go around Hadrian's Library to get
there since Andrianou Street comes to an end and
begins on the other side. This is a great
place to watch people on
Sunday. It gets crowded so you have to come
early. Even if it is there are half a dozen or more cafes on the street overlooking the Stoa of Attalos and the Ancient Agora. In terms of view, people-watching and finding good coffee this is the best street in Athens. My favorite hangout in the winter was Diodos which is a cafe-ouzerie right across the street from the entrance to the Ancient Agora on lower Adrianou street. Very friendly service and good espresso and other coffees. Another one of those places that you can come for a coffee
pick-me-up in the afternoon and make the gentle transition to ouzo and meze and hang out for the next 6 or 7 hours. They have dinner too. Look for the most traditional chairs and tables and that's the place. |
You will have to wander around the Plaka a
bit if you want to find the
Cafe
Klepsydra
which was owned by
Andrea's friend Tstisinos who died about 30 years ago.
The cafe is a favorite of locals but the cat is out of the bag and it gets its share of tourists now. But it is in a very nice out of the way settingin an old house on the steps and besides good coffee they have food as well. I think it is on Trassivolou street
at the corner of either Klepsidras or Alimberti right under the
Acropolis. I met the new owner one day when I was wandering around shooting photos for my Athens Graffiti page and he was a really nice guy and offered to treat me a coffee without even knowing I had a famous website. But if you can't find it you can just go to Dioscouri which is a famous cafe on Dioskouron
Street which borders the ancient Agora and is more or less an extension of Aeolou Street. |
At Fokinos Negri in Kypseli there are
dozens of cafes, one after the other and
in the afternoon they are crowded with
people and this is the place where I do most of my coffee drinking. Some of the cafes are for old
people and some for young. The most popular
cafes can have a couple hundred tables and are always packed at any time of the day.
Though
most people sit outdoors some of the
interiors of these cafes are spectacular and
it seems like they try to out-do each other to have the cleanest
and most interesting restrooms. It also seems that they change the
furniture and decor every year which gives you an idea of how much
money is to be made in the cafe business. The street
itself is a big pedestrian mall, like a
park that goes on for several blocks. There are some good
restaurants here too so you can come for your afternoon coffee and hang out until dinner time.
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Try the Foibos Cafe at #19 which is a small un-pretentious place across the park from most of the larger cafes. They play classical music and jazz and are owned by a very nice Greek-Australian woman named Julia and her two sons. I usually go to a place called The Happening, which in the morning is
full of old people. It does not seem very happening but they make great coffee and have wireless internet and on a hot summer day there is a breeze that comes down the mountain and hits that spot. If you take the #2, 4 or 9 trolley from the top of Syntagma in front of
the park, going towards Omonia you get off at Platia Kypseli and walk down. You
can walk there from the Archaeological
Museum up Patission street and make a
right on Agia Melitiou and left on Drossopoulou. I love
Fokinos Negri. Its the kind of area that people go to Paris for and it is right here in central Athens.
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When you climb to the top of a mountain
and there is a coffee shop there that
overlooks all of Athens, does it really
matter how good the coffee is? I would
have loved to have sampled an espresso but
after climbing Mount Lykavettos I did not want
to risk having a heart attack so I will
let you be the judge as to whether the
cafe belongs on the same page as these
others. From the cafe you can see the Acropolis
and all of Athens and even the ships leaving Pireaus for the islands.
You don't have to climb the mountain if you don't want to. The Funicular
is a train that goes up and down the mountain and you can catch
it at the top of Ploutarchou Street. Walk down. It is easy and good
exercise.
On
the other side of the coin the fast food place on the
corner of Ermou and Athinas, though lacking in atmosphere,
actually make their Greek coffee the old style...in
hot sand!
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There are cafes all over Athens. Anywhere
there is a square or a space on the street
to fit a few tables you will find a cafe,
cafe-bar or cafeneon. Some other places to
hang out and enjoy a coffee or a drink and
watch life are Thission, the cafe in the
national Gardens, Zappion, the path to the
Acropolis, Makrianni, Gazi and many of the major public
squares. Half the major avenues
downtown are being converted into
pedestrian streets and that means even
more cafes. In a country like Greece where
the climate is prefectly suited for
hanging out and drinking coffee there can
never be enough cafes. I almost forgot to mention.
There are now a couple Starbucks in Athens and I am sure there will
be more. It's like bringing coals to Newcastle but if you are one
of those people who refuse to visit a country that does not have
a Starbucks then you are in luck. To be honest with you I LOVE Starbucks
Frappuccino. It's like a milkshake with a buzz and is tough to beat
on a hot day in Athens. For inexpensive but decent espresso, capuccino, latte, fredo etc check out the Grigoris chain which are all over the city and even on some of the ferry boats. They also have spanakopita, tiropita, and lots of other pitas and sandwiches as well as traditional Greek coffee. The Flo-cafe chain also has cheap coffee drinks and they are everywhere.
If you are looking for really great coffee I recommend Coffee Island. They are all over the city and not only sell all your favorite coffee drinks but they also have excellent bulk coffee that you can get ground in any style and take with you to the islands if your taste is above the supermarket variety. You can also buy a small stove-top espresso-maker, press-pot or just a simple cone filter and make gourmet coffee in your room. And for you people who get your coffee in
the supermarket the freeze-dried or vacuum packed Lavazza which you can find in just about any supermarket or grocery store is pretty good too.
The fact is that when I first wrote this page there was a need for it because espresso was just being introduced to Greece and cafeneions were just beginning to be transformed into cafes. Now you can find good coffee anywhere and cafes are bringing the prices down because their customers can no longer afford to pay Parisian prices for coffee in Athens. So my advice is to look around the neighborhood your hotel is in and find a place that has comfortable
chairs, shade, a nice view, and low prices and if you order a coffee and it is good, make that your home.
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