A Black-owned coffee shop renaissance is brewing in L.A. 25 cafes with all the vibes
When popular sitcoms like “Friends” and “Gilmore Girls” debuted in the ’90s and early aughts, they helped shape mainstream understanding of coffee shops as essential third spaces, places where we can escape the stresses of life and catch up with friends over a hot cup of Joe. However, by featuring predominantly white casts, these shows and others like them sent a subtle message as to who coffee culture is meant for.
Here in Los Angeles, a dedicated group of Black coffee shop owners and roasters are on a mission to make the industry more diverse and inclusive, offering spaces that unapologetically celebrate Black and brown cultures, with coffee programs that involve intentional sourcing from countries like Ethiopia and Brazil.
“[These] are not just coffee shops,” said LaNisa Williams of Barista Life L.A. “These are spaces where amazing things happen. We’re giving back to the community through coffee shops.”
Head to these coffee shops in L.A., Hollywood, Culver City, Santa Monica and beyond, for great espresso drinks, lattes and pour-overs and options for remote work.
Williams started #BlackInBrew in June 2020 to raise awareness of Black coffee professionals and build community in the wake of the George Floyd protests. Today she consults and provides education and training for many of L.A.’s coffee shops, with an emphasis on uplifting those who have not historically been represented in the industry.
Given that coffee is historically grown by Black, brown and Indigenous people, Williams said there’s an element of reclamation at many Black-owned coffee shops, with an intention of using that foundation to move the industry forward.
Jonathan Kinnard, founder of Coffee Del Mundo in South L.A., places a heavy emphasis on coffee origin education. “We want you to be very aware that coffee is not a European thing. It’s an Ethiopian thing. It’s a Colombian thing. It’s a Guatemalan thing. We take a lot of pride in that, and we need to honor that if you understand the difficulty of labor that goes into these things,” said Kinnard.
The best brews from L.A.’s Black-owned coffee shops include drinks that celebrate Black culture, like lattes named after Cardi B, Barry White and Slauson Avenue.
Compton local Geoffrey Martinez of Patria Coffee Roasters sought to center the surrounding BIPOC-majority neighborhood when opening his specialty coffee shop in 2018. A sign near the register reads: “Patria Coffee is a space intended for Communities of Color to share a safe place, free of criminalization and punitive treatment, that is relational and not simply transactional. We aim to uplift the beauty and richness of our cultural identity while offering a dignified coffee experience and quality, respectful of the existing Compton community structure and understandings.”
“They’re creating these spaces so that we feel safe,” Williams said. “We need these spaces for us to be able to express ourselves in our own communities … We are empowering ourselves through ownership and breaking generational curses, showing what happens when we take pride in our Black history.”
Here are 25 Black-owned coffee shops to support across L.A:
Auntie's Coffee
Bloom & Plume Coffee
Bohemian House of Espresso + Chai
Cafe Ruisseau
Coffee and Plants
Live plants and flowers adorn the pink shop walls, and succulents are available for purchase. On the menu, you’ll find the Rose Bowl latte, a floral nod to the neighborhood. Rose-hibiscus, lavender and vanilla syrups are made fresh in-house with minimal ingredients, in line with Lewis’ promise to not serve anything she wouldn’t consume herself. For every 100 cups of coffee sold, Coffee and Plants plants a tree in partnership with the National Forest Foundation.
Coffee Del Mundo
Dam Good Coffee
Dubb's Organic Coffee Blends
Muhammad has been around the L.A. business block a couple of times, but what has uniquely prepared him for this independent venture was Coffee and Kush, a food truck dispensary that offered coffee and cannabis. After the business shuttered, Muhammad kept pouring into his love for coffee, even adding a CBD-infused roast with anti-inflammatory properties.
The house oat milk honey latte adds a touch of sweetness to the toasty espresso brew. Breakfast and brunch noms — including a stuffed French toast, waffles, and breakfast sandwiches — are made to order. The breakfast burrito with turkey sausage, fresh bell peppers, seasoned potatoes and a dash of Tapatio is one of the best in the city and can be made vegan by request. Dubb’s roasts two types of beans: Power is a dark roast with chocolate notes and Glazed Donut is a sweeter medium roast that’s perfect for a black coffee lover who enjoys a hint of vanilla.
Flowerboy Project
Goodpeople
Founder Chuck Herrera was tired of the “pretentiousness and performance” around craft coffee and instead wanted to lead with “genuine hospitality” and “let people be who they want to be.” It shows. Upon entering, Kimberly Bardales-Bonilla, the shop’s managing barista, introduces you to the shop, asks you about your day and helps walk you through the menu. The coffee bar leads down a hallway to an expansive, dog-friendly patio with turf and colorful seating.
The brunch menu has all the staples like avocado and lox toast, as well as L.A.-inspired takes like the beef bulgogi-stuffed K-Town burrito and the vegan Abbott Kinney bowl. Goodpeople is unapologetically brash in its naming conventions, such as “The Notorious Vanilla Bullsh*t,” a latte with espresso, your choice of milk and house-made smoky vanilla bourbon syrup that’s dusted with cinnamon. There’s also “F*ck the 405,” a decadent caramel and chocolate espresso blend, which shines in the ube-sweetened “Dirty Dee” named after co-owner and Herrera’s wife Dee Von Kauffmann.
Harun Coffee
Hilltop Coffee + Kitchen
From the straight-up Slauson Drip to the complex Matcha Chata, Hilltop has an extensive drink and food menu to give you fuel to climb that hill and reach your goals. At any Hilltop (there are also locations in View Park-Windsor Hills, Eagle Rock and downtown L.A.), you’ll find people in business meetings and interviews and students giving virtual presentations, making it a prime destination for remote workers. At its newest location at Los Angeles International Airport’s Terminal 7, you’ll find travelers and crews fueling up for departing flights. Of course, when you work hard, you must brunch hard. Hilltop’s downtown location now offers a full brunch service with 2-for-1 mimosas, plus chicken and waffles, steak and eggs and a salmon benedict.
Hooked Venice
The convivial beach cottage tucked behind the Venice Boardwalk is bright and welcoming, much like Alameda himself. He has a passion for the craft that permeates the high energy of the space and finds that naturally processed coffee invites “more authentic” conversation around tasting coffee. When you dip one of their flat oat cookies into a homemade Heilala vanilla latte, the fruity notes of the coffee still cut through.
L.A. Grind Coffee & Tea Bar
Lou, the French on the Block
Mingles Tea Bar
Mingles boasts a collection of 48 caffeinated and non-caffeinated premium loose leaf teas, such as the full-bodied Earl Grey Créme and the floral Peace tea made with chamomile, lavender, rose petals, rosehip and bright pink peppercorn.
Obet & Del's
ORA
In its new digs, ORA’s drink menu returns with classics like the Barry White latte with blueberry syrup and white chocolate, and adds fresh pressed juices. The menu has been reworked to be entirely vegan with whole ingredients. Find a savory flavor profile in the Groovy bowl cooked with brown rice, toasted kale, shredded cabbage and mushrooms, dressed with a spicy BBQ sauce and nutritional yeast.
Patria Coffee Roasters
The shop features art that highlights the diversity and legacy of resistance in Compton, hosts community events, sells items from local artisans and has partnered with the Free Black Women’s Library as a place where people can donate and borrow radical texts. Located across from Renaissance Plaza and the Compton Towne Center and right next to Wilson Skatepark, it’s the perfect place to stop for energy to start your day.
Silverback Coffee
Here, you’ll find staple coffee drinks and a variety of beans, all grown on small farms in Rwanda and roasted sustainably in Northern California.
Sip & Sonder
Super Domestic Coffee
TRO Coffee
Undergrind Cafe
Watts Coffee House
Eat your way across L.A.
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