Coffee
September 22, 2002
Craig Street Coffee
305 S. Craig St.
(412) 683-9993
$
It’s refreshing to… Craig Street Coffee
305 S. Craig St.
(412) 683-9993
$
It’s refreshing to visit a coffee shop there’s only one of. Actually, it’s more than a coffee shop. In addition to a nice array of the caffeinated stuff, Craig Street Coffee offers sandwiches, soups, salads and desserts. The extensive sandwich menu can fix you up with something grilled, something deli-style or even something vegetarian. There are always plenty of fresh baked goods; the chocolate chunk cookies are the largest you have ever seen. The shop’s coffee beans are supplied super-fresh by a local roasting company – you can buy them by the pound to grind on your own if you like. There are many espresso drink choices and the specialty concoctions are tempting. You can order to go or eat there. Try to nab one of the sidewalk tables if the weather is pleasant.
– Chad Eberle
Crazy Mocha Coffee Company
116 S. Bouquet St.
(412) 621-7440
$
Ah, coffee – that heady, life-giving elixir.
At Crazy Mocha Coffee Company, the employees, well-versed in coffeeology, can prepare any coffee drink from the lowliest cup of drip decaf to the most decadent mocha creation. Its signature drink, the Crazy Mocha, is a fantastic creation of espresso, steamed milk, chocolate and ice cream.
But there’s more than just the delightful jolt of caffeine and chocolate at Crazy Mocha. You can also get pastries like the almond mele, a buttery pastry pocket filled with sweet, fragrant almonds, or a panini that’s plump with spinach and feta cheese.
Relax at the outdoor tables with a blistering shot of espresso and The Wall Street Journal, or run in before class and grab a flavored Italian soda to go.
– Clare Perretta
GNC Smoothie
3721 Forbes Ave.
(412) 682-5008 $
If you’ve ever downed one of the yogurt-and-milk concoctions at Eddie’s and thought there must be more to a smoothie, the new GNC Smoothie Bar on Forbes Avenue has heard your cry. From a single counter tucked among various pills, powders and other nonfood sources of nourishment, the folks at GNC can make you one of more than two dozen varieties of smoothie. With names like “Hear Me Roar” and “More Gain than Pain,” the menu offers a smoothie for everyone, from the strawberry-banana purist to the wheat-grass-loving health food nut. For those who take their smoothies without fruit, there are coffee, chocolate and peanut butter options. And dieters limited to single-digit carbohydrate intakes can indulge for once, thanks to GNC’s Low Carb smoothie, available in three Atkins-friendly flavors. And, for those days when you just need some bee pollen, you can add it or one of 17 other supplements for just 50 cents.
– Amanda Sammons
The Juice Stop
119 Oakland Ave.
(412) 682-8343
$
Accepts PittFunds
So you need to recharge after a long night of studying or a weekend of insanity, and subpar coffee and power bars just won’t do it. If you can work up the effort, trudge down to The Juice Stop.
This snazzy little juice bar offers a wide array of the best fruit smoothies you’ve ever tasted. Each contains ingredients like fat free yogurt, berries, fruit juice and sherbet, along with ad-ins that include ginseng and vitamin C. Each smoothie has a convenient title, examples of which include “energy,” “protein” and “be smart.”
Six dollars will buy a 20-ounce smoothie (complete with paper umbrella) and a fresh muffin. The Juice Stop also offers coffee and tea, including yummy chai tea, along with soups and healthy, somewhat unusual snacks such as wheatgrass and soy pretzels.
– Toni Bartone
Kiva Han
3533 Forbes Ave.
(412) 682-5354
420 S. Craig St.
(412) 687-6355
$
Amid the clicking of laptop computer keys and the whispers of student fingers turning pages of classic literature, it’s easy to forget that Kiva Han isn’t a library. The main differences? You can talk as loud as you want, you won’t have to use any of your print quota and – of course – Kiva Han serves a variety of beverages that Faulkner and Descartes could never provide.
Both of Kiva Han’s Oakland locations sell the spectrum of coffee, from your standard joe to the fanciest of Arabica coffee bean lattes. Accompany your coffee with a pastry or, on a warm day, ditch the hot stuff and sit outside with a cup of ice coffee or juice. Plus, Kiva Han advertises a special brew every month.
Started in 1993 by Ed Wethli, Kiva Han is supposedly named for history’s first coffee house started in Constantinople in 1471.
– Eric Lidji
Starbucks
3618 Forbes Ave.
(412) 682-3868
$
Let’s face it: Everyone already knows about Starbucks. Talk about corporate America always seems to accompany talk about this coffee shop. Starbucks, then, serves as Pittsburgh’s coffee shop for customers willing to spend a little more money for fancy, eclectic pick-me-ups.
Starbucks offers everything from hot chocolate to iced lattes to coconut Frappuccinos to chai tea. Employees know their stuff when it comes to customizing and preparing the drinks. There is always a regular, decaf and breakfast coffee blend of the day. There are 18 varieties of coffee beans – which range from $5.10 for a half-pound to $11.95 for a pound – and the array of coffee accessories are essential for at-home coffee consumption.
Drinks come in tall, grande and venti sizes and the most expensive drink on the menu is $4.10. Food prices range from a 35-cent shortbread cookie to a $2.25 piece of crumbleberry coffee cake.
Although it continues to fight anti-capitalism protesters, this Starbucks will also continue to provide its customers with velvet couches, The New York Times and really big cups of satisfying coffee.
– Erin Brachlow