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Vienna coffee purveyor pours on
the panache
November 19, 2002
BY LUCIO GUERRERO STAFF REPORTER
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Chicago has long been known as the home
of the Vienna hot dog. Now, it's going
to be the home of coffee from Vienna.
A Viennese company has opened up shop
on Chicago's North Side, where coffee
is served in the traditional style: on
a silver platter with a glass of water
at its side.
Co-owner Thomas Meinl had one request
for his Yankee shop: "I didn't want it
to be a honky-tonk coffee shop," said
Meinl, whose family owns the Meinl coffee
empire in Vienna and has opened the Julius
Meinl coffee shop at Addison and Southport.
"We wanted it to be as authentic as possible."
That includes flying in most of the interior
furnishings from Austria and piping in
the country's classical music.
Unlike most coffee chains in the United
States, such as Starbucks and Caribou
Coffee, the Austrian version has waiters
and waitresses. The shop also has a more
American, traditional take-away service.
"Someone came in here and said what we
are doing was revolutionary," Meinl said.
"Imagine that, a coffee shop being revolutionary."
Meinl, who along with his brother represents
the fourth of five generations of Meinls
in the family business, said he picked
Chicago as the first city for his American
coffee shops because of the neighborhood
and because his partners are from Chicago.
He said the timing also was right. "Chicago
has become a sophisticated city," Meinl
said. "Twenty-five years ago, the city
was railroads and warehouses, but now
it is a world-class city." Meinl said
Chicago is also the heart of the heartland.
He thinks Midwesterners will be more willing
to try something different, as opposed
to East Coast residents, with their ties
to Western Europe, and the West Coast,
which is more open to Asia. The roasted
coffees Meinl sells in a store inside
the coffee shop have been roasted and
vacuum-packed in Austria, then flown to
Chicago. "Without modern technology, creating
what we're creating would have been not
only difficult, but impossible,'' Meinl
said.
Meinl also has imported recipes from
the Vienna shop to serve to Chicagoans,
including a topfenstrudel , a farmer's
cheese strudel with orange zest and golden
raisins. The coffee has been praised by
critics who have tasted the beans, and
prices are comparable to those of major
franchises. A few American restaurants
import the coffee from Vienna to serve
to their customers. A New York Times restaurant
reviewer wrote: "I'm prepared to state
that it's the best coffee in [New York]:
rich, robust and deep.'' So far the reception
in the Wrigleyville neighborhood has been
good. Crowds pack the shop at night, and,
in the morning, a line of commuters heading
for the trains snakes through the interior.
"It's nice to have something different
in the neighborhood," said Larry Kolar,
who has become a regular at the shop that
opened earlier this month. "This should
do very well here."
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