As far as my western American mind-
set goes, if youโre not at a cafรฉ to wake up, youโre there to meet a friend, or work quietly on a laptop, or even just geek-out on coffee. If you eat anything, itโs probably from a pastry caseโmaybe just a bagel with cream cheese.
So when you get great food at a coffee shop, it feels like someone just showed up with a giant check.
This is what happened at Guilder Cafe. Iโd walked by the Northeast Fremont shop and noticed the pretty packaging of the Juniorโs Roasted Coffee bagsโmathy-looking tricolor line drawings, rocketships and boats on white bagsโand my coffee geek roommate and I decided to try the goods.
We chatted with roaster/co-owner Mike Nelson about Guilderโs varied, complex coffees that are currently roasted in Southeast (soon to be roasted in-house). The coffees come from various farms and regions, the selection informed by Nelsonโs academic research in environmental science. In true cafรฉ fashion, the conversation then turned, as always, to Star Wars and Stranger Things.
Feeling peckish, I ordered a โsavory toast.โ The description sounded like some veggies on a piece of bread, but it was giant-check amazing. The white bean salad was light and flavorful, the raw and pickled roots were crisp, and the egg rich and warm ($8.50, $2 extra for the egg). Prettier and presumably less terrible for me than the benedict Iโd have had elsewhere, it tasted like unclogged arteries and Instagram likes.
The menu also includes pastries from Shoofly, sweet ($8) or savory ($8.50) porridge (I prefer the housemade berry jam in the sweet; the savory actually feels heavier), a breakfast sandwich called Miracle Max, and a farro-and-rice โInconceivabowlโ ($10). (Somehow Guilderโs is at least the second Princess Bride-themed menu in Portland, after Victoriaโs.) They even have cocktails, most of them named for characters in the comic book Saga (a first, I think, for Portland). Of these, The Will is a favorite. Made with rum, tea syrup, bitters, and soda, itโs a lighter, floral take on a standard rum and Coke.
All in all, Guilder isnโt trying to force you into anything new: Itโs still counter service and a menu that seems modest until you eat from it. The staff here arenโt reinventing the wheel, they just make a fine one.
Meanwhile, slightly north, a coffee roaster of southern (hemisphere) influence is turning a different kind of wheel: Australian coffee roaster Proud Mary has opened a cafรฉ and roastery on the swiftly reinvented 2000 block of Alberta.
The model is downright un-American: table service coffee. While the centerpiece is still an espresso bar, and they do offer coffee to go and a case of mostly housemade pastries, this place is huge, with plenty of seating and a big kitchen.
And that kitchen, like Guilderโs, is pumping out some impressive food. But this menu looks like a proper brunch spotโs: hotcakes, hash, granolaโplus some more unique fare. If you wake up with a sweet tooth, get the banana bostock, a twice-baked brioche topped with bananas, caramel, and a hazelnut frangipane that shows Proud Maryโs not too proud to embrace the state nut of its new home. If you lean savory, the miso smoked trout is a standoutโavailable as a side ($5) or a full plate with soba noodles and a mild kimchee ($16). Thereโs even breakfast sashimi, a delicious idea, though the fishโlocal wild albacoreโdoesnโt quite shine, buried as it is in spices and seasonings ($16).
Proud Mary is a cafรฉ first and foremost, and as big as the food menu is, the drinks list is bigger. Thereโs tea and chocolate from Australia, housemade juices (get the Kermit, one of those rare perfectly balanced green juices with just enough apple and lemon, $6.50), tonics, and smoothies. Shamefully, my favorite was the berry-purple Smooth Barney, which contains ice cream but is listed under smoothies, so Iโll keep telling myself itโs healthy ($7.50). Thereโs a milkshake section, too, but as coffee geek roommate says, if youโre going to call a banana/chocolate/peanut butter shake a โMrs. Mia Wallace,โ you have to take the hit and charge $5 for it. (Proud Maryโs is $8.)
The coffee has to impress as much as Portlandโs homegrown favorites, and it doesโfrom basic blends to the coffees from the showcase farm, which the crew talk about unpretentiously. They also drop a card with the menu describing the current farm and the coffees, which range in price and obscurity and are available in different brewing methods, iced or hot.
The card included a photo of one of the Aussies with the Hartmann coffee farming family in Panama. Coffee Geek Roommate said, โHey, that guyโs making our coffee.โ And so he was. In fact, a lot of the staff at Proud Mary are Australians. If that dedication to their originsโmoving staff thousands of milesโand attention to local product isnโt proof that we can MAGA with immigrants, I donโt know what is.
To Portlanders, the hustle and bustle at Proud Mary is bound to feel more brunch spot than coffeehouse. It will take a little customer training, but I think weโll cotton to table service cafรฉ life. Whether that will ever allow for the friendly atmosphere Guilder offers is harder to figure. It might not matter; not every cafรฉ has to be some โthird placeโ community space, but neither does having a tableside server necessarily stop a community from forming. You can still strike up a conversation about Star Wars if you want.
