Guilder Cafe Credit: Dan Cole

As far as my western American mind-
set goes, if youโ€™re not at a cafรฉ to wake up, youโ€™re there to meet a friend, or work quietly on a laptop, or even just geek-out on coffee. If you eat anything, itโ€™s probably from a pastry caseโ€”maybe 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. Iโ€™d walked by the Northeast Fremont shop and noticed the pretty packaging of the Juniorโ€™s Roasted Coffee bagsโ€”mathy-looking tricolor line drawings, rocketships and boats on white bagsโ€”and my coffee geek roommate and I decided to try the goods.

We chatted with roaster/co-owner Mike Nelson about Guilderโ€™s 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 Nelsonโ€™s 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 โ€œsavory 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 Iโ€™d 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 โ€œInconceivabowlโ€ ($10). (Somehow Guilderโ€™s is at least the second Princess Bride-themed menu in Portland, after Victoriaโ€™s.) 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, itโ€™s a lighter, floral take on a standard rum and Coke.

All in all, Guilder isnโ€™t trying to force you into anything new: Itโ€™s still counter service and a menu that seems modest until you eat from it. The staff here arenโ€™t 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 Guilderโ€™s, is pumping out some impressive food. But this menu looks like a proper brunch spotโ€™s: hotcakes, hash, granolaโ€”plus 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 Maryโ€™s not too proud to embrace the state nut of its new home. If you lean savory, the miso smoked trout is a standoutโ€”available as a side ($5) or a full plate with soba noodles and a mild kimchee ($16). Thereโ€™s even breakfast sashimi, a delicious idea, though the fishโ€”local wild albacoreโ€”doesnโ€™t 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. Thereโ€™s 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 Iโ€™ll keep telling myself itโ€™s healthy ($7.50). Thereโ€™s a milkshake section, too, but as coffee geek roommate says, if youโ€™re going to call a banana/chocolate/peanut butter shake a โ€œMrs. Mia Wallace,โ€ you have to take the hit and charge $5 for it. (Proud Maryโ€™s is $8.)

The coffee has to impress as much as Portlandโ€™s homegrown favorites, and it doesโ€”from 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, โ€œHey, that guyโ€™s 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 originsโ€”moving staff thousands of milesโ€”and attention to local product isnโ€™t proof that we can MAGA with immigrants, I donโ€™t 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 weโ€™ll 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 โ€œthird 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.

Thomas Ross writes about art and booze, and edits fiction, nonfiction, and poetry for Tin House.