Joe Coffee

Weโve been doing quite a bit of shopping here in New York. Romain has been here before, but never with an โalmostโ local. (I grew up next door.) Sure, heโs been all the museums, but heโs never been to places as uniquely American as Bed, Bath & Beyond, TJ Maxx, and Old Navy, where we saw the woman who played Janice on The Sopranos loading up on bargains. I guess now that the show is over, sheโs watching her finances, too.
He was absolutely bewildered that one could buy a shirt for $10 or pay just $25 for a pair of sneakers, which, in euros, cost a third of that. Weโve both been loading up on Leviโs at Daveโs for $32, or โฌ20. And my once-empty suitcases are now bulging at the seams. Everything is so cheap here, and no tax, eitherโGod bless America!
Oddly, the same jeans I bought in France cost โฌ72 ($100), and that was when they were on sale.(Although I didnโt get the same personal attention that I did in Paris, which, arguably, is worth the extra costโat least at my age.) After all that bargain hunting, what could plus obligatoire than a cup of good, strong coffee?
So we stopped in at Joe Coffee. Although Iโve always found their espresso a bit murky, Romainโs declared his espresso macchiato, โLe meilleur cafรฉ de ma vie,โ the best coffee of his life. I took a sip of his, and indeed, it was amazing.
I donโt quite know what to write about French coffee that I havenโt written about before, but after he was done, he wondered why he couldnโt get coffee like back home. So now heโs hooked, and so am I.
And not just on the coffee, but the bargains. Weโre going to need an intervention to get us to leave.
Joe Coffee
405 West 23rd Street
New York City
(212) 206-0669
(Other locations throughout Manhattan)







