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Cafe du Monde: Savoring Berkeley's Caffe Strada
For many years I have been talking -- dreaming -- about writing a book called Café du Monde. The book would be a collection off some two dozen essays, each one set in a different café around the world. The underlying notion would be my long-held (and repeatedly confirmed, latte by latte, croissant by flaky croissant) belief that spending a few hours in a café and really closely observing, absorbing, the small world there can inimitably illuminate the larger world around it. My plan would be to choose one great café in two dozen locations – Paris, Tokyo, Venice, Cairo, Istanbul, for example – and plant myself there for a few hours over a few days, and watch and listen and write. Sounds delicious, doesn't it?
So it seemed appropriate to make my Gadling debut with a piece about a café. And I couldn't think of a better café to begin with -- and in -- than the Caffe Strada in Berkeley, right across from the UC Berkeley campus at the corner of College and Bancroft avenues.
Inside, the Strada is simple and spare. In a space roughly 60 feet by 40 feet, a friendly foursome presides behind a cedilla-shaped counter. Wooden panels mounted on the wall behind the main counter serve as menu, showing a standard selection of coffees and teas, milk, hot chocolate, cider and the specialty I always order: the Strada biancha mocha, a creamy confection that injects just the right mind-jolting mix of caffeine and sugar. This main area, where orders are taken and cash handed over (no credit cards, please), displays croissants, scones, pastries and madeleines, with baskets of apples, bananas and fruit cups for the health-conscious. More ambitious concoctions – chocolate and carrot cakes, banana cream pie, cheesecake – are showcased on the left. If you'd prefer more substantial fare, there's a ham and cheese croissant. That's it – no fancy sandwiches or salads. One doesn't stop at the Strada for the food.
An hour ago, students paraded past on their way to class, spanning the spectrum from just-got-out-of-the-shower to never-made-it-to-bed. An hour or two from now, cops and postal workers will gobble croissants on coffee breaks, and city maintenance workers will devour danishes and crack jokes. Members of fraternities and sororities will evaluate anxious pledges, jotting notes in ring binders; foreign students will cluster with their compatriots, creating a mellifluous music of French, Japanese, Spanish, Mandarin, Italian and Korean; awkward seniors in suits and ties will interview for internships; and club leaders will commandeer tables to sell their groups to prospective members.
The Strada is an extension of the university without being the university. That's why it was the perfect place to write a guide to travel writing – a profession that essentially brings the classroom into the world and transcribes the lessons of the world-as-classroom. The atmosphere of intense inquiry still sizzles here just as it does on the campus across the street, but the Strada is also a bridge to the town beyond the gown, a place where office workers stop by for an americano on their way to work and suburban spouses bring their kids for cupcakes and lemonade in the afternoon. Sealing its appeal, the Strada spans coasts too, commingling east coast intellectualism with west coast hedonism – two poles that are integral to my own Connecticut-meets-California make-up.
Over the years, the Strada has come to feel like a second home to me. I like the way the terrace's leafy boughs filter the sunlight; I like the comforting cosmopolitan chatter, the combination of marble bundt cake and biancha mocha, the easy mix of old and young. I like the staffers who always have a smile. And on a springy day in February, I like luxuriating under the plum petals reading Paul Theroux and Peter Hessler, tapping on my laptop, and occasionally glancing up to watch the unceasing stream of students surging by in sweatshirts and blue jeans, t-shirts and thigh-high skirts. They hug and laugh and banter about classes, parties, what they did for dinner last night, where they're going for spring break. The air is infused with their innocent energy.
I love the optimism that pervades this place, an optimism I still associate with Berkeley as a whole, even in this cynical age. I sit on this sun-dappled stage and think: There is so much still to be learned, so many adventures still to come. The world looms large.
On a fine February day, the possibilities bloom like plum blossoms on the terrace at the Strada cafe.
Filed under: Arts and Culture, Food and Drink, North America, United States














Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Alexi Mar 1st 2010 5:39PM
I live by Lake Merritt, about 20 minutes (sans traffic, ha!) from the Strada and you've captured the atmosphere perfectly. It's all I can do not to throw my laptop in my bag, run to my car and drive there now.
But my boss probably wouldn't appreciate it.
Croissant + book + people watching (in Berkeley, no less) = the perfect afternoon.
Don George Mar 11th 2010 8:19PM
Thanks, Alexi! I'll meet you there!
Carol Margolis Mar 2nd 2010 1:07AM
Great review! The cup of coffee looks wonderful -- I want one now!
I love cafes. I get great writing done at a small table with lots of hot coffee, enjoy time with friends in various cities, and love the people-watching.
And with all my travel, I always feel right at home at a great cafe.
Welcome to Gadling!
Carol Margolis
http://www.smartwomentravelers.com
Alison Brick Mar 2nd 2010 1:50AM
Great post, Don! The weather has kept me from Caffe Strada lately, but you've reminded me what I love about it: reading under the tree-filtered sunlight, feeling the energy of university life, and overhearing conversations of groups that you can just sense meet there regularly every week.
Looking forward to reading more of your writing here!
C(h)ristine Mar 2nd 2010 2:53AM
Found this post by way of the series on North Korea--oddly enough, I have a deep personal connection to both destinations. Half my family originates from North Korea, and I spent many evenings in college at Caffe Strada with friends (I live a few miles away, and I realize I haven't visited Strada in years and years). I'll have to go buy for a bianca mocha soon (one of the many sources of my "freshman fifteen"), so I can remedy that issue. ;)
Thank you for sharing.
virginia waters Mar 3rd 2010 6:19AM
Your cafe is great, but the deux magots in the Left Bank of Paris is also a fantastic setting for people watching and, as Hemmingway did, writing, and the croisants and cafe au lait couldn't be found to be better!
Vee Mar 3rd 2010 8:27PM
Your sensitivity to the world around you is contagious. Great essay. I'm ready for the five hour drive up to the Strada!