These days cities are awash with coffee
shops, brew bars, specialty coffee houses and the likes, many of which function
as so-called 'coffices', spaces where
people engage in all sorts of mostly laptop based work alongside their
espressos, flat whites and chatter. It would be pretty hypocritical of me to
complain of such places though, since I am a faithful patron of many, yet in my
heart of hearts I have always longed for an establishment which harks back to
the old days of imperial coffee consumption and of which Budapest unfortunately
has none.
Several coffee houses have
attempted to recreate the atmosphere of those halcyon days of caffeination, but
the break in tradition remains painfully obvious. These places do not continue
a lifestyle as much as reconstruct an idea of said lifestyle- which is a nice
postmodern endeavour, but not the thing I’ve been looking for.
The thing I’ve been looking for
can however be found in Trieste- now a bustling city in Italy’s North, but
once, of course, the major Mediterranean port of the Habsburg Empire and as
such the point where coffee entered the bloodstream of the giant state. The
fact that Trieste is still enamoured with the black liquid is vastly evident
from the number and diversity of establishments offering it- and also by the
quality of the end product.
Some places do however stand out
even in such sea of excellence, and Caffé San Marco on via Cesare Battisti 18
is one of them. (Don’t be confused by the silly Italian numbering, at 18 you
will find something akin to an appliance store but next to it, under a rather
unassuming guise is 18A, and inside it Caffé San Marco.) Its history started in
the fateful year 1914 and still in the bosom of the Empire- albeit one of its
main activities was hosting pro-Italian irredentists, for which it was duly
closed the next year. It later gained a new lease of life in the now nominally
Italian but culturally still very diverse city and in both periods served as the 'coffice' of some ‘modest’
literary figures such as Italo Svevo, Umberto Saba and James Joyce.
Joyce had auto-exiled himself on
the continent and had sought a teaching job in Zürich, but was finally offered
employment in Trieste. Here he penned most of the short stories which were to
be collected as Dubliners, and
befriended one of his students, Ettore Schmitz, better known as Italo Svevo,
who served as an inspiration for Ulysses’ Leopold Bloom and whose works Joyce
enthusiastically promoted when the Italian literary establishment initially
failed to grasp their value.
Inhabitation by writers is
however not only a thing of the past for Caffé San Marco: in 2013, when the
building’s owner, insurance company Assicurazioni Generali, threatened to close the place and reallocate
the space for more lucrative undertakings, whatever those meant, the campaign
to preserve it was led by Trieste based writer and translator Claudio Magris,
who often works from the San Marco.
Thankfully the campaign proved
successful, and Caffé San Marco continues to serve the citizens of Trieste, for
unlike many famed locales, the San Marco is not a tourist trap with expensive
cakes but a real coffee house, with pleasant woodwork and many mirrors,
neighbourhood regulars storming in for a quick shot of espresso at the bar,
groups of elderly ladies out for a chat, solitary poker faced readers, students
toiling over assignments or artists brainstorming over projects. One of its
wings hosts a bookstore and the entrance area is plastered with posters
advertising upcoming events. And if anyone had a doubt about it, the coffee is
excellent too- no fussy concoctions, no matcha latte and pumpkin spice
frappucinos, just the Italian trinity of espresso, cappuccino and caffé latte-
old world charm for the present and hopefully for the future too
.
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