Tuesday, October 12, 2010

The Best Coffee In Quito

I'm a lethargic, angry, mean person without coffee and the thing they serve you here in Ecuador that is supposed to be coffee, but is actually Nescafe with hot water and milk, just doesn’t do it for me and it probably doesn’t do it for you either.

As a person who made a latte a part of her morning ritual before she entered high school and who has spent most of her free time since then socializing and writing in coffee shops, chosen apartments based on their proximity to a good java joint, and converted her tea drinking boyfriend into a coffee fiend, the little brown beans that we all know and love are almost a part of my self identity. Who am I without coffee? I don’t really want to know and I can assure you that my boyfriend definitely does not want to find out.

Of course you can find great, real coffee in the Mariscal, but I don’t live in the Mariscal - I live half an hour away by trolley and that is much too long a commute without coffee first - hence the dilemma. After sampling the java in a two block radius all around my house in Centro Historico and always being served Nescafe, I finally decided that I needed to make it at home to make it how I want it. Since then I have tried numerous coffee brands and had almost settled on the organic Mindo Cloud Forest when the sweet, rich aroma of roasting beans lured me into this little tienda near Plaza Grande where my coffee dreams were realized.






They have dark, medium, and light roast, but like a true junkie I went straight for the strong stuff and bought a bag for $5.50.



This morning I sampled it for the first time and it is good! Strong, bold, rich with an earthy flavor and enough caffeine to wake me up after a single cup, but not so much that I’m shaking after two. I can say, hands down, this is the best coffee I have had in Ecuador. Café Aguila de Oro is located directly behind the President’s house on Benalcazar between Chile and Espejo.


5 comments:

  1. My wife and 1 year old son and I will be living in Centro Historico starting in July. Glad to hear about the coffee, will check it out. See our blog at http://yanapanareserve.blogspot.com/

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  2. Congrats on finding one of the oldest coffee roasters in Quito! I used to buy this coffee nearly 40 years ago, until I opened my own coffee shops and found a commercial roaster. This was back in the days when Ecuador still had good coffee. They are just now getting back in the groove!

    Your posts on Ecuador are great! I have yet to go to Vilcabamba, but as I am living just about 2 hours away it will soon be checked off that list.

    By the way, if you do any shopping for food at Super Maxi, ESCoffee has a whole bean specialty coffee that I can vouch for. The ground version is OK, but I confess to being somewhat of a stickler on grinding it fresh. I brought a cheap burr grinder from the states and a French Press just so I could guarantee getting a good cup!

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  3. Oh yeah...great photos too!

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  4. I just recently moved to Ecuador myself and was searching for a good cup-o-joe too. Found this place on one of my treks around and gotta concur - the 'strong stuff' is quite nice. There is a shop just off Plaze Grande (behind the Majestic hotel) that serves a nice cup, but at $1.50 for a small shot, just doesn't justify as well. Also, in the Plaza de San Francisco there's a place for a decent cup, but really nothing like the one you can get at home from this coffee.

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  5. Gracias por habernos preferido y que bueno que le haya gustado nuestro café. Siempre será bienvenido. Saludos desde Ecuador.

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