Because the Trib's articles don't hand around very long, I've included the whole review.
The Coffee Bean Cafe
By Amanda Henry of The Tampa Tribune
Published: October 19, 2005
TAMPA Someday, supposedly, Starbucks is coming to spearhead the Hyde Park-ification of Seminole Heights. Until then, there is The Coffee Bean Cafe, a new breakfast and lunch spot that caters not so much to the future of the neighborhood as its present.
The Coffee Bean Cafe is the latest restaurant to try to make a go of it in the funky green strip mall at the corner of Florida and Osborne avenues, also home to several good antiques stores, a gift shop and a gym. Judging by weekend crowds in its first few months of business, The Coffee Bean may be on to something.
The menu offers breakfast and lunch, as well as coffee drinks and ice cream, with a retro comfort-food feel. That means things like biscuits and gravy, homemade corned beef hash, crustless cucumber and cream cheese sandwiches, an authentic Sloppy Joe and a variety of grilled sandwiches — including PB&J — and wraps. There also are some vegetarian options, including quite a few salads.
For an area that’s still a mix of working class and starving artists, this is probably a good niche. (Lovers of radicchio and truffle oil may want to stick to south Tampa; the menu here is more likely to trumpet its use of mayonnaise.)
Highlights of several recent visits include the homemade soups — the vegetable was rich enough to pass for beef stew — a classic Reuben, and the Wild Turkey sandwich (turkey, ham and blue cheese dressing). The Uncle Milty wrap is a heartier version of the latter, with added roast beef, bacon and avocado, though the sun-dried tomato tortilla was on the dry side. Sandwiches come with a bag of chips, but you might want to upgrade to the bacony delight of the country potato salad.
The cobb salad was simple, but clearly prepared to order, and therefore fresh and tasty — no wilted lettuce or slimy avocado. Even the tomato tasted like tomato, an increasingly rare quality in restaurant salads. The fruit salad also was prepared fresh, but is probably a better choice when there are more and better fruits in season (the mealy apples didn’t cut it).
A more palatable option was the caramel apple walnut pie, served warm with a side of vanilla ice cream. While not prepared on the the premises, it was clearly homemade somewhere, with a thick, authentic crust and none of that canned goop in the middle.
Another fun dessert is the Old Fashioned Soda, a blended mix of club soda, milk and ice cream, with whipped cream and a maraschino cherry on top. (Think milk shake, with fizz.) Among the other beverages, a plain cappuccino was excellent, but the Cafe Mocha was far too sweet. The selection of teas is extensive, and serving them in antique china cups is a nice touch.
There are some new-restaurant jitters at The Coffee Bean. When it gets busy, service can be slow, and everyone is still learning the menu — and the espresso machine. It would be nice to see some fresh pastries in the morning for those on the run, instead of individually wrapped danishes, and a few more pies or other desserts for the afternoon coffee/tea crowd. The homemade biscotti is a good start, though, and there are at least a dozen flavors of the delicious Working Cow ice cream.
Room for improvements notwithstanding, this is a nice neighborhood hangout. The interior is bright and cheerful, with an eclectic mix of antiques, and the friendly staff doesn’t mind if you linger over a hot beverage. With its reasonable prices and nostalgic cuisine, The Coffee Bean could be a keeper.
Tribune reviewers eat anonymously. Amanda Henry can be reached at (813) 259-7569.
BOTTOM LINE: Home cooking, plus coffee and ice cream, in a cozy, non-corporate setting
WHERE: 4715 N. Florida Ave., Tampa
HOURS: 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday
CREDIT CARDS: AE/MC/V
CHILDREN’S MENU: Can accommodate
ALCOHOL: No
WHEELCHAIR ACCESS: Yes
PRICE: Breakfast and lunch entrees range from $2.99 to $6.99
CALL: (813) 237-5808
I was eating at The Bean when Milton (the owner) pointed the article out to me. (Looks like it was originally printed in the Friday Extra!)
ReplyDeleteAs for Coffee Bean, that place is really getting it together. The location is busier than I'd ever seen it in its previous carnations -- plus, their decision to add to their breakfasts big, hearty pieces of bread and potatoes cooked with sausage drippings really helps meet the image of 'comfort food' that they are striving for.
Everyone should check out Coffee Bean if they have yet to do so ...
i'm pretty dissapointed in the place, personally...i would have liked to have seen a "real" coffee shop - a third space kinda place...with the recent closing of hyde park's black hawk, our area is just begging for a hang-out vibe kinda shop to open up...coffee bean just doesn't have that feel though - its really more of a diner...so if you're looking for a diner, fine, they've fulfilled that niche i suppose (although i'm pretty sure that nice was crammed kinda tight already)...oh well, starbucks is only a few months away - i would have just liked something less generic.
ReplyDeleteEverything you can thing of has been tried at that location. Including two coffee shops. (I believe it was two) and well, you see where that went.
ReplyDeleteI was so excited to see the coffee bean getting such big exposure in the extra. It's one of my favorite places in the neighborhood.
I love Uncle Milty's!
Just a note: roughly 60% of small businesses fail. Location is probably not as important as management in these cases.
ReplyDeleteI wish the coffee bean the best. The neighborhood is better served by well-run "mom and pop" businesses IMHO.
Location is crucial for any eatery.
ReplyDelete