CoCo Fresh Tea & Juice
47, Carrer d'Astúries
CHAINCoCo Fresh Tea & Juice is a popular coffee chain location located in Madrid, ES. Check in here with the Pulled Coffee app to earn real cash rewards. Chain locations count toward First 15, Explorer 30, and Daily 50 challenges.
About Madrid
Madrid runs on coffee and chatter. The two are inseparable. The standard order at any city bar is "café con leche," equal parts espresso and steamed milk in a cup slightly bigger than a cappuccino, served at any hour with a small pastry tucked alongside. The café con leche is not specialty coffee. It is morning infrastructure.
Café del Real, opened in 1864 across from the opera house, anchors the classical line. Café Comercial, founded in 1887 in Glorieta de Bilbao, closed briefly in 2015 and reopened with the same marble tables and curved windows but slightly better espresso. These are the cafés where Madrileños have been writing letters and arguing politics for a hundred and fifty years. The coffee is fine. The room is the point.
The third wave arrived in Madrid in 2010 and built carefully. Toma Café, in Malasaña, opened that year and remains the city's most respected specialty roaster. The original branch on Calle de la Palma still runs as the de facto quality benchmark, and Toma now has a second location near Conde Duque and a roastery in Carabanchel. Hola Coffee, also in Malasaña, took the Australian flat-white-and-banana-bread template and translated it into Spanish without losing either side. Misión Café, in Chamberí, runs an arquetipo Spanish room with Northern European coffee precision.
The neighborhoods stratify by register. Malasaña and Chueca hold the heaviest specialty density. Salamanca, the city's high-income district north of Retiro, has its boutique cafés but tends classical. Lavapiés has the most international diversity, with Senegalese tea cafés and Bangladeshi coffee houses operating alongside the traditional Madrid bar. La Latina, just south of the center, has the working-class Madrileño breakfast culture: café con leche and toast, eaten standing, paid in change.
Madrid's coffee history is shaped by the dictatorship's import controls and the post-1975 opening of the country. Through most of the twentieth century, Spain drank torrefacto, a roasting method that adds sugar to the beans and produces a glossy, bitter, distinctive cup. Specialty coffee in the contemporary sense did not really exist as a movement until well into the 2000s. The country had seventy-five years of catching up to do, and Madrid did most of the catching.
What you notice in Madrid that you do not notice in other Spanish cities is the volume. Madrileños drink coffee with friends, with strangers, alone, in groups of seven. They drink it at four in the afternoon and at eleven at night. The bar where you have your morning café con leche is the same bar where you have a beer at six and the same bar where you have an espresso at midnight. The bar is the city's living room. Coffee is what the room is for.
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