Heyma Yemeni Coffee & Brunch
248 9th Street
SPECIALTYHeyma Yemeni Coffee & Brunch is a specialty coffee shop located in San Francisco. Check in here with the Pulled Coffee app to earn real cash rewards. Specialty shops count toward all challenges including Pulled 50, Pulled 100, and Pulled 300.
Heyma Yemeni Coffee occupies a corner of 9th Street in San Francisco's SoMa, four blocks south of Market and a short walk from the Civic Center. The cafe opened in August 2025 as a Yemeni coffee house in the Mocha tradition that predates the Italian espresso bar by centuries. Walls hang with marble and brass details, with a fountain at the back of the room and golden Turkish coffee pots stacked behind the bar. Drinks are spiced with cardamom, ginger, and cinnamon, the Yemeni way. The Socotra'a is the house medium roast, a clean cup. The Dubai Chocolate Latte is the order people come back for. The room stays open through late, with weekday hours running until 11:30 at night and weekends past midnight. Order the Socotra'a if you want Yemeni coffee in its straight medium roast. Order the Dubai Chocolate Latte if you came for the modern drink the cafe is now known for.
About San Francisco
Caffè Trieste opened on Vallejo Street in North Beach in 1956, founded by Giovanni Giotta, known as Papa Gianni, an immigrant from the Italian fishing village of Rovereto, and was the first espresso bar on the West Coast of the United States. The room has run continuously for nearly seventy years, hosting Allen Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and Francis Ford Coppola, who reportedly drafted parts of The Godfather screenplay at one of the back tables. The bar is not a museum piece. It still pulls espresso every day, and the lineage from Italian immigrant North Beach through to the modern American specialty wave runs directly through this room.
The city's role in shaping global specialty coffee is hard to overstate. Trish Rothgeb, working in the Bay Area, published the essay that introduced the term third wave in 2002, describing the movement that was already forming around a small group of American roasters and bars. The framework she set down, treating coffee as an agricultural product with origin specificity equivalent to wine, became the foundational vocabulary for the global specialty industry. The format she described took its clearest physical shape in San Francisco cafés over the following decade.
The modern specialty register began with Blue Bottle Coffee, founded by James Freeman in Oakland in 2002 and expanded to the Mint Plaza location in San Francisco in 2008. Ritual Coffee Roasters opened in the Mission in 2005 under Eileen Hassi Rinaldi. Sightglass Coffee, founded by brothers Jerad and Justin Morrison, opened in SoMa in 2009. Four Barrel Coffee opened on Valencia Street in the Mission in 2008. Saint Frank Coffee opened in Russian Hill in 2013. Mr. Espresso, the family-run Oakland roaster operating since 1978, supplies many of the heritage Italian seats across the bay. The cluster is denser than in any other American city and the cafés sit within walking distance of one another in several neighborhoods.
North Beach holds the heritage register. Caffè Trieste anchors the cluster, with Caffè Roma on Columbus Avenue running a second-generation Italian bar in the same block. The Mission holds the specialty heart, with Ritual on Valencia Street and Four Barrel a few blocks south. SoMa and Hayes Valley run a denser modern register tied to the technology workforce, with Sightglass on 7th Street and Blue Bottle at Mint Plaza. The geography of the city, hilly and walkable, makes a serious café crawl possible across most of the central neighborhoods.
The broader cultural context places the city at the intersection of immigrant Italian café tradition, Pacific Rim coffee sourcing, technology-industry purchasing power, and the design language that has shaped global specialty café aesthetics for two decades. The format set down here, light roasts, single origins, manual brewing on the bar, minimal ornamentation, has been copied in cities from Berlin to Seoul. The original sits in San Francisco.
RECENT PULLS
No pulls yet. Be the first to check in here.
Check in at Heyma Yemeni Coffee & Brunch.
Earn real cash. Visit this shop, take a photo of your drink. That is it.
600 founding spots remaining. Half-price lifetime pricing.
NEARBY SHOPS
MORE IN SAN FRANCISCO
MORE SPECIALTY IN US
EDITORIALS IN US
Are you the owner of Heyma Yemeni Coffee & Brunch?
Claim this shop to verify ownership, respond to check-ins, and run sponsored challenges to Pulled's community.
Claim Heyma Yemeni Coffee & Brunch →