Main Lane Coffee Roasters
Weichselstraße 65, 12043 Berlin, Germany
Main Lane Coffee Roasters is a specialty coffee shop located in Berlin, DE. 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.
Main Lane Coffee Roasters is a specialty coffee shop that fits neatly into a Pulled routine in Berlin, DE. The promise is plain. Show up, order, and log the cup to earn cash back on coffee you would have bought regardless. Your check-ins here build a record you actually own.
As a specialty spot, the focus here is the craft. You can expect considered espresso, hand-poured filter coffee, and staff who can talk through origin, roast, and method without making it a lecture. Seasonal beans rotate, so the menu rewards a return visit. Order a pour-over if you want to taste the bean clearly, or let the barista steer you toward whatever is drinking well that week.
Located in Berlin, DE, it is well placed for a quick visit or a longer sit. People building out their map of Berlin tend to log it alongside the nearby stops, since one trip through the area can cover several check-ins. Keep it on your list and it becomes an easy default whenever you are close by. It is part of the wider coffee map Pulled tracks across DE.
Thinking about what to get at Main Lane Coffee Roasters? Start with your usual and branch out from there. The point is to enjoy the cup, not to optimize it. Check in once you have ordered and the visit folds into your streak and your challenges, turning an ordinary stop into measurable progress.
About Berlin
Coffee reached Berlin in the late 17th century, traveling inland from Hamburg, the Hanseatic port that handled most of the German-speaking world's green imports. The first Berlin coffee houses appeared shortly after, modeled on the Viennese Kaffeehaus and serving a clientele of civil servants, soldiers, and merchants. By the early 18th century the drink had become enough of a habit that Frederick the Great issued a public decree in 1777 attempting to limit its consumption in favor of beer, with limited success. For most of the 19th and 20th centuries, the city's coffee identity sat between two poles: the formal Kaffeehaus tradition with its newspapers and marble tables, and the post-war filter coffee of West Berlin's department stores and East Berlin's HO cafes. The third wave arrived late but landed with force.
The pivotal address is Auguststrasse in Mitte, where Ralf Rueller opened The Barn in 2010. The Barn refused milk in long blacks for several years, ran tight extraction protocols, and built one of Europe's most respected roasting operations on its current Schoenhauser Allee site. Bonanza Coffee Roasters, founded in Kreuzberg in 2006 by Yumi Choi and Kiduk Reus, predates The Barn and supplies cafes across the city from its Oderberger Strasse roastery. Five Elephant, also in Kreuzberg, became known for both its coffee program and its New York-style cheesecake. Together these three names define the early Berlin specialty grammar: long brews, lighter roasts, transparent sourcing, and an emphasis on origin over technique.
The scene that grew around them is unusually deep. Father Carpenter occupies a courtyard near Hackescher Markt and remains a Mitte fixture for serious espresso. 19grams runs a small group of cafes that introduced many Berliners to single-origin espresso and direct-trade sourcing. Companion Coffee operates inside Voo Store on Oranienstrasse, sharing a roof with one of the city's better-known concept retailers. Concierge Coffee in Kreuzberg works from a converted kiosk and runs a tight bar program. Roastmarket grew from the same wave but now functions more as an online retailer for roasters across Germany. By 2015 Berlin roasters were exporting beans to Japan, the United States, and across the EU, with The Barn and Bonanza appearing on cafe menus from Tokyo to New York.
The broader cultural context matters. Berlin's specialty cafes inherited the city's relationship with public space: cheap rent, long opening hours, dogs on the floor, laptops on every table, and a tolerance for sitting for hours over a single cortado. They also inherited the Kaffee und Kuchen ritual, the afternoon pause that any older Berliner will recognize. The result is a coffee culture that moves at the city's pace, slower than London, more permissive than Vienna, and unmistakably Berlin in its mix of technical precision and zero pretension.
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