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Marshall Street Coffee

SPECIALTY

Schopenstehl 30, 20095 Hamburg, Germany

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Marshall Street Coffee is a specialty coffee shop located in Hamburg, 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.

Looking for a coffee stop in Hamburg? Marshall Street Coffee is a specialty coffee shop you can add to your Pulled routine. Members use the app to record each visit, build a streak, and climb the local leaderboard while earning back part of what they spend on coffee.

Expect a room that takes its coffee seriously. Specialty shops like this one tend to pour carefully, dial in espresso through the day, and keep a rotating bench of single-origin options for the people who notice the difference. Ask the barista what is fresh and you will usually get a real answer rather than a script. It is a good place to slow down, taste something new, and pay attention to the cup in front of you.

Set in Hamburg, DE, the cafe is a natural part of the Hamburg coffee scene. It is the kind of stop you can reach without much detour, which is half the reason regulars keep it in rotation. Add it once and it tends to stay on your route, an easy win for your streak on busy days. It is part of the wider coffee map Pulled tracks across DE.

The move at Marshall Street Coffee is to order what sounds good and log it before you leave. Espresso for speed, a larger brewed coffee if you want to slow down, something sweet if that is your morning. Whatever you choose, the visit counts toward your next payout once the photo is in.

About Hamburg

Coffee imports through Hamburg date to the 1670s, when the city's Hanseatic trading networks first connected the port to the Yemeni mocha trade through Amsterdam and London. By the 19th century Hamburg had established itself as the dominant coffee port of continental Europe, and through 1900 the Speicherstadt warehouse district held the bulk of European green coffee inventory. Sacks moved through the brick-and-iron warehouses on the Elbe in volumes that shaped global pricing. The city's coffee history is the most layered in Germany, running through Hanseatic trade, the rise of industrial-scale roasting, the founding of major German chains, and the contemporary specialty wave that has reshaped the city's cafe culture over the past two decades.

Tchibo, founded in Hamburg in 1949 by Max Herz and Carl Tchilinghiryan, grew from a coffee mail-order business into one of the largest German coffee chains, with thousands of locations across Germany and Europe. The company's flagship operations remain in Hamburg, and its trajectory shaped the country's middle-market coffee culture through the second half of the 20th century. Schmidtchen Cafe and a layer of older Hamburg cafes hold the heritage register from the prewar and postwar periods.

The specialty wave in Hamburg is anchored by Elbgold, founded in 2008 by Andreas Stechl in Eppendorf and now operating multiple Hamburg locations as one of Germany's leading specialty roasters. Public Coffee Roasters in St. Pauli runs a smaller but serious specialty program. Stockwerk Kaffee operates in a similar register. Speicherstadt Kaffeerosterei sits in the historic warehouse district and runs as a working roastery in a building that historically held green coffee for the European market. The Coffee Museum Burg, also in the Speicherstadt, combines a roastery with a museum of Hamburg's coffee history.

The traditional German cafe vocabulary runs through the espresso, cappuccino, latte macchiato, and Milchkaffee set, with filter coffee a continuing default in older cafes and home consumption. Specialty bars run the international third-wave menu of pour-over, espresso flights, and single-origin beans. Both registers coexist, with Hamburg's specialty scene running denser per capita than most German cities of comparable size.

The broader cultural context is a city of 665 indexed shops with a coffee history that physically built the German coffee industry. Hamburg roasts more coffee than any other German city. The Speicherstadt is a UNESCO World Heritage site as of 2015, recognized in part for its role in global trade. Walking through the warehouses now means moving past cafes, museums, and roasteries layered on top of three centuries of coffee infrastructure. The port still handles a significant share of Germany's green coffee imports, with the trade running through HafenCity and the older docks downstream.

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