5 Great Places for Coffee in Liverpool.

The demand for coffee currently has no bounds and for many it is an essential part of their day. While growth of coffee in the UK may have begun with the large commercial operations there is now an explosion of small independent retailers as customers have become increasingly discerning in their daily fix of caffeine. Liverpool is no different to other major cities, boasting a fine range of options for coffee drinkers. This in no way attempts to be a definitive list but is simply the places I particularly like.

Moose Coffee.

American influenced and so much more than a coffee shop. It has been serving coffee and fantastic food for over ten years now and is something of an institution. Always busy and it is easy to see why. There are so many reasons to visit and the coffee is always good.

Moose Coffee. 6 Dale Street.

Open Monday – Sunday 8am-5pm.

Root

This may well currently be my favourite place. The atmosphere here is always relaxed and is a great place to stop for a while and relax. You could be excused from thinking you had walked into an advert for Apple such can be the number of customers hard at work tapping away on their laptops. This is a place of great charm and you will want to return time after time and the coffee is so good. It has an intriguingly shaped communal table as well as plenty of regular seating. You can also have your coffee outside if the weather is good.

Root Coffee. 52 Hanover Street.

Open Monday – Saturday 8.30am-6.30pm, Sunday 9am-6pm.

Bold Street Coffee

Back in business again after a period of closure in 2018 the only problem is it’s so busy no matter what time of day you choose to visit. Thats no bad thing of course because it tells you everything you need to know, the coffee is really good here. Located at the very top of Bold Street near the bombed out church it makes an excellent stop off for those en route up towards the cathedrals and The Philharmonic. Don’t be put off, its well worth the wait.

Bold Street Coffee. 89 Bold Street

Open Monday-Wednesday 7.30am-6pm, Thursday-Friday 7.30am- 10pm, Saturday 8am-10pm and Sunday 9.30am-10pm.

92 Degrees

92 degrees can lay claim to being the first combined roasters and coffee shop, opening in 2015. A favourite haunt of students from nearby Liverpool University it is always a great place to visit and they never seem to serve a bad cup of coffee. Despite its popularity you can always find somewhere to sit and its a great place to relax after a few hours seeing the sights in the Georgian Quarter of the city.

92 Degrees. 24 Hardman Street.

Open. Monday- Friday 7.45am- 7pm, Saturday 9.30am-7pm and Sunday 10am-6pm.

Filter & Fox

Another great location that is so much more than a place for a great cup of coffee as they also have an excellent selection of cocktails and wines.. Indeed their website claims that they have cured almost as many hangovers as they’ve caused!! Filter & Fox offers a welcome break from the crowds of shoppers on nearby Bold Street, it is often an oasis of calm and great place to while away the time while thinking what to do next on a visit to the city.

Filter & Fox. 27 Duke Street

Open Monday- Sunday 8am-8pm.

A Stroll Down Bold Street

Ropewalks is part of the city centre that consists of a series of narrow, parallel streets that run from Renhaw Street to Lydia Ann Street. It is this area that was the heart of rope making in the eighteenth century when Liverpool was developing into a major port for sailing ships and the demand for rope for the ships rigging was enormous. A single ship needed miles of rope if it were to be seaworthy and they were partly manufactured in what were then fields on the edge of the city. As part of the manufacturing process the ropes were laid out to dry and each rope making business had their own narrow strips of land for this purpose. These were later to become the streets of the Ropeworks quarter of the city when development and expansion of the city occurred in the early nineteenth century. Bold Street is one such street.

Bold Street is very similar in length and width to its neighbouring streets in Ropewalks, reflecting its history as a former site of rope making. It runs from the end of Renhaw Street, opposite St Lukes Church, to Hanover Street and it has become one of the city’s premier shopping and entertainment areas, renown for its eclectic mix of independent businesses.

The Havelock Building (130 Bold Street) stands on the corner opposite St. Luke’s Church and when it was built in 1858 it would have been one of the tallest in the city with three floors. It was here in 1864 that Dr Sebastian Ziani de Ferranti was born, his father owning a photography business in the building. Ferranti became a pioneering electrical engineer, designing the first modern power station and the means of supply electrical power to homes. A process that remains unchanged to this day.

News From Nowhere (96 Bold Street) has been a fixture on Bold Street since 1989 although the business itself was founded in the mid seventies at a different location.

News From Nowhere describes itself as Liverpool’s Radical and Community Bookshop and it is certainly a Liverpool institution. Next door, above the entrance to Liver House is a blue plaque commenmorating Jeannie Mole.

Jeannie Mole was a social feminist and trade union organiser who is credited with bringing socialism to the city. She moved to the city in the late 18702 following her second marriage and lived here on Bold Street. She was politically very active encouraged the development of trade unions for women, including those involved in rope making, though the industry was less significant in the city at this time. She was known to to have held many meeting at her home here.

As well as its historical importance this top section of Bold Street is renown for its numerous coffee shops and restaurants. Almost opposite the Havelock Building is Bold Street Coffee (89 Bold Street). Re-opened in late 2018, following a temporary closure, it serves some of the best coffee in the city along with light snacks. A great stopping off point for any city visitor in need of a little refreshment.

There are a number of restaurants close by, two particular favourites are Maray (91 Bold Street) and Mowgli (69 Bold Street). Food here is small plates and the ambience casual and laid back. Both are well worth a visit, Mowgli has no reservation and is walk in only, Maray has reservations but also space set aside for walk ins.

I am particularly fond of Artisane (84 Bold Street). Not only is the coffee excellent but they also have a fantastic range of pastries and breads. Too good to miss.

More or less across the road is Leaf (65-67 Bold Street). This is one for all tea lovers with a huge number on offer including black, white, green, oolong and fruit teas. They also serve good range of food and they have an extensive breakfast menu. For those requiring something a little stronger than tea they also have good range of alcoholic drinks. Leaf now occupies the site of Liverpool’s first vegetarian cafe The Yamen which opened in 1910.

Unfortunately I can never resist a record store. By that I mean a proper, old-fashioned store the deals principally in vinyl records. There is just something pleasing about flicking through the racks, admiring the artwork and hopefully coming across something of interest. Dig Vinyl (80 Bold Street) is such a place and a worthy stopping point for any serious record collector. It is actually situated in the basement and the shop (Soho) on the ground floor is a clothing store so its not exactly obvious, a sigh outside is usually there to help location. I hear that in the near future that they are to relocate to bigger premises on a first floor location close by and still on Bold Street. Music lovers may also be interested in 77 Bold Street which back in the 1980s was the site of Cafe Berlin, the interior of which featured on the cover of local band The Icicle Works album The Small of a Bicycle.

Matta’s International Foods (51 Bold Street) has been on Bold Street since 1984 when it relocated from Toxteth. Another Liverpool institution, it is the place to go for the widest range of produce from around the world available in the city. The staff here are so friendly and helpful. It is easy to see why the business has thrived over the years.

At the junction of Bold Street and Concert Street is the statue entitled Reconciliation by Stephen Broadbent.

One of a series of identical statues with others in Benin on the West Coast of Africa and Richmond on the east coast of America. These three locations represent places in the slave trade triangle. The states represent the building of bridges and overcoming racial disadvantage.

At the bottom of Bold Street as it makes the junction with Bold Street is The Lyceum. Built in 1802 it has been through a number of incarnations including a gentleman club, a library, a cafe and a post office. It was saved from demolition in the early 1970s but sadly the building is currently vacant. It’s Grade II listed and a fitting building to end a stroll down Bold Street