Great coffee in the state of North Carolina is nothing new. The Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill areaโoften referred to as the Piedmont, or “Research Triangle”โhas proved itself as a major national hub for cafes and roasters in the 21st century, with an influence extending far beyond the state’s borders. But travel a few hours southwest to the city of Charlotte, and you’ll find a city with a coffee scene totally its own. Queen City has made massive strides in the specialty sector just in the last 15 years, and today is home to a collection of great cafes on par with any city in the American South.
Trail Blaze Coffee Academy founder Brady Butler, who started as a barista just as the evolution was beginning, has seen it all. From the early days of events and small cafesโthink ย โ20oz dry cappuccinosโ, he recallsโButler has watched as the scene in Charlotte has grown tremendously. He characterizes this growth as something organic, born out of “strong neighborhood connections,” and itsย story is sustained by local cafes, owned by the same folks who cut their teeth in the original circles. Many of these career third wave folks in Charlotte haveย begun roasting themselves or investing in a growing number of local roasters, while keeping regional relationships strong.
The donut-hole nature of Charlotteโs geography, which circles around the commercial Uptown, makes supporting local a natural choice. From artistic NoDa to hip Plaza Midwood and historic Enderly Park, many cafes are built on the ethos of the neighborhood where they are located.
Weโll visit six Charlotte standouts for this guide, but thereโs always more brewing. If youโre in the area, check out the acclaimed new Archive CLT, a Black-owned vintage book and magazine shop with great coffee and tea, and try to time your visit with the annual No Filter Coffee Fest, recently nominated for a Sprudgie Award and helping to set an inclusive direction for coffee in the southeast.
Central Coffee Co.
Want a home away from home? Youโll find it in Central Coffee Co., which South Charlotte native Jimmy Kleto opened with his parents in 2009, in the former convenience store his grandfather bought in the 1960s.
The โCheers of Plaza Midwood,โ as locals call it, is โfunky, casual, and a little granola,โ Kleto says, with the stained concrete floors, wooden ceiling beams, and exposed brick walls of the 1920s-era building. Co-owner Louisa Kleto, Jimmyโs wife, joined the family business in 2012, producing syrups, muffins, scones, and zucchini bread in-house.
The pandemic couldnโt keep their community away. During lock-down, the Kletos released a Zoom background with Centralโs mint-green walls, Louisa says, โin case anyone was missing them.โ The new work-from-home crowd loves the laptop-friendly community tables, and in the aftermath, โvery few regulars havenโt returned.โ
The Kletos serve single-origins from long-term partner and roaster Joe Van Gogh (founded 1991) on a Synesso Cyncra, and employ a Nicaragua Selva Negra from a farm theyโve visited personally in their chocolatey nitro cold brew. The first Charlotte cafe to offer nitro, Central now sells two kegs a day and also offers refillable, ready-to-drink versions. Customers can enjoy coffee-infused beers and a seasonal pumpkin pie latte with pumpkin puree, too.
In the aftermath of the pandemic, the Kletos are considering reopening their now-closed South End cafe and building out a wholesale business that reaches beyond Queen City thanks to their partner, food and bev retailer Vibe NC. Theyโve put their Innovation Grant from the City of Charlotte towards making merch and expanding their food menu to include vegan, gluten-free options from local vendors like True Flour and Crust Punk Baking.
Not Just Coffee
โWhen we opened in 2011, my wife Miracle and I didnโt know we were starting something so new,โ says James Yoder, co-owner of Not Just Coffee (NJC) and Night Swim Coffee. โAt the time, pour-overs or the now-ubiquitous EK43 grinders were nowhere to be seen.โ
NJC has since grown into six cafes around Charlotte. While each offers a unique experience, all are driven by a โclean, design-forward aestheticโ and use La Marzocco machines, with Night Swim Ultraviolet blend as the house espresso and Immersion as the house filter, with rotating single-origins on pour-over and espresso. The caramel latte, thanks to a recipe Yoder developed 12 years ago, is NJCโs most popular.
So why โNot Just Coffeeโ? The Yoders brainstormed the name with the dream of drawing non-coffee drinkers too; James says it reflects the community and creative focus of their origin. The not-coffee menu includes classics like avocado toast alongside โan absolutely fantastic BLT with avocado,โ and sources from local farms and bakeries whenever possible, James says.
And about that community? Hosting events like jazz night, art openings, and womenโs arm-wrestling competitions is an integral part of the cafe chainโs identity the team hopes to restore post-pandemic.
In late 2021, the Yoders joined forces with Todd and Erin Huber, founders of Undercurrent Coffee, to launch the Night Swim roasting venture, which now supplies all Not Just Coffee, Undercurrent, and Night Swim cafes.
Aside from being a Charlotte staple, says James, โNot Just Coffee is our baby.โ He anticipates this will stay consistent as they grow Night Swim.
Summit Coffee Co. (NoDa branch)
The current evolution of roaster/cafe brand Summit Coffee Co. began with intentional franchising, which CEO Brian Helfrich introduced after taking over in 2011. โWeโve been trying to do specialty in an accessible way,โ says Helfrich, sitting in front of a light in the shape of the phrase find your summit. โTo be successful, you need to invite people to be a part of the process.โ
Customer-focused from the outset, the Summit team sees value in local cafes having local ownershipโlike Summit Coffee NoDaโs John and Melissa Varvaro. After living in NoDa for 16 years, says Melissa, โWe couldnโt turn down the opportunity to support our own space in the neighborhood.โ
The NoDa cafe was designed by Tyler Helfrich and showcases local artists that reflect the diverse, eclectic community. โThere is a familiar Summit touch and feel to our cafe but with a color-outside-the-lines NoDa vibe,โ Melissa says.
As a roaster, Summit prioritizes strong producer relationships, sourcing 90+% of their coffee from existing partners, 62% of whom are women. โCustomers know theyโll get good coffee,โ says Chief Experience Officer Dora Callahan. โHow do we surprise them with a great experience?โ
At Summit cafes, youโll find an approachable menu with customer favorites like the 16oz latte (with 24oz iced drinks on the way) and women-produced Basecamp blend batch brew available at a lower price point than the featured batch brew. Plant-based milks have no upcharge.
โWe have big ambitions but never to a point where we lose sight of the customer experience,โ Helfrich says. Sustainability is an important part of this journey; the roasting operation became climate-neutral in 2022. Summit has 10 locations as of 2022 and is rapidly expanding in the southeast.
Enderly Coffee Co.
Tony and Becky Santoro co-founded Enderly Coffee Co., one of Yelpโs 2022 โ100 best coffee shopsโ in the US, in 2012. Over the past decade, Tonyโa former Title 1 teacher who started out selling air popper-roasted coffee to churchesโbecame a SCA-certified roaster and barista and formed his โintentionalโ wholesale company around the tagline, โPeople First. Coffee Always.โ
Perceiving that the typical third-wave experience lacked hospitality, Tony decided to bake approachability, quality, and community into the DNA of his brand, named for the historic, majority-Black neighborhood of Enderly Park where itโs based.
The cafe is a bright, clean space featuring local art, where staff have free reign over the music and a cup of their top-selling, dark roast State Street Blend costs just over $2 cash. Itโs situated in a โ40s-era grocery store, where Tony imagines nearly every local once set foot.
โWe are joy dealers, facilitating an experience with a goal to make your day better,โ Tony writes on Enderlyโs insightful โBean Blog.โ Their washed Papua New Guinea, with tasting notes of lemon and honey, does that for meโbut Tony humbly deflects my compliments. The bridge heโs building towards the well-rounded, approachable specialty coffee his customers want doesnโt necessarily begin with lemon notes.
To ensure customers enjoy coffee to their tastes, the team encourages questions at the register. โOur job is to blow their mind,โ says Tony, and Enderly regularly accomplishes this with their Honey Bee latte (made with hello honey), rotating single-origins, and seasonal flavors like pumpkin pie and salted maple.
โIโm filled with gratitude to be here after the pandemicโโduring which Enderly launched a successful Friday home delivery program in partnership with local bakeriesโโand for all our staff,โ Tony says.
HEX Coffee Roasters
I first encountered HEXโs natural Indonesia with tasting notes of blueberry wine and earl grey at No Filter Fest. It was a โHow is this coffee?โ momentโturns out, thatโs their thing.
In 2015, HEX was a popup, which served as a good opportunity to share ideas with other Charlotte coffee brands and grow together, says Tanner Morita, co-founder and Director of Coffee. The Roastery, their main production space and espresso bar, opened in 2017.
The brandโs tagline โPOINTED TOWARD PROVENANCEโ serves as their barometer for selecting coffees that show terroir and roasting for vibrancy and sweetness. โOur main goal is to be a progressive voice in Charlotte coffee,โ Morita tells me. โWe wanted to push specialty forward, and present powerfully vibrant coffees in a market that was, at that time, not familiar with this style of uniquely fruited coffee.โ
HEXโs minimalist, architecturally-minded aesthetic is designed to โlet the product speak for itself [and] show the incredible work being done at origin.โ
At their South End installation Stablehand, a sister concept that combines HEX Coffee with the Good Bottle bottle shop, youโll find coffee shotsโfilter coffee through a La Marzocco GS3โinstead of pour-overs. Customers gravitate towards bright tropical flavors, and the rotating list of filter and espresso means thereโs always a new experience (including seasonals like a rich and buttery Kabocha pumpkin squash latte).
HEX will soon open a new flagship cafe with a Modbar, full-scale restaurant and natural wine bar, โto put provenance forward,โ says Morita. Beyond putting coffee front and center, the cafe will also showcase the local food community and the teamโs ventures into natural wine.
Queen City Grounds
Queen City Grounds (QCG) was founded in 2017 by childhood friends Adam Hummell and Paul Waggoner, a founding member of Between the Buried and Me and owner of sister company Nightflyer Roastworks, as a small corner coffee shop. Itโs since grown into three locations, including in 4th Ward, South End, and Wesley Heights, and offers in-house, small-batch roasting, beer, and wine.
For me as a recently diagnosed celiac, QCGโs creative, accessible food menu and knowledgeable staff stands out. I got a kick out of seasonal drink names like the โBasic Witchโ and โChai Day the 13th.โ My โIs It Pronounced Syrup or Syrup?โ featured homemade brown sugar syrup and QCGโs signature Night Owl espresso blend with gluten-free oat milk.
QCGโs focus on community and inclusivity reflects their โCore Values,โ which are prominently displayed behind the bar at 4th Ward and encourage staff to โbe genuinely hospitable,โ โbe collaborative,โ โbe stoked,โ and โstay grounded.โ Thereโs even a โPay It Forwardโ wall, where you can claim a drink paid for by a previous patron.
The original 4th Ward shop is a big industrial space designed by Cluck Design Collaborative with a long coffee bar, exposed ceiling pipes, and black, silver, and wood accents. QCGโs logo of an owl with spread wings looms large over the stairs to the mezzanine. Local art, including watercolors made with Nightflyer coffee grounds, adorn the walls above a mix of tables, stools, and comfy chairs.
QCG brings the personality down to the details (read: the red โ86โdโ icon denoting a sold-out dish on their menu screen), and is a space that invites you to #StayGroundedโand stay awhile.
Chloรฉ Skye Weiser (@apostropheskye) is a freelance writer based in Denmark. Read more Chloรฉ Skye Weiser for Sprudge.
All photos by the author unless otherwise noted