Trieste handles 40% of Italy's coffee imports. The city has been the primary coffee port for central Europe since the Habsburg Empire — when Vienna, Budapest, Prague, and Cracow all received their coffee beans through Trieste's customs warehouses. Illy coffee was founded here in 1933. The city's coffee culture is distinct from the rest of Italy — different vocabulary, different roast profiles, different cups. Here's how to navigate it.
The claim will offend Neapolitans, but the numbers support it. Trieste has more coffee roasters per capita than any other Italian city. The city processes approximately 45 million bags of green coffee per year through Porto Franco di Trieste — the largest free port in the Mediterranean for this commodity. The major Italian roasters (Illy, Hausbrandt, Bristot, Dersut, Vergnano in partnership) all have historical roots in or around Trieste.
Naples has the most distinctive espresso tradition in Italy — shorter, darker, stronger, made with harder water. But Trieste has the infrastructure, the history, and the per-capita café density. The Triestino relationship with coffee reflects the city's Austro-Hungarian past — the coffeehouse tradition of Vienna and Budapest transplanted to the Adriatic, modified over 200 years into something unique.
Trieste has its own coffee terminology that visitors need before approaching the bar:
At the bar, simply saying "un capo" or "un nero" will immediately mark you as someone who's done their homework — it tends to generate an approving nod from the barista.
Founded 1839. On the most beautiful piazza in Trieste — a vast rectangular square open on one side to the sea. Mirrors on every wall, a painted ceiling, and a terrace that has historically attracted intellectuals, politicians, and Habsburg officials. James Joyce (who lived in Trieste 1904–1920 and wrote Ulysses here) allegedly frequented it. Nero €1.60 at bar, €3.50 seated. The history is real but so is the tourist premium — don't go here for your morning coffee, go for the experience once.
Founded 1914. The other great historic coffeehouse — less tourist-visible than degli Specchi, more beloved by Triestinos. Original art nouveau interior, newspapers on reading poles, chess boards available. The Viennese coffeehouse model transplanted entirely intact. Nero €1.40 at bar. James Joyce also wrote here; Umberto Saba (Trieste's great poet) was a daily presence. Still functions as a neighbourhood cultural hub with readings, occasional concerts.
Founded 1830 — the oldest coffeehouse still in operation in Trieste. Smaller, quieter, less touristic than degli Specchi. The interior has original 19th-century fittings. Regulars range from philosophy professors to port workers on their break. Nero €1.30 at bar. No food, no pretension.
Founded 1914. Known for the best pastry in Trieste alongside the coffee — the Triestino version of Vienna's Kaffee und Kuchen culture. The putizza (a Slovenian-origin spiral pastry with walnuts, raisins, and rum) is worth ordering at any hour. Coffee €1.30–1.60.
The home roaster's flagship bar. Francesco Illy opened Illycaffè in 1933 in Trieste, inventing the pressurized coffee can in 1935 and the early espresso machine prototype. The flagship bar uses the current Illy blend (9-variety Arabica) on a Francis Francis machine and represents the company's quality benchmark. Nero €1.50. The adjacent shop sells the full range including the museum-quality espresso cups in collectors' designs. A visit has some tourist-attraction quality but the coffee is genuinely excellent.
The other major Trieste roaster (founded 1892). The bar opposite the Borsa (stock exchange) is less visited than Illy but the quality is equal. The Hausbrandt blend is slightly darker-roasted — more bitter finish, fuller crema. Nero €1.40 at bar. Buy a 250g bag of their Espresso blend to take home: €8.50.
Yes, in two ways. First, the roast profile: Trieste coffee traditionally leans toward lighter roasts than Naples or Rome — more complex, less bitter, higher acidity. This reflects Central European taste preferences from the Habsburg period. Second, the vocabulary (see above) — unique to Trieste and largely unknown even 100km away in Venice. The drinking culture also differs: Triestinos sit down with their coffee more readily than Milanese or Romans — the coffeehouse (caffè storico) tradition from Vienna means extended sitting is not considered wasteful.
Coffee is the reason to visit on the margins — the city is also architecturally remarkable (Habsburg neoclassical on a grand scale, the finest in Italy after Rome), historically fascinating (the largest free port in the world, a city that was German, Austrian, Slavic and Italian simultaneously), and gastronomically interesting (the cuisine merges Italian and Central European — you eat goulash and sardoni in saor in the same meal). The James Joyce trail, the Miramare Castle (where Maximilian of Mexico was born before his doomed Mexican adventure), and the Carso plateau hike are all worth a day each.
Train from Venice: 2 hours, €8–15 (frequent Trenitalia service). Train from Ljubljana (Slovenia): 3 hours, good cross-border service. Flight to Trieste Airport (TRS): Ryanair from various European cities, small terminal, €30–50 taxi to city centre. Car from Venice: 1h45 via the A4 motorway. Trieste is a day trip from Venice but deserves at least one overnight — the evening passeggiata on the waterfront is one of Italy's best.
Related reading: Trieste Complete Guide | Friuli Venezia Giulia | Best Coffee in Milan | Best Coffee in Naples
James Joyce lived in Trieste for 12 of his most productive years (1904–1915, then briefly 1919–1920). He taught English at the Berlitz school, lived in nine different apartments, and wrote most of Dubliners, all of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, and the earliest drafts of Ulysses in the city. His relationship with Trieste's café culture was as functional as it was literary — he worked in cafés because his various apartments were crowded with children and difficult relatives.
The established Joyce café sites: Caffè San Marco (Via Battisti 18) is the most documented; Caffè dei Specchi has claims; the Pirona pastry shop on Via Dante 15 (still open, est. 1900) is mentioned in Joyce's letters as a morning stop for cornetti and the newspaper. The James Joyce Museum (Museo Joyce, Via Madonna del Mare 13) is housed in a building where Joyce briefly lived and has manuscript pages, photographs, and a recreation of his teaching desk. Open Tuesday–Sunday, €5.
A Joyce walking tour of Trieste is offered by the city tourist office (€15pp, Saturday mornings May–October) — covering the cafés, his various addresses, and the school where he taught. The tour guide typically reads passages from A Portrait of the Artist in Joyce's original locations, which is either profoundly moving or mildly embarrassing depending on your relationship to literary tourism.
Trieste is the place in Italy to buy coffee to take home. The variety of roasters available in city-centre shops is unmatched anywhere else in the country:
The perfect Trieste coffee morning runs 3 hours and covers the key sites without rushing:
7:30am: Caffè Tommaseo (Piazza Tommaseo 4) — the oldest still-operating coffeehouse, a nero at the bar (€1.30), standing, watching the morning regulars. The 7:30am crowd is Triestino through and through: retired port workers, professors from the university, early-shift civil servants.
8:15am: Walk to Caffè San Marco (Via Battisti 18). Sit at a table this time — order a capo in B (€1.80) and a putizza or croissant (€2). Read whatever you have. Stay 30 minutes.
9:00am: Illy flagship (Via Cattedrale 7). Order their Intenso (not the Classico — the Intenso shows what their darker roast can do). Buy a tin to take home.
9:30am: Walk to Piazza Unità d'Italia. Caffè degli Specchi for the setting — one coffee, one photo. This is the tourist coffee of the morning; the others were the real ones.
10:00am: Caffè Orientale (Riva Tre Novembre) to buy the historical Trieste blend and watch the port from the waterfront terrace.
Trieste was the main seaport of the Habsburg Empire from 1719 (when Charles VI declared it a free port) to 1918. The empire controlled central Europe's trade through this city for 200 years. The coffeehouse culture of Vienna — where intellectuals, merchants, and politicians conducted business over hours-long coffee sessions — was transplanted to Trieste wholesale. The original Viennese coffeehouses (Café Central, Landtmann, Schwarzenberg) were established in the same period as Trieste's historic cafés, and the design vocabulary is identical: marble-topped tables, bentwood chairs, newspapers on wooden reading poles, a tolerance for lingering.
The café in Central European tradition was an extension of the private salon — a warm, public space where you could sit for 4 hours over one coffee and read, write, or argue without pressure. The Caffè San Marco and Caffè Tommaseo still operate on this logic. The barista at San Marco will never ask if you want another coffee. James Joyce described the Triestino café as "the intellectual parliament of the Adriatic." The cafés of Zagreb, Budapest, and Prague share the same DNA — all fed by Viennese coffeehouse tradition transmitted through the Habsburg network, with Trieste as the Adriatic hub.
After WWI, when Trieste became Italian, the café culture survived the transition but changed character. The strict neutrality of the Habsburg café — where politics was formally prohibited to prevent arguments between the empire's many nationalities — gave way to political intensity. Trieste in the 1920s–1940s was a contested city (Italian fascists, Slovenian partisans, remnant Austrian-identity citizens) and the coffeehouses reflected it. The 1920 burning of the Narodni Dom (Slovenian cultural centre) by Italian fascists started from a café meeting two streets away from Caffè San Marco.
Trieste has hosted the European Barista Championship (now the World Coffee Championships European circuit) three times — the only Italian city to do so. The Specialty Coffee Association of Europe (SCAE) chose Trieste partly for its symbolic importance as coffee capital, partly for its existing professional infrastructure (roasters, barista schools, tasting facilities).
The University of Trieste has a coffee research programme — jointly funded by Illy and the university's chemistry department — that has produced peer-reviewed research on espresso extraction chemistry, crema stability, and the Maillard reactions that produce coffee aroma compounds during roasting. The programme is open to research visitors by appointment (dip.chimica@units.it). If you're a coffee professional visiting Trieste, requesting a tour of their sensory analysis lab is entirely reasonable.
The professional barista training school attached to Illy (Università del Caffè, Via Flavia 110) runs public courses: a 3-hour espresso fundamentals class costs €80pp and is available in English. The 2-day professional barista course (€280pp) covers extraction science, milk texturing to competition standard, and sensory training. Open to anyone with interest — not restricted to industry professionals.
Trieste is a city that rewards slow exploration. Between coffee stops, the city's central area offers some of Italy's most underrated attractions:
Castello di Miramare (8km from centre): Built 1856–1860 for Archduke Maximilian of Austria — the Habsburg brother who became Emperor of Mexico and was executed by firing squad in Querétaro in 1867. The castle sits on a promontory above the Adriatic with spectacular views. Maximilian never returned from Mexico; his wife Charlotte (Carlota) went mad from grief and lived until 1927, long outliving the Mexican Empire that destroyed her husband. The interior is exactly as Maximilian left it in 1864. Open daily, €8. Take the 36 bus from Piazza Oberdan, or rent a bike — the seaside path from Trieste centre is 8km of flat cycling.
Museo Revoltella: Trieste's modern art museum, housed in a 19th-century Palazzo and an angular 1990s extension by Carlo Scarpa's former studio. The collection covers 19th–21st century Italian and European art; the Scarpa extension is worth the visit for architecture alone. Open Wednesday–Monday, €7.
The Triestine Ghetto and Jewish Museum: Trieste had one of the largest Jewish communities in the Adriatic — at its peak in the 19th century, about 6,000 people. The old Ghetto Nuovo (new ghetto, 18th-century) in the Cittavecchia quarter has streets where the Jewish commercial and intellectual life was concentrated. The Museo Ebraico Carlo and Vera Wagner (Via del Monte 7) documents the community from the Roman period through WWII. Open Sunday–Friday, €5. Note: Trieste had a German-built concentration camp (Risiera di San Sabba, the only camp in Italy with a crematorium) — it's now a national memorial 3km from the city centre, open Tuesday–Sunday, free. Solemn and necessary.
The Port and Magazzini Generali: Trieste's port was rebuilt in the 1880s on the latest British engineering principles (the same engineers who built Southampton docks). The Magazzini Generali — vast Neoclassical storage warehouses from 1856–1870 — are being converted into a cultural centre. Some parts are open for tours on specific dates; check the Trieste port authority website. The Porto Vecchio (old port) is the largest contiguous example of 19th-century port infrastructure in the world still intact.
From Caffè degli Specchi to Illy's flagship bar — Trieste's coffee history in a morning walk.
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