Dining| Published on January 2, 2008 5:04 pm

Yeah Me Too…. Coffee

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[YMT]Yeah, Me Too

3005 Indianola Ave.

Clintonville

No Phone

No Website

Monday to Saturday

7 AM to 6 PM

Yeah Me Too is a very small coffee shop in Clintonville. If the place had a motto – it would be: just coffee – no perks and no pretense. I don’t really drink coffee but all of my friends have raved about this simple shop for over a year. YMT sells four types of coffee to take home to your coffee machine and usually has one type available to drink when you drop in. There is no place to sit, no Wi Fi, no gimmicks, no frills – just coffee. Everything is simple – hence no phone, no web site, no marketing – they just sell coffee. There may be a few baked goods from Pattycake Vegan Bakery and/or Wellness Forum Foods (Del Sroufe) in case you need a snack as you head out the door but that is more of an afterthought – maybe even a public service.

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52 Comments

  • Bear wrote Just bumping these guys to remind folks that they exist.

    These guys are pretty awesome. It’s just hard to get me out of Brioso.

    We really are blessed with good coffee here in Columbus.

  • roy wrote Bear: Your science sounds spot-on, although a little like explaining good sex using charts and graphs.

    HAH! Well put. The problem is, I roast my own — so I am in the unenviable position of not just being forced to use charts and graphs all the time, but actually taking notes during the act itself.

    I hear more and more about Brioso. Must explore soon….

  • Bear wrote

    I hear more and more about Brioso. Must explore soon….

    Not to hijack a YMT thread, but I’ve known the owner Jeff for years, and he roasts a damn fine bean in my estimation. He was one of the roasters up at Stauf’s many years ago and left. He then got together some backing and opened Cafe Brioso downtown.

    He roasts smaller batches in that are generally in season. If you’ve ever had coffee at Tip Top, you’ve had Brioso coffee.

    My current fave is his Full City roast. It gives tons of the bean flavour without the “green” taste you get in many so called “Full City” roasts (I’m looking at you Stauf’s).

    Anyway, back to our regularly scheduled Yeah Me Too thread, which is already in progress.

  • YMT is great, like drinking liquid candy. I’ve been going the last 2 saturdays (only time I can get there) and it is really a great addition to my day, I’m happy I’ heard about it.

    i do drink a lot of coffee, I’ve been to many places downtown in the morning(every morning), but YMT really does beat anyone I’ve ever tasted.

  • Cookie wrote I’m sure it sacrilegious to even ask, but do they sell decaf?

    :shock:

  • i don’t know.

    yes, it is sacriligious to ask. :wink:

  • Cookie wrote So, does nobody know, or are you just refusing to answer on principle?

    I actually don’t recall. Just being a smartass.

  • They’ve been closed when i went by. Where the hell would I drink it once I bought a mug full? On my bike? :?

  • michaelcoyote wrote Not to hijack a YMT thread, but I’ve known the owner Jeff for years, and he roasts a damn fine bean in my estimation. He was one of the roasters up at Stauf’s many years ago and left. He then got together some backing and opened Cafe Brioso downtown.

    Since we’re hijacking….

    I’m actually in the process of trying to put some local roasters, including the Brioso folks, YMT, Stauf’s, and so on, in touch with some coffee producers in Guatemala who produce a unique bean. It’s the only coffee currently protected by Slow Food’s Ark of Taste program, which in a nutshell is like an endangered species program for food — so it’s a lot like a fair trade coffee on steroids. (Details here, leftmost column, for the curious.) I’ve made contact with the producers, and I’ve written a letter to the roasters. The producers are willing to send me a sample of their coffee to include along with the letter.

    This is where I hit a bit of a snag. I have no idea how much coffee to ask them for as a sample. I could roast it myself and give 1/4 lb. each to these folks, but my guess is they’d much rather roast it on their own so they know what went into the roast… and they might actually have trouble roasting anything that trivially small. I also don’t want to ask too much of the producers, since the whole point is to get local roasters to buy their coffee, not to have them send out too much of it as a free sample.

    I don’t actually know many of the local roasters because I don’t visit coffee shops that often — a downside to roasting one’s own coffee. I’ll work on getting in to talk to some of them, but in the interim, if anyone happens to have any insights as to what quantities I should request for an evaluation, please pm me. Thanks very much.

    Now back to the show.

  • Bear wrote

    Since we’re hijacking….

    I’m actually in the process of trying to put some local roasters, including the Brioso folks, YMT, Stauf’s, and so on, in touch with some coffee producers in Guatemala who produce a unique bean.

    I don’t know the YMT guys so well, but they seem very nice whenever I visit. I’d just say stop in for a cup of coffee and start chatting. I’ve only seen them roasting once when I visited, but they were really accomidating. I guess that’s the nice part about only roasting for your own store.

    year..

    Brioso can be tough, because I know Jeff is often pretty busy roasting for commercal accounts. When I do stop in for a visit, I generally try to make it after 3p as Brioso is much less busy. I’ll swing by tomrrow and talk to Jeff if he’s there.

    I really don’t know anyone over at Stauf’s anymore. The last managment type person I knew from there left around the beginning of the

    Please PM me if you have any more questions. I’ll be traveling this afternoon, so I woln’t be respoding right away, but I’ll see what I can do..

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