Designinga New Brew
Ralph Lauren’s first-ever coffee shop may be his boldest move yet—and the results are a delicious testament to good tasteRalph’s Coffee, the coffee shop tucked in a corner on the second floor of the new Polo Ralph Lauren flagship store, in Manhattan, is a stunner. Cozy and light-filled, it boasts views of New York’s famous Fifth Avenue on one side and 55th Street on another, mosaic white marble–tiled floors and soaring aged-oak ceilings. Creamy white Carrara marble–topped tables, chairs found in Parisian flea markets and a sweeping white wooden banquette can accommodate 22 guests. Behind the bar, baristas clad in striped shirts and green knit ties bustle with cheerful purpose. It’s all very, well, Ralph Lauren, resembling both an American boathouse and a Parisian bistro all at once. When the designer first dreamed of this place, he wanted it to evoke the New York coffee shops of his youth. That its décor also recalls some of his other lifestyle inspirations is not surprising.
What may surprise fans and naysayers alike is the coffee. It’s really, truly good. One would be forgiven for thinking that the actual brew at a shop like Ralph’s Coffee would be beside the point. But Mr. Lauren knew it would have to make a statement, and he knew that for it to do so, he’d have to partner with one of the world’s greatest coffee experts.
Enter La Colombe Torrefaction, a Philadelphia-based coffee outfit with a reputation not only for sourcing its beans as ethically and sustainably as possible but also for crafting a high-quality product. Countless minute factors affect the caliber of a cup of coffee—water composition and quality, brewing time, temperature and whether or not the grind is consistent—and La Colombe selected top-of-the-line equipment for Ralph’s Coffee to ensure that the baristas would have the kind of precise control necessary to craft a perfect cup. It outfitted the shop with an Italian-made pearl-white La Marzocco FB/80—the Ferrari of espresso machines—and three coffee grinders, two by Mazzer and one by Mahlkönig, which produce a consistent grind while preventing each machine’s heat from compromising the coffee. La Colombe was also charged with putting Ralph’s Coffee baristas through the same rigorous training program that’s in place at its own cafés.The specific blends will change periodically—coffee, like any other agricultural product, is seasonal and subject to nature’s vicissitudes—but the spirit of the blends will remain constant, just like that of the Polo style.
- All photographs courtesy of Ralph Lauren Corporation