Croatian cafe culture on hold – a reminder of its importance
- by croatiaweek
- in Entertainment
Coffee at the cafe and its importance in the Croatian way of life has been well documented. With all cafes shut due to the coronavirus pandemic, a key part of Croatian life has been taken away temporarily.
In a survey, Croatians have said that not being able to go for a ‘coffee’ is one of the main things they are missing during the lockdown, and going for one with friends will be one of the first things they do once things return to normal.
“When things are taken away you realise how important they are. I am working from home now and I really miss not being able to go for a coffee. I miss the networking, opportunity to get things off my chest, hearing new ideas from work colleagues and just the real-life communication,” Maja from Zagreb explains.
Croatian cafe culture is more than enjoying the drink. Coffee seeps into every aspect of Croatian life and language.
“The all-embracing Croatian cafe culture is more than loafing around on sun-lit terraces – a familiar image of Zagreb, Split, Zadar or Dubrovnik. This fragrant dark liquid is the lifeblood with which we measure our time, quality of life and soundness of our social ties,” says Andrea Pisac, author of the blog Croatia Honestly and Croatian Desserts cookbook, who took an in-depth look a few years ago into the cosmology of coffee in Croatia by explaining 25 sacred and secret meanings.
With coffee at the cafe currently not an option, now is a good time to look back again at Andrea’s deep-dive into Croatian coffee and cafe culture.
Croatian cafe culture connects people
#1 Ajmo na kavu [let’s go for coffee]
This the most widespread invitation to socialize. It may sound innocuous, but if you’ve never had coffee with a Croat, you need to branch out from the usual image of chit-chatting over coffee.
#2 Croats meet for coffee at various occasions and with different agendas
Sometimes it’s as plain as catching up with friends. There’s nothing sweeter than grabbing coffee after food or clothes shopping, with bags resting by your legs. But the informal cafe setting is also perfect for closing business deals and discussing ‘terms and conditions’ that escape both large and small print.
#3 Going for coffee doesn’t stop Croats from exchanging espresso for an alcoholic drink
Even an afternoon session may turn into an inebriated frolic with coffee only as last orders to sober everyone up.
#4 Saturday morning coffee rounds fall into a special category
In Zagreb, this is called špica and it means being where the action is. Coffee on špica is all about seeing the world and being seen, so heartfelt bonding takes a backseat to strutting around.
Croatian cafe culture opens doors to people’s homes
#5 Dođi na kavu [come round for coffee]
This a genuine invitation to visit someone’s home. It’s not mere courtesy like the English equivalent ‘you must come round for dinner’. When a Croat invites you to their home, they mean it, so you should follow through.
#6 Close friends announce their impromptu visit with pristavi kavu [put the coffee on], especially when they’re just around the corner
This welcoming cup of coffee is sometimes called kava dočekuša [coffee for greeting guests]. But there’s also kava sikteruša [coffee to get rid of the guests]. We serve you this coffee after a long meal to signal it’s time to pack up and go.
#7 While espresso may be the coffee of choice in a cafe, at home, we still like to brew Turkish coffee
Sometimes there is instant coffee on the home menu. But generally, we don’t give guests much choice – apart from milk on the side – and as guests, we never discuss the quality of coffee we’re served.
#8 In fact, we complain only if the coffee is terribly weak and sweet
This one is called kava proseruša [coffee that gives you diarrhea] and will immediately send you to the toilet. No need to tell your host coffee was terrible – they noticed why you left the table. We complain to others as we recount the story.
Strangely enough, we’re happy to make proseruša for ourselves every morning to get a healthy start of the day!
Croatian cafe culture makes things happen
#9 Coffee makes a perfect gift when you visit someone’s home
For ages, a golden standard has been bringing Franck cigla [a brick] – a brick-shaped 250 grams vacuum-packed coffee of the Franck brand (Croatia’s oldest coffee roaster). While bringing a bottle of wine is a newly acquired act of good manners, showing up with a brick is a foolproof choice.
#10 In Croatia, the old saying ‘you scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours’ is often done via coffee
If someone does a favour for you or gives you a gift you can’t repay straight away, you can treat them with coffee.
#11 We never ever go Dutch with coffee
It’s preposterous to let a friend scrabble for coins to contribute to the bill. Somehow we keep the score and take turns in treating each other with coffee. No one knows if the score is correct or not, but that’s of little importance. We believe coffee always finds its way into divine balance.
Croatian coffee is the measure of value
#12 The world could be falling apart but as long as there is coffee, a Croat will survive
We measure our quality of life with coffee. If times are hard and the money is short, we’ll express it in the coffee currency: Nemam ni za kavu [I don’t even have money for coffee].
#13 For a Croat, a sign of good life is to have easy access to coffee
If you think of coffee drinking as a ritual that makes things happen between people, imagine how traumatic coffee scarcity can be.
It happened in the last decade of socialism when I was a preschool child. People queued for limited rations of coffee. This ‘degradation’ of the quality of life lives on as a collective memory. I myself can’t conjure up images of coffee lines, but I know very well that life without coffee isn’t a decent one.
#14 Croats found imaginative ways to fight coffee scarcity
The collective memory has it that people travelled to Italy and Austria and smuggled back countless kilos of the venerated coffee bean. Lorry drivers en route from Austria to Greece had drop-off points where they sold Minas brand to the deprived coffee drinkers.
Thank goodness those days are gone!
#15 Today we use the price of coffee to gauge how good the times are
As the sine qua non of a respectable life, an expensive coffee causes outrage. We will say kava je tamo 25 kuna!!! [they charge 25 Kuna for coffee there!!!] And when we say there, we mean trendy destinations like Dubrovnik or Hvar. Some Croats refuse to visit places that charge a bomb for the primary requirement of happiness.
Croatian coffee is the measure of time
#16 We’re back full circle to the familiar scene of everyone loafing around at cafe terraces
Sharing coffee with friends is the most basic particle of our sense of time. If we can’t make time for coffee, we’re seriously out of whack. It’s why we scold our friends for neglecting us with nemaš vremena ni za kavu [you don’t even have time to meet me for coffee].
#17 A healthy rhythm is the one that allows us both planned and ad hoc coffee dates
Being available to loaf around at coffees signals a good life-work balance. We’ll strive to achieve it even if work is the one that suffers. That’s the crux of the Croatian cafe culture, the reason why it’s one of our most raved about tourist attractions, and why as a visitor you feel so attracted to our lifestyle.
#18 There’s a flip side to this, of course
If you try to get straight down to business with a Croat, cafe culture could become an obstacle. You expect a sense of urgency, but all we want is to finish our coffee. Try and get some sense from us in the morning and we’ll say nisam još ni kavu popila [I haven’t even had my coffee yet].
#19 Even Croats complain of Croats – stalno kafenišu [they’re doing nothing but drink coffee] – we say for the layabouts
But really, there’s no need to rush. Everything always gets done, and it’s usually via, over and because of the coffee.
Croatian coffee is subversive
#20 Such a simple drink, but made in Croatia, coffee can resist or break deeply entrenched rules
And because coffee is just coffee, no one will mind. This makes it a powerful agent of social life.
#21 If you eavesdropped on a Croat’s phone conversation – the word coffee would signal a behind-the-scenes part is coming
Serious, confidential and emotionally loaded stuff is rarely discussed in a regular phone catch-up. There’ll be a few basic pieces of information, followed by ispričat ću ti sve na kavi [I’ll tell you all over coffee]. That ‘all’ might mean many things: a heartfelt outpouring, missing juicy details or the real version of events.
#22 Coffee is one of the main reasons why Croatian cafes are still smokers-friendly
Coffee and cigarettes are a deeply ingrained match that will never get unhinged. Smokers use coffee as an excuse to never quit: kako ću piti kavu bez cigareta [how will I enjoy my coffee without cigarettes]. Even non-smokers rarely complain of a smoky cafe atmosphere, showing tolerance for everyone’s right to have coffee their own way.
#23 In Croatia, you can use coffee to undermine the corporate money-grabbing culture
While elsewhere in the world you’ll be rushed to leave a cafe once you finish a drink, no waiter in Croatia will give you a look if you sit for hours with an empty coffee cup. Coffee always trumps profit!
#24 Actually, with any other drink, you would go on a bar crawl, but with coffee, you stay true to one place
This cafe monogamy allows your waiter to really learn how you like your coffee. After a while, the arrangement exhibits familiar signs of a long marriage: with little being said, your cup of pleasure materializes before you even order it.
#25 Finally, coffee is even able to shake the remaining patriarchal stereotypes
Traditional Croatian men never cook. They don’t know how to and can even brag about never setting foot in the kitchen. We often say on ti ništa ne zna skuhati, osim kave [he can’t cook anything, but he knows how to make coffee]. Coffee allows even the proudest patriarchal man to get comfortable by the stove while still keeping his manliness.
The power of coffee in Croatia is limitless.
How about baking a cake to go with your coffee? Andrea’s cookbook provides 50 authentic Croatian dessert recipes to make at home. Check it out HERE