
Australia lives and breathes coffee – there’s no two ways about it.
When Italian and Western European immigrants brought their lives, culture and espresso machines down under post World War II, few could have predicted the revolution it primed.
The birth of a culture
For decades now, Australia has stood alongside Brazil, Vietnam and Italy in the global coffee hall of fame. Unlike those nations, we don’t grow much of our own – less than 1% of coffee consumed here is homegrown, mostly in Queensland and parts of NSW, according to research from Southern Cross University.
But that reliance on imports has given us freedom: the chance to experiment with beans, blends and styles from every corner of the world.
Even so, we’ve given the drink lifeblood status. Australians have built a culture and way of life around coffee that is unlike anything else. It’s a ritual, a culture, even a form of identity – treated as gospel at home and admired overseas.
This World Coffee Day, Crumb Wire asked a few café owners and industry folk what makes Australian coffee culture so distinctive and why it’s held up as canon the world over.
Quality, care and community
On the ground, cafés and roasters agree that Australia’s reputation comes down to quality, care and the community spirit wrapped around every cup.
In Bondi, Meidy Estevez, owner of Meidy’s Café, is marking International Coffee Day with $3 iced lattes and long blacks, using Piazza D’Oro organic beans. For her, the culture stands out because of the attention to detail that goes into serving every cup. “It’s rare to go into a café in Australia and meet a barista who doesn’t care about your coffee,” she says.
Down in Melbourne, Katie Batzias, Director of Sales and Marketing at the Royce Hotel, points to the city’s DNA of food, wine and culture as fertile ground for coffee to flourish.
She says: “The last few decades really have seen cafés and baristas flood the market. But it’s never been too much, as our local love for coffee has grown alongside the offering. They’re meeting places, they’re community hubs. So deeply ingrained now, our coffee roasters, people and places are globally awarded and world-class. Lucky us.”
The Royce sources its coffee locally from family-owned roaster Cottle Coffee. The company has been operating in South Melbourne since 1980 from a facility that has been used to roast coffee since 1912.
The wider industry, including larger franchises, is doubling down on this sense of community. Toby’s Estate runs OcToby’s Fest, now in its fifth year, celebrating its 800-strong wholesale network. In a statement earlier this year, General Manager Jody Leslie described cafés as vital cultural hubs – places that create jobs, spark connections and shape the way Australians experience coffee together.
As trends shift, beans evolve and brewing methods change, one thing seems certain: Australians will keep pushing the boundaries of coffee culture. If the past few decades have proven anything, it’s that our national love affair with coffee isn’t slowing down any time soon.
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