April 28, 2025 Restaurant/Bar News
Interlude, the most charming coffee and tea shop on Hudson and Hubert, has taken the storefront in the base of 111 Murray, facing the highway, and will soft-open today. Thanks to N. for catching the signs.
I checked in with founder and owner Josh Kim yesterday: “Word travels fast! We will be in a very quiet, soft opening mode beginning tomorrow. To start, we’ll be operating for limited hours, Monday through Friday, while we fine tune our workflow and build up a new team.”
The name is Interlude Murray and it will eventually have the same menu as the Hudson location. There’s a larger baking area here, so Josh said they will be able to expand the bakery menu at both locations. “We’ve already started offering plain croissants and pain au chocolat that were all made from scratch at this new facility,” he said. “More menu development to come as we settle in to our new space.”
Exciting!!
Josh opened the first Interlude Coffee & Tea in 2018, with his sister Melody serving as the head of the pastry program. Melody has since moved back to California. (I never stop thinking about her malted chocolate chip cookies.) Here’s an excerpt from their New Kid post:
When Josh moved to New York City from Irvine, California, to study classical piano at Juilliard, he discovered independent cafés and good coffee: “I was surprised coffee could taste different,” he says. “I was used to Starbucks!” After graduating, he moved back west to help with his dad’s music-education business—and he found the coffee in Orange County lacking. “I’d drive all the way to L.A. just to visit Intelligentsia, which wasn’t going to be sustainable in the long run.” Eventually, he bought a manual home espresso machine and taught himself how to use it, sourcing beans from roasters all over. He returned to New York City with the plan to get an MBA, but none of the likely career paths looked appealing, so he took a job doing something he knew he’d love: At the Joe café chain, he rose from working the register to being a barista to training new employees. Then he went to manage Spreadhouse, a café on Suffolk, where he also developed the food menu.
By then, he was ready for a café of his own, and the result is now open on Hudson Street: Interlude Coffee & Tea. Kim has clearly given careful consideration about every decision, down to the logo: A circle with two parallel slashes, it’s meant to evoke the musical symbol for a caesura, or pause; a clock, to indicate a break from your workday; and a coffee bean. “While I was figuring out what to do, I also took a product-design course at Parsons,” he says. “I like minimalist style, very clean, but I didn’t want the café to feel cold, so we incorporated wood and cane chairs.”
As you should expect if you read the first paragraph, the coffee is very good, among the best in Tribeca. Using beans from George Howell Coffee, Interlude aims to appeal both to connoisseurs and casual drinkers. “Our house coffee is more chocolatey, and nutty, while our ‘featured’ coffee is on the bright, fruity, delicate side. We’re pushing the boundaries of what people think coffee should be.” Also of note: Iced coffee is available as nitro brew as well as flash brew, where fresh hot coffee gets cooled in one minute, without any dilution from ice.
Tea is of equal importance, which is why it gets billing in Interlude’s name. It comes from Tea Dealers, with a couple of options in every category. “Most cafés don’t offer straight ceremonial shot of matcha, just lattes and other concoctions,” says Kim, “We wanted to stay true to the roots of the matcha ceremony, too.” He thinks that matcha fans will follow the same arc as many coffee lovers, including himself, have: “I started drinking iced lattes with Splenda, and now I drink straight espresso.”
Last but certainly not least is the pastry program, which Kim’s sister, Melody, is in charge of. “She was teaching piano, working as a nanny, and baking as a hobby,” he says. “And she was also at a point where she was ready for the next step. So I invited her to join me.” The baked goods are classics with a twist: oatmeal-pickled-raisin cookies, banana sesame loaf, honey butter scones, malted chocolate chip cookies, blueberry maple muffins, cream cheese Funfetti cookies.
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This is a wonderful piece, about some of my favorite people. Thank you.
The best! So happy to have another Interlude in town.
Our absolute favorite coffee shop! We love going to Interlude and always look forward to visiting with Josh + Seara. Excited about this second location, congrats!
Stopped by the other day and had a butter scone with an oat cortado. Everything was on point, very chic design, the outdoor patio is going to be a great spot. Welcome to this side of Tribeca!