The Method, Old East Dallas’ New Craft Coffee Shop, Is Finally Open

Add Method to Dallas' growing list of serious coffee shops. The shoebox-sixed storefront on the corner of Ross Avenue and Hall Streets opened Saturday to an enthusiastic bunch of java junkies. Maybe they were jonesing so hard because they waited so long. Owner Louie Corwin has been working on the...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Add Method to Dallas’ growing list of serious coffee shops. The shoebox-sixed storefront on the corner of Ross Avenue and Hall Streets opened Saturday to an enthusiastic bunch of java junkies.

Maybe they were jonesing so hard because they waited so long. Owner Louie Corwin has been working on the project the better part of a year before hosting a mock service last week. He finally got it open over the weekend.

It was last July that we talked to property owner Richard Allen. His retail space has been home to Joyce and Gigi’s for more than a year now, and while the one end had played home to furniture storage and sales, the other end of the building had been empty for years.

His previous tenant had just lost their financing, but Allen seemed far from worried. “Ross Street is the new Knox Henderson,” he said. If he couldn’t find a new tenant, he’d just open the coffee shop himself. He eventually found Corwin.

Will you step up to support Dallas Observer this year?

We’re aiming to raise $30,000 by December 31, so we can continue covering what matters most to you. If the Dallas Observer matters to you, please take action and contribute today, so when news happens, our reporters can be there.

$30,000

Method intends to be more than a coffee shop. Corwin and a few of his staff talk about TABC permits on the horizon — they want this little coffee shop to be a place to hang out, not just refuel and go.

It could happen. The space is small but comfortable, and the patio out front adds some much-needed seating. There’s a small communal seating area toward the front, opposite a small bar that runs along one wall. A handful of small tables leads to an ominous framed sign: “Maximum Occupancy 14.” Filling those seats over the weekend was plenty of thick-rimmed eyewear, sock-less bluchers, and colorful tattoos.

And while you’re waiting for that whole TABC to happen you should keep yourself occupied with what was, at least this Saturday, a stellar plate of French toast. Who the hell wants butter and syrup when you can have berries and crème anglaise?

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Food & Drink newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...