SF likes to explain Irish coffee, though who unequivocally invented it?


  • Bartender Paul Nolan creates Irish coffees during a Buena Vista Cafe in San Francisco. Photo: Blair Heagerty, Blair Heagerty / SFGate / SFGate

    Bartender Paul Nolan creates Irish coffees during a Buena Vista Cafe in San Francisco.

    Bartender Paul Nolan creates Irish coffees during a Buena Vista Cafe in San Francisco.


    Photo: Blair Heagerty, Blair Heagerty / SFGate

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Bartender Paul Nolan creates Irish coffees during a Buena Vista Cafe in San Francisco.

Bartender Paul Nolan creates Irish coffees during a Buena Vista Cafe in San Francisco.



Photo: Blair Heagerty, Blair Heagerty / SFGate


You can’t speak about Buena Vista Cafe though articulate about a Irish coffee. In 1952, a cafeteria introduced a friendly multiple of coffee, sugar, Irish whiskey and churned complicated cream to sweet-toothed San Franciscans. Soon, a whole universe was clamoring for more.

As a result, San Francisco takes a lot of credit for Irish coffee — though even Buena Vista itself doesn’t explain to have invented a drink.

“The Irish coffee is usually something we brought over,” explained Ron Martinez, a partner ubiquitous manager during Buena Vista. “We give out a leaflet that tells a story of it, and have it on a behind of a menu — it’s no secret.”

Buena Vista popularized a splash in America, approbation — though of course, a drink’s genuine roots are in Ireland. The many ordinarily supposed origin story is this: In 1943, a moody left a Foynes airfield in Ireland for New York, though was forced to spin behind due to bad weather. Airport staff was educated to acquire a passengers behind to a airfield with comfortable food and drink.


It was afterwards that cook Joe Sheridan initial churned adult a mythological splash for a sap travelers. When one newcomer thanked him for a smashing coffee and asked either it was Brazilian coffee, he replied, “No, it was Irish coffee!”

This is a story Margaret O’Shaughnessy, executive of a museum that a Foynes airfield has now been converted into, tells me.

“That is how Irish coffee initial started: as a welcoming drink,” she explained.

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Now, as fable has it, here’s where Buena Vista comes in: In 1952, Chronicle transport author Stanton Delaplane, who had created during length about this tasty splash he attempted during an airfield in Ireland, came by a bar. Jack Koeppler, a owners of Buena Vista during a time, was intrigued, and a dual of them set about perplexing to re-create a Irish coffee.

After a lot of unsuccessful attempts — they had difficulty removing a cream to boyant — Koeppler eventually flew abroad to range out a strange splash and find out how it was unequivocally done. Finally, with a assistance of Sheridan, who even came behind to San Francisco to assist a project, he was means to ideal a recipe. And that’s how Buena Vista’s famous Irish coffee was born.

But there’s another chronicle of a story, too.  According to an comment from a Harvard highbrow of Irish Studies, Irish coffee was indeed invented around 1940 during a place called a Dolphin Hotel in Ireland. The grill was owned by Michael Nugent, who presumably created Irish coffee to costume a awful ambience of coffee during World War II — and Sheridan, who worked underneath him, schooled a recipe from him.


O’Shaughnessy immediately ignored a effect of this account.

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“That was positively wrong,” she said, observant that a Foynes Flying Boat Maritime Museum is a usually place to have tangible support of Sheridan’s purpose in formulating Irish coffee. “People invent stories for promotion. We have all a element here.”

Today, a Dolphin Hotel is no more, though a pub called Bad Bobs (in a building that Nugent also owned during a time) on a same travel recounts this chronicle of Irish coffee story on its website. However, Patrick McGowan, one of a owners of Bad Bobs, says they aren’t perplexing to “claim” a splash — they’re usually recounting a story of a building before they became a owners.

“Personally, I think anybody that lays explain to inventing a Irish coffee… it’s like observant that we invented vodka and coke, or a mojito,” pronounced McGowan. “People have been blending drinks given ethanol existed. It’s trustworthy that people would put whiskey into coffee.”

While he doesn’t trust that any one chairman can lay explain to inventing a Irish coffee, he does give Sheridan credit for popularizing it and bringing it to America. And it’s substantially since of him that we can now find it on menus opposite a globe.

“I have had Irish coffees in a Alps, Andorra, France, New York, Norway and Sri Lanka,” pronounced McGowan.

San Franciscans in sold can’t get adequate of a drink. Since 1952, Buena Vista Cafe has served some-more than 40 million Irish coffees. And even a Irish approve of a cafe’s version: Both O’Shaughnessy and McGowan trust that they make “an well-developed Irish coffee.”

Madeline Wells is an SFGATE associate digital reporter. Email: madeline.wells@sfgate.com | Twitter: @madwells22