There are coffee shops, and then there is Rimsky-Korsakoffee House. Tucked into a beautiful old Victorian home in Southeast Portland’s Buckman neighborhood, this place has been quietly enchanting locals since 1980, and somehow it still feels like a discovery every single time you walk through the door.
From the outside, you might walk right past it. There is no glowing neon sign, no sandwich board loaded with specials, no line of people staring at their phones. Just a handsome historic house on SE 12th Avenue, looking for all the world like someone’s private residence. That restraint is entirely intentional, and it sets the tone for everything inside.
Push open the door and you step into what can only be described as a living room that someone decided to share with the world. The interior is dim, warm, and draped in the kind of comfortable clutter that takes decades to accumulate: mismatched furniture, framed artwork covering nearly every inch of wall space, and classical music drifting through the rooms at just the right volume. The whole place feels like stumbling into the home of an eccentric, well-traveled aunt who also happens to make transcendent desserts.
And those desserts. That is really why you come. Rimsky’s is famous throughout Portland for its rotating selection of homemade cakes, pies, and tortes. The menu changes constantly depending on what the kitchen feels like creating, but you might find a dense, bittersweet chocolate hazelnut torte, a towering slice of cardamom-spiced apple cake, or a silky tiramisu that tastes like it was made by someone who learned the recipe in Rome. Pair any of it with a properly pulled espresso drink and you have yourself an afternoon worth savoring slowly.
The quirks are part of the charm and absolutely worth mentioning. Some of the tables are rigged to move — slowly, almost imperceptibly — while you sit at them. The bathroom is a destination in itself, decorated floor to ceiling in a way that defies easy description. Staff are unhurried and genuinely friendly, and the whole atmosphere encourages lingering rather than hustling you out the door.
Rimsky’s keeps its own hours, typically opening in the evening and staying open late, which makes it an ideal stop after dinner or a show at one of the nearby theaters. It is cash-friendly and unpretentious, the kind of spot that reminds you Portland has always had a talent for nurturing beautifully odd, deeply beloved institutions.
If you visit Portland and spend your whole trip chasing the obvious landmarks, you will have a fine time. But if you find your way to a corner table at Rimsky-Korsakoffee House on a quiet weeknight, fork in hand and Chopin in the air, you will understand why people fall in love with this city and never quite get over it.