Denver Coffee House Menus: Paris on the Platte, Muddy’s and the Mercury Cafe

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I used to waitress at Paris. On Fridays I'd work from 9-5 during the day, then work from 9 pm to 5 am at Paris. I remember Fatz City closed at 2:00 pm and we'd have to set our alarm clocks after working until 5 am to get there in time to eat breakfast before they closed. <3

Hi Renna, thanks for your additional observations. You are correct: the Merc’s owner Marilyn Megenity had a significant amount of success with her prior restaurants, including the Westerner Cafe in Indian Hills starting in 1975, as you noted. From what I have read in various parts of our collection (largely newspaper articles and interviews with her over the years), she operated restaurants at 7 different Denver locations between 1976 and 1981 (most of which were located in Capitol Hill, and it sounds like there were some fascinating stories behind those moves). These businesses included Elrond’s Kitchen, Fatz City, and the Magickal Mercury Café (sometimes spelled without the “k”). That was a lot of moving in a short period. After 29 successful years of the Mercury Café on 22nd and California Street, anything else seems “short lived” in comparison!

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Thank you for this. Paris was my home away from home from 1989-1993. The Cafe Fantasia & Cambric were my mainstays. Also spent plenty of night at Muddy’s and the Merc. Some of the best cafes of all time.

The cambric! Yea baby i was there in those years too. I used to Walk there with my girlfriends from the Northside it was pretty sweet. We had gone to Catholic school and became all Goth by 8th grade lol. I remember smoking cool Sobranie cigarettes for 10 cents a piece. So many memories thanks for sharing. I discovered Anais Nin there. Loved the bookstore.

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The Muddy’s menu seems to be a version I never read, as it’s missing the all-important Crowbar. I drank pitchers of that caffeine-blasted concoction nightly for years, while wearing my black, biker leather jacket and Docs.

Hi Chris. The menu we have is from the original Muddy's, so if you hung out at the 2.0 version, perhaps that's why? There's a Crowbar on the Paris menu (which somehow was omitted from the original post, so you've done your civic duty by drawing my attention to this! It's now up there). And also, yes, leather jackets were definitely part of the uniform!

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Yes! First started going to Paris when I was 14 and did theater with the older kids who could drive there. I also loved, and still do, the Market. I took swing lessons at the Merc. Fond memories of all of those places.

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I feel very fortunate I had so many memorable experiences at all three of these Denver gems. The Merc for the Crash Worship show in ‘94 where the DFD came as uninvited guests and later in 2017 for my brother’s wedding reception. After several trips downtown from the burbs as a teen to hear music, socialize and, of course, smoke like a chimney, Paris became my local coffeehouse in the early ‘90s. My future husband reintroduced me in my twenties and shortly after moved me into his studio apartment just over on 16th & Boulder. Your right, Laura, I can still taste those Mexicanos. We continued to go there right up until the end. I didn’t make it to the original Muddy Waters, but I did to Muddy’s Java Café. Before said husband started taking me there after blood-pumping nights at 23 Parish and Rock Island, as a teen I saw the two-man show “Zoo” in the basement theatre and had my very first coffeehouse experience.

Jim Jarmusch’s (love him) LA coffee-goers in “Coffee and Cigarettes” have nothing on us Denverites.

Always have loved being a Gen Xer.

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