The cheese bread, which has been rebranded as "Kitanda bread", is prepared as a snack and as a base for a breakfast sandwich.[5] Coffee drinks use medium-roast organic Brazilian coffee.[5]
History
Brazil-born João Boff opened the original Kitanda as a convenience store in Seattle's University District in 1998 named Sendex.[9] The shop initially sold Brazilian groceries and foods, as well as cassette tapes of Brazilian music. In 2002, the business relocated to Kirkland because of the city's larger Brazilian community, and became more of a bakery. At this point, the name of the business was changed to Kitanda,[9] a name based on the Brazilian Portuguese word quitanda, meaning convenience store.[5][10][9] Kitanda relocated to Redmond in 2013, evolving into a coffee shop chain.[5][11]
Boff's stepdaughter Erica Bueno joined the family business in 2009, after relocating from Brazil to the United States. The Green Lake shop opened in 2015.[5] As of 2019, there were five locations, in Green Lake,[8] Kirkland, Redmond, Southcenter, and the University District.[7] The Capitol Hill location opened in 2021.[12] In downtown Seattle, Kitanda has operated in the McKenzie building.[13]
Lori Bailey included Kitanda in Eater Seattle's 2019 list of "top spots" in Seattle for bowls and juices.[7] The Not for Tourists Guide to Seattle has said Kitanda has "Brazilian coffee and pastries that you didn't know your life was missing".[15]
^"32 restaurant openings in Seattle (with bagels, soup dumplings and fried grasshoppers)". The Seattle Times. 2022-07-23. Archived from the original on 2022-11-04. Retrieved 2023-12-23. Our international coffee scene expands with the Ethiopian Café Avole in the Central District, the Vietnamese coffeehouse Voi Cà Phê in Georgetown and the Brazilian cafe chain Kitanda in the McKenzie building downtown.