New York Food Tours: Jewish Cuisine

Within the hustle and bustle of busy, loud New York, there’s a food that stirs nostalgia and feels homey to many people. That’s Jewish food. Culinary historian Sarah Lohman, a blogger at Four Pounds of Flour acting as a docent for Context Travel, takes Alexandra Korey on a tour of New York’s lower East side for a literal taste of Jewish history. (This is a guest post from my friend Alexandra, an art historian based in Florence and the brains behind one of my favorite blogs, ArtTrav.)

When people immigrate, they bring with them culinary traditions that change based on the new country. Adaptations are made for local ingredients, and often, over time, people look to changes in their homeland and evolve their recipes. This is not true of most Jewish food: Jews who came to New York brought over traditions from mostly eastern Europe, but they did not have a “homeland” to which to look for the evolution of flavour. Many of the recipes for things like bagels, latkes and pastrami haven’t changed at all in a hundred years. So if you’ve got any Eastern European in you – like I do – chances are you’ll feel quite at home in a Jewish deli in New York.

Best Jewish food in New York

Of the flavours we tasted with Sarah on Context Travel’s Jewish Cuisine and Culture tour, many were new to me. For example, we tried pastrami smoked salmon, which uses the same kind of spice rub and smoking found on beef pastrami but on the fish; we tasted “real” pastrami but also corned beef and the less fancy brisket; and we dined on Knishes begun 114 years ago (or at least their yeast was). Sweet and savoury pickled pineapple from a place that pickles everything finished our tasting walk and opened up the discussion towards the integration of other immigrant tastes (this one with a Dominican Republic influence).

As we munched for three hours, Sarah provided a walking history of the area, which proved most fascinating: the lower East side provided an entry into New York for poor immigrants from many nations over the decades, who would slowly move up and out, making space for the newest wave. Only now, as gentrification has pushed rent prices through the roof, has this changed.

Where to taste Jewish Cuisine in New York

Schimmel’s Knishes

137 E. Houston

Best Jewish food in New York

A knish is a pastry stuffed with, most traditionally, potato or kasha (buckwheat grout). Yonah Schimmel has been at this location for 114 years, and his knishes are made from a mother yeast that has been kept alive the whole time. Now that’s historic food. Eat at the formica tables and check out the walls covered with photos of famous visitors (like Woody Allen, who filmed here).

Russ and Daughters

179 E. Houston

Best Jewish food in New York

100 years of business in 2014 for the first store in town to be “and daughters” rather than “and sons”. This is an “appetizing” which is not a new word for appetizers, but apparently refers to milk rather than meat meals in the Kosher diet. If you were catering an event or just having friends over for an easy brunch, you’d order it from here, getting amazing smoked fishes, prepared salads, the freshest cream cheeses, but also fancy caviars and lots of tasty sweets. This does not come cheap, but it is the best quality. After so long in the take-out business, Russ and Daughters opened up a café at another location nearby in May 2014.

Katz’s Deli

205 E. Houston

Best Jewish food in New York

This is a New York pilgrimage stop for many tourists, and is famous for its very thick pastrami sandwich. The sandwich costs 19$ but it is so loaded with beef, it costs them a fortune to make. Sarah explained that there is a lot of pressure on Katz’s and others to sell the property to real estate developers (for a lot of money!) but they’ve held off so far. The place gets very busy from lunchtime onwards, so consider an early lunch or late brunch.

Kossar’s Bialys

367 Grand St

Best Jewish food in New York

The story of the Bialys really touched me. There’s a town in Poland called Bialistok that had a 50,000 person Jewish population before Hitler’s 1941 invasion. Now, they are 5. Their traditional bread, something like a bagel without the hole and with a bit of chopped onion in the middle, lives on only in New York.

Barney Greengrass

541 Amsterdam Ave

Best Jewish food in New York

If you want to sample some excellent Jewish Cuisine without heading down to the lower East side of the city, Barney Greengrass’s is up near Museum Mile. This local café has preserved its retro look and no-nonsense service, and its huge sturgeon sandwich is worth the price. (In the photo, smoked salmon and cream cheese on pumpernickel bagel.)

For a guided tour in New York that includes tasting these foods, I highly recommend Sarah and her fellow docents at Context Travel and their group tour: Jewish Cuisine and Culture.

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7 Comments

  1. Great post! This is the exact food tour I like to do every time I’m in New York. I even have a Russ & Daughter cooler bag that I bring back filled w/ smoked fish, pastrami, etc. And Barney Greengrass is truly one of my fave restaurants anywhere in the world. Just thinking about it makes me pine. All of these establishments lend such a wonderful sense of place. I also recommend a trip to the Tenement Museum in the LES. Gives proper context to these spots.

    1. says: Jenna

      Thanks so much for this insight, and I can imagine that these places lend a wonderful sense of place. It’s a shame that we don’t have many establishments that carry on old traditions from immigrant groups. Of course, in CA it’s all about the newer immigrant groups, but in the rest of the country, it would be wonderful to see more places like these that continue old food traditions and stay true to themselves.

  2. says: Cassie

    This is fantastic, I wanted to learn more about Jewish food last time I was in NYC but didn’t make it beyond a few bagel shops — there was a Hasidic holiday the weekend we were there and most of the local businesses in Brooklyn were closed. I’ve never had a knish nor a bialy and those are some things I can try as a vegetarian.

    1. says: Jenna

      Well, now you’ll have to go back and take this tour! And Alexandra is a vegetarian, too, so I think she tried the non-meat items and left the pastrami to her husband.

  3. says: Joseff

    This is interesting. I love exploring different varieties of food and indulging it here in New York? Wow! It’s just perfect and I couldn’t ask for more. Maybe I can bring my kids here too because they love to eat and want to visit New york too. Thanks for sharing this!

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