My family and I try to get to New York City every few months to enjoy the changes with each season. We hadn't been there since the spring, so last weekend we made another trek. The one thing that doesn't change? The food, and my love/hate relationship with it. I love it
when I’m there and I hate it when I leave.
I’m not even talking about the plethora of chi
chi restaurants owned by TV chefs. I’m talking about the every day food, real food
that you can only get in New York. Although this delectable food does eke into
bordering Connecticut, I live in the northeastern section, which in this case might as
well be Ohio. I know Mayor Bloomberg was trying to pass a law against selling
giant sodas, but is there another law I haven’t heard about? The one that says
only New Yorkers are allowed to enjoy authentic food while the rest of us are
stuck with the generic kind?
On this
trip, we stop for a bite to eat about a half hour outside of the city in
Greenwich, CT. We choose Corbo’s, a deli my husband frequents when he consults
down there. My husband is originally from Long Island so he knows from delis. The minute
he orders, the university professor who’s been living in New England for over
20 years disappears and his Long Island accent and mannerisms emerge. He
immediately bonds with the New Yorkers behind the counter.
We get our
sandwiches even before we’re done paying, because that's how these guys roll. Not like
Panera, where you might wait ten minutes just for them to throw some lettuce
and dressing in a bowl. They don’t take numbers or names. They just point at
you and toss you your foil-covered sandwich.
My husband
wasn’t sure I’d want to go there. “The place has no atmosphere,” he said. No
atmosphere? It’s got New York deli atmosphere! (Does he forget that I’m a New
Yorker, too?) There are a few tables in the front. There’s a rack of potato
chips: plain, salt and vinegar, or sour cream and chives. There’s a
refrigeration unit that sells bottles of Cokes and Dr. Peppers and cream soda. I
neglected to check, but I’d bet they even sell Yoo Hoo.
We open the
foil to reveal our sandwiches. And this is the thing: They’re on hard rolls.
These are rolls that you can only get in New York. They’re the type of rolls I
used to put slabs of butter on in my youth and eat for breakfast in my high school
cafeteria. Yes, my school cafeteria. You didn’t have to go anyplace fancy to
get the best hard rolls on the planet. You could stop at the local mini mart
and pick one up buttered or with an egg and cheese in it. But it didn’t matter
what was in it or on it, it was all about the roll. Eating that deli sandwich
was the ultimate sense memory from my youth.
It was the
most satisfying lunch I’ve had since…well, since the last time we went to New
York. I felt I could be fine the rest of the day on simply the memory of it,
but then we make our way into the city, park the car, and step out onto the
sidewalk. The aromas wafting from the food carts assault us. Intellectually, I
know it’s not the cleanest place to get your food from. In the back of my mind,
I’m thinking the rats probably exit them every morning before their owners fire
them up for another day’s business. Still, it’s difficult to walk past one of
those stainless steal carts with the yellow Sabrett’s umbrella and not salivate
at the thought of a dirty water dog.
My son has
his eye on a hot pretzel. It would be his first and I debate about not buying
it for him, only because it will ruin him from ever being able to eat
one elsewhere. No one else can apparently make a proper hot pretzel, not at the mall or at the
movies. Yes, they all sit there the same way under the warm lights, presumably
hours old. But somehow, the ones in the city aren’t hard and flavorless like all
the others. These are soft and chewy and salty, and with a thick line of yellow
mustard, they are worth every cockroach-infested nightmare you might have.
Ditto with
the hot nuts. Hungry or not, every visit I find myself in zombie mode heading
to a Nuts 4 Nuts cart and taking out a few singles for a waxed bag of warm, sugar-coated
peanuts. What other food makes you crunch and hum at the same time as you’re
walking down the street?
It’s all
the walking; that’s why we keep eating (or so I tell myself). For blocks and
blocks we walk and take in all the sights and sounds that only New York City
can provide: the vivid lights of Times Square, the bells of St. Patrick’s
Cathedral, the crowds in Rockefeller Plaza. The eclectic vibe continues into
Central Park and we eventually make our way to the neighborhoods of Greenwich
Village.
Although
you can get real New York pizza many places in the city (even a quick slice at
Penn Station doesn’t disappoint), we like John’s of Bleeker Street. It’s small
with wooden booths etched with years of diners’ graffiti. Like Corbo’s,
the talented Italian guys who run it are no nonsense. No reservations, no
credit cards, no slices. Order a pie and a pitcher of soda and you’re good. And
really, what else do you need? What you get is a foldable, mouthwatering pizza.
In my book, if you can’t fold a slice, it’s not real pizza. Don’t give me those
blackened brick-oven pizzas. Don’t sell me on stuffed crust or pan pizza. You
fold it in half, let some of the oil drip off the end, and then take that first
mouthwatering bite that always burns the roof of your mouth because you just
can’t wait. That’s pizza that for some reason you can only get in New York.
True story:
My nine-year-old son never liked pizza. He rarely ate it. A few years ago we took
him to John’s for the first time. “This doesn’t
taste like pizza,” he proclaimed, gobbling it up. Our poor
little suburban boy who had only known the likes of Papa Gino’s and birthday
party pizzas had gotten a taste of his first real pie. It was a bittersweet day
for our family.
After stuffing ourselves at the pizzeria, what’s left to do but get a Junior’s cheesecake? I can never quite remember the flavor, because there’s nothing else like it. That first heavenly forkful reminds me of its light yet deep texture, delicate yet robust flavor, and the perfect balance of sweetness and tartness. It’s the epitome of New York cheesecake. In fact, it makes me want to picket The Cheesecake Factory and tell all their customers that what they’re selling might seem good, but it’s not cheesecake. It’s not even in the cheesecake family. It’s some globby composite of sweet upon sweet, which can be interchanged with chocolate or peanut butter or Oreos. That’s not cheesecake. Real cheesecake can stand alone, exposed, without any bells or whistles or even cherries.
After stuffing ourselves at the pizzeria, what’s left to do but get a Junior’s cheesecake? I can never quite remember the flavor, because there’s nothing else like it. That first heavenly forkful reminds me of its light yet deep texture, delicate yet robust flavor, and the perfect balance of sweetness and tartness. It’s the epitome of New York cheesecake. In fact, it makes me want to picket The Cheesecake Factory and tell all their customers that what they’re selling might seem good, but it’s not cheesecake. It’s not even in the cheesecake family. It’s some globby composite of sweet upon sweet, which can be interchanged with chocolate or peanut butter or Oreos. That’s not cheesecake. Real cheesecake can stand alone, exposed, without any bells or whistles or even cherries.
At the end
of the day, we make our way to the parking garage, feet sore, bellies stuffed,
palates humming with satisfaction. Oh yes, it’s all happiness as the flavors
play over again in my mind on the ride home. I go to bed exhausted but fulfilled.
But what do I wake up to? The knowledge that we have to drive three hours to
get food that tastes like something.
Like
lemmings, we all go to our chain restaurants and fast food joints, thinking we
are enjoying these foods because it’s what we’ve become accustomed to. But I
know better and believe me, it would be better not to know. I almost wish the
toll on the Tappan Zee Bridge was a mind eraser. You pay your $5 and you get
your memory erased of all those rich flavors that are still lingering on your
taste buds. Then you could happily go back to your white bread life without
knowing any better. I could go back to being a Stepford eater.
“Yes, I’ll
have the white chocolate caramel macadamia nut cheesecake, please. It’s
delicious.”
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