Read 97 Orchard: An Edible History of Five Immigrant Families in One New York Tenement Online
Authors: Jane Ziegelman
Tags: #General, #Cooking, #19th Century, #History: American, #United States - State & Local - General, #United States - 19th Century, #Social History, #Lower East Side (New York, #Emigration & Immigration, #Social Science, #Nutrition, #New York - Local History, #New York, #N.Y.), #State & Local, #Agriculture & Food, #Food habits, #Immigrants, #United States, #Middle Atlantic, #History, #History - U.S., #United States - State & Local - Middle Atlantic, #New York (State)
New York, 71-76
Northern Italian, 218-220
private, 170-171
signs, 27
Rhineland, 88
Riis, Jacob, 34, 223
riot, meat, 178-179
Rizzolo, Concetta, 211-212
Rogarshevsky family, xi, 125
Rogarshevsky, Abraham, 125, 142
Rogarshevsky, Fannie, 125, 141, 152, 158, 212-213
Rogashevsky children, 141-142
Romanian Jewish restaurants, 171-173
Roosevelt, Franklin, 199
Roosevelt, Teddy, 29, 73, 127, 131, 173
Rorer, Sarah Tyson, 224
rum, 31-32
Rumpolt, Marx, 91
“runners” (boardinghouse workers), 66-67
Russ & Daughters, 180
Russian Jews:
arrival on Lower East Side, 123-124
love of tea, 175-176
restaurant food, 175
Sabbath dishes, 105
Sabbath, Jewish:
cultural pressures, 104, 105
fish, 85, 87
food symbolism, 119
food, 84, 105, 155-156
German, 95-96
Saengverein
(German singing clubs), 44
salads:
Italian, 215
Jewish, 147
saloons, 33-34
sandwiches, 117, 127, 151
sanitary police, 114, 149
sauerkraut making, 24-26
sauerkraut man, 25-26
sauerkraut, recipe, 26
sausage factories, 169
sausages, 13, 22, 44
Scènes de la vie de Bohème
(Henry Murger), 38
Schaefer, Frederick, 32-33
Schaefer, Max, 32-33
schav, 147
schmaltz,
see
fat
Schneider, John, 6, 9, 124
Schneider’s Saloon, 9
Schnorrer’s Verein
, 42
school lunchrooms, and immigrants, 165-166
school lunchrooms, menu, 165-166
Schultz, Sadie, 139-140
Schwartz, Frieda, 140
Scotland, corned beef in, 78
Scribner’s Monthly
, 17
Seattle, 100
“servant question,” 53
servants, Irish:
New York, 52-55
culinary skills of 54-55
frustrations with, 53-54
introduction to American food traditions, 54-55
Settlement Cook Book
, 86
settlement houses:
cooking classes, 160-165
immigrant classes, 160
Lower East Side, 160-165
“model flats,” 163-164
sfinge
(Italian fried dough), 226-227
shabbos goy
(Gentile helper on Jewish Sabbath),
Josephine Baldizzi as, 212
Shanley, Charles Dawson, 27
Shavuot, 156
Shearith Israel (synagogue), 98
shellfish, Jews and, 98, 100-101
shetlach (Jewish market towns), 133, 142
shoppers, public markets, 17, 69-70
Sicilian bread, 209-210
Sicilian cafés, 222
Sicilians:
and bread, 207-212
Brooklyn, 208
family suppers, 196
importance of food to, 195
New York, 198
Sieghortner’s restaurant, 37
signs, New York City, 26-27
slave trade, 31-32
slave descendants, on Lower East Side, 2
Slavic foods, East Prussia, 103
“slumming,” on Lower East Side, 173-174
Smedley, Emma, 166
smells:
Collect pond, 5
Lower East Side, 23-24
snails, Italian, 214
social clubs, German, 42-45
costumes of, 43
social workers, tenement visits, 154
societies, Irish-American, 80
“Some Queer East Side Vocations,” 116
soup:
Jewish, 107, 145-147
lentil, recipe, 122-123
white bean, recipe, 122
chilled, 147
Southern Italians, biases against, 220-221
spaetzle, 12, 107
spaghetti con aglio e olio, recipe, 211-212
spaghetti, early description, 218-219
spaghetti, adoption by Americans, 223-225
spaghetti and meat balls, recipe, 224-225
Spewack, Bella, 154-155
St. Patrick’s Day, 80, 82
Staats-Zeitung
(New York), 36, 131
stale bread, 210
steamship companies, and immigrant food, 127
steerage, steamships:
conditions, 48-50, 134
food in, 49-50
health risks in, 49
poverty of passengers in, 50
regulation of conditions, 50
stewed fish, recipe, 86-87
stews:
German, 8-12
hasenpfeffer
, recipe, 10-11
veal with dried pear, recipe, 11-12
“stirabout” (Irish porridge), 56
strudel, cranberry, recipe, 159
stuffed cabbage, recipe, 140
sugar, and Irish immigrants, 63
sugar industry, New York, 201
supper, German, 8
sweatshops, 2
Sweeny, Daniel, 72
Sweeny’s (restaurant), 72, 76
“Table Tidbits Prepared Under Revolting Conditions,” 203-204
Taft, President, 136
tailors, German, 4
taverns, Jewish, 93-94
tchotchkes (cheap decorations), 158
tea:
at Russian Jewish cafés, 175-176
Irish and, 63
Telsh, Lithuania, 125
Temple Emanuel (synagogue), 99
tenement buildings, description, 1
tenement candy factories, 201-204
tenement candy, as health risk, 202-204
tenement courtyards, 1-2
tenement poultry farms, 114-117
“tenement problem,” 23
tenement sweatshops, 2
tenements:
and immigration, 5
communal nature, 153-154
early history, xii, 5, 6
food sharing in, 152-157
lack of privacy, 152-153
noisiness, 152-153
rear, 20
Text Book for Cooking and Baking
(Hinde Amchanitzki), 158-159
Thanksgiving banquet, Ellis Island, 130-131
Tompkins Square, 20
“trefa banquet,” 100
treyf
(“impure”), 98, 101
triticum durum
(wheat type), 207
Trow’s New York Business Directory, 166
tuberculosis, 142, 204
Turkeltaub family (fictional), dinner, 104-105
Turnverein
, 43-45
United States:
as land of bread and work, 208
demand for immigrant servants, 53
immigrant names for, 207
Irish boardinghouses in, 68
vegetables:
Italian, 214-215
pushcart market, 145, 147
vegetarian chopped liver, recipe, 179-180
vegetarian dishes, Jewish, 179-180
vegetarian restaurants, Jewish, 177-180
vegetarianism, United States, 178
Vereine
(German social clubs), 42-45, 80
vermicelli, 89
Vienna Bakery, 29-30
Vienna bread, 29-30
vinegar, spiced, recipe, 10
Vineland, New Jersey, 216
violence, attributed to Italians, 188
Volkfest
(German festival), 43-45
voyages, Irish immigrant, 48-50
Wage-Earner’s Budgets
(Louise More), 62-63
waiters:
dialect, 74
Irish, 55, 72, 74
Wald, Lillian, 154, 163
A Walker in the City
, 169
Wallis, Frederick, 132
Walton mansion, 68-69
Walton, William, 68-69
wards, Lower East Side, 21
Washington Market, 14, 15, 17-18
water, 97 Orchard Street, 7-8
watermelons, 18
West Indies, 77
wheat, Sicily, 207
“When Does Mama Eat?” 108-109
whiskey, 13, 59
Whitman, Walt, 38
Wilde, William, 59
Wise, Rabbi Isaac, 98, 100-101
Wolf, Rebekka, 112
women, Irish, as immigrants, 51-55
Wood, Bertha, 149-151
working class food, American, 129
World War I, and anti-German bias, 191-192
Yezierska, Anzia, 119-120, 161, 181
Yiddish theater district, 176
Yoke of the Thorah
(Henry Harland), 121-122
Yonah Schimmel, 177
Yourself and the Neighbours
(Seamus MacManus), 60
Zimmerman, Moses, 169
zucchini frittata, recipe, 210-211
This book would have no reason to exist if not for the Lower East Side Tenement Museum, the present-day 97 Orchard Street. I am forever indebted to Ruth Abram, founder of the museum and the woman who granted this project the spark of life. I also need to thank Morris Vogel and Helene Silver for their steadfast support, and David Favaloro and Derya Golpinar for sharing their time and their knowledge.
In the course of researching this book I have benefited from the guidance of a small army of food authorities, genealogists, historians, and librarians. I would like to thank Karen Franklin, Roger Lustig, Joel Hecker, Lori Lefkowitz, Vivian Ehrlich, Anne Mendelson, Joan Nathan, Lorie Conway, Roberta Saltzman, Eleanor Yadin, Amanda Siegel, Bonnie Slotnik, Barry Moreno, and Janet Levine. I am likewise grateful to the immigrants, their children, and grandchildren who shared their stories and their recipes. Among them are Barbara Levasseur, Flora Frank, Brian Biller, Josef Griliches, Hannah and Walter Hess, Maria Capio, Francine Herbitter, Lillian Chanales, Betsy Chanales, Frieda Schwartz, and Edy Geikert. And of course, I must thank my incredibly patient editor, Elisabeth Dyssegaard, and my agent, Jason Yarn. Finally, I would like to thank Marjorie and Aaron Ziegelman, Michael Coe, and my friends Stephen Treffinger, Steve Miller, and Joshua Patner for being such perceptive and tireless readers.
JANE ZIEGELMAN
is the director of the forthcoming culinary program at New York City’s Tenement Museum. The founder and director of Kids Cook!, a multiethnic cooking program for children, she has presented food-related talks and cooking classes in libraries and schools across New York City. Her writing on food has appeared in a number of newspapers, magazines, and books, including
The New Cook’s Catalog
, and she is the coauthor of
Foie Gras: A Passion
. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.
Foie Gras: A Passion
Jacket photograph © Bettmann/Corbis, 1890, Probably Lower East Side, New York City
Jacket design by Christine Van Bree
97 ORCHARD
. Copyright © 2010 by Jane Ziegelman. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
FIRST EDITION
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Ziegelman, Jane.
97 Orchard: an edible history of five immigrant families in one New York tenement
/ by Jane Ziegelman.—1st ed.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-06-128850-0 (hardback)
1. Food habits—New York (State)—New York—History—19th century. 2. Immigrants—Nutrition—New York (State)—New York—History—19th century. 3. Lower East Side (New York, N.Y.)—History—19th century. 4. Lower East Side (New York, N.Y.)—Social life and customs. I. Title.
GT2853.U5Z54 2010
394. 1‘20974741—dc22
2009049637
EPub Edition © April 2010 ISBN: 978-0-06-199790-7
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
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