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97 Orchard

Page 26

by Jane Ziegelman


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  Academy of Arts, 40, 41

  Age of Migration, xi

  Ainsworth’s Magazine, 78

  alcohol consumption, in New York, 31-32

  alcohol production, in United States, 31-32

  ale, English, 32

  Aleichem, Sholem, 174-175

  Allaire Iron Works, 6

  Allaire, James, 6

  Amchanitzki, Hinde, 158-159

  America, abundance of, 191

  American food traditions, and Irish servants, 54-55

  Americanization:

  of immigrants, 165-166

  and school lunchrooms, 165-166

  Americans:

  as pie-eaters, xiv attitude toward alcohol, 34

  attitude toward Italian immigrants, 187-188

  attraction to German foods, 41

  dislike for Italian food, 217-218

  introduction of immigrants foods, xiv

  love of spaghetti, 223-225

  Ansche Chesed (synagogue), 95

  anti-Semitism, 133

  apartments, at 97 Orchard, 7

  arancini (rice balls), 210

  The Art of Jewish Cooking, 151-152

  Ashkenazi Jews, culinary traditions, 88-91

  Astor, John Jacob, as tenement investor, 5-6

  Atlantic Gardens beer hall, 35-36

  “Aunt Babette” (Bertha Kramer), 101, 110, 111

  Aunt Babette’s Cook Book (Bertha Kramer), 97-98, 122

  The Auxiliary Cook Book (Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society), 101

  baccala (salt codfish), recipe, 226

  bacon, and Jews, 98

  bakeries, German, description, 27-28

  bakers, German, 27-31

  Baldizzi family:

  and bread, 210

  and Depression, 199

  Christmas dinner, 226-227

  life, xi, 184, 197-200, 212

  meals, 199-200

  move to Brooklyn, 225-226

  Baldizzi, Adolfo, 197-198, 212-213, 225

  Baldizzi, John, 199

  Baldizzi, Josephine, 199, 212

  Baldizzi, Rosaria, 197-200, 212-213, 225-227

  bananas, 127

  banquets:

  German, 43, 80

  German-Jewish, 121-122

  Irish-American, 80

  medieval, 91

  messianic, 91-92

  Thanksgiving, 130-131

  Beecher, Miss, 70

  “beef an” (corned beef and beans), 73

  beer halls:

  food served at, 36

  German, xiv, 34-36, 42

  Signs, 27

  beer production, New York, 31-32

  beer, German:

  as family drink, 34-36,

  at picnics, 44-45

  bock, 25

  Germany, 22, 31-36

  lager, 33, 44-45

  Bennet, James Gordon, 73

  berches (Jewish ritual bread), 91

  Beyer, Annie, 141

  Beyer, Joseph, 141

  “beygals” (bagels), xiv

  Black Hand, 188

  blintzes, 106, 156

  Bloch Printing, 98

  Bloch, Edward, 98

  Blood of My Blood (Richard Gambino), 195

  boarders, 142

  boardinghouse dwellers, as “hash eaters,” 70-71

  boardinghouses:

  cuisine of, 70-71

  food supplies of, 17

  immigrant, 66-70

  Irish, 67-70

  Italian, 186

  kitchens, 69

  landladies, 69-70

  New York, 1, 221

  Bohemians, New York, 37-39

  bondes (potato dish), 109

  book vendors, pushcart market, 158

  borscht, 147

  The Boston Cooking School Cook Book, 224

  bouillon cubes, 187

  Bowery, the, 20-21, 35-36

  boycott, meat, 178-179

  bread crumbs, 210-212

  bread peddlers, 208-209

  bread:

  German, 28

  importance to Sicilians, 207-212

  Sicilian, 209-210

  symbolism, 208

  traditions in New York, 28

  Vienna, 29-30

  Breakstone & Levine, 152

  breweries, 32-33

  brewers, German, 32-33

  A Brief Account of the Author’s Interview with His Countrymen (Jeremiah O’Donovan), 67-68

  Brieneh, Hannah (fictional character), 181

  “Bringing Up Father,” 81

  Brooklyn Eagle, 10

  Brooklyn:

  Baldizzi family in, 225-226

  Sicilians in, 195, 208

  brothels, 52-53

  Brown, Mary, 52

  Browne, Junius Henri, 15

  burial societies, German, 22

  butchers, signs, 26-27

  butter, Irish and, 58, 63

  butter, Jews and, 111

  buttermilk, 60

  cabbage, 61, 78

  caciocavallo (Italian cheese), 194

  cafés:

  as political clubs, 175-176

  East Side, xiv

  Hungarian Jewish, 172-174

  kibitzing in, 174-175

  Russian Jewish, 174-175

  Sicilian, 222

  cakes, German, 30-31

  campanilismo (Italian love of hometown), 222

  candy factories, 201-204

  candy, Italian, 200, 204-207

  carp, in Jewish cuisine, 83-84, 86-87

  Castle Garden, 63-64

  Catherine the Great, 132-133

  census:

  1850, 2-4

  1870, 3

  1880, 4

  history of, 3-4

  Irish, 59

  pushcart, 145

  Centennial Exhibition (Philadelphia), 29

  challah bread, 87, 90, 91, 155, 156

  challah recipe, 157-158

  Chanales, Lillian, 180

  charity, stigma, 154-155

  Chicago Tribune, 224

  chicken fat, 118

  chicken market, Lower East Side, 117

  chicken noodle soup, 107

  children:

  German, and beer, 34-35

  Lower East Side, as firewood collectors, xiii

  Chinese railroad workers, and food, 187

  cholent, 103, 141

  chop suey, farmer’s, 147

  chopped liver, vegetarian, recipe, 179-180

  Chotzinoff, Samuel, 170

  Christmas baccala (salt codfish), recipe, 226

  Christmas dinner, Italian, 226-227

  Christmas traditions:

  German in America, 25

  New York, 79-80

  Cincinnati, 97, 98, 100

  Citizens’ Association, 114

  Clapp, Henry, 38

  “coffee and cake shops,” 71-72

  coffee cake:

  German, 30-31

  recipe, 30-31

  coffee, Hungarian Jews and, 172-173

  Cohen, Fannie, 155-158

  Collect pond, 5

  confectioners, Italian, 204

  confetti (Italian candy), 200, 204

  Congregation Emanuel (synagogue), 86

  contadini (Southern Italian peasants), 195

  cookbooks:

  German-Jewish, 91, 110

  Jewish, 98, 158-159

  cooking classes, settlement house, 160-165

  cooks, boardinghouse, 17, 70

  cooks, Ellis Island, 139-140

  Cooper, John, 89

  Cork, Ireland, 58, 77

  corned beef, 70

  corned beef and cabbage, 76-82, 129

  Council Cook Book (Council of Jewish Women), 101

  The Country Housewife’s Family Companion (William Elllis), 77

  courtyards, tenement, 1-2, 7

  credit, buyi
ng on, 14

  Crisco Recipes for the Jewish Housewife (Procter & Gamble), 118

  Crisco, 118

  croccante (almond brittle), recipe, 206-207

  Cromwell, Oliver, 56

  Crusades, 89

  cucuzza (Italian squash), 216

  Daily Forward, 104, 146

  dairy foods, Irish, 56, 57

  dairy restaurants, Jewish, 177-180

  dandelion-pickers, Italian, xiii dandelions, wild, 215-216

  Davidis, Henrietta, 9, 12, 26

  De Voe, Thomas, on markets, 15-17

  DeCasseres, Benjamin, 40-41

  “delicatessen habit,” 167-168

  delicatessens:

  and East European Jews, 169-170

  aromas, 169

  backlash against, 167-168

  German, 19

  herring dishes at, 19-20

  New York, 166-171

  products, 167

  Delmonico’s, 37

  deportees, love of Ellis Island food, 130

  Deutsche Bund (“German League”), 21

  Deutsche-Amerikanische Schutzengesellchaft, 43

  Diner, Hasia, 59

  dining room, Ellis Island, 126-131

  dining rooms, German-Jewish, 99

  dinner staples, nineteenth-century America, xiv

  dinners, German-Jewish, 104-106, 121, 122

  Dinty Moore’s, 81

  Dolan, Patrick, 72-74

  Dolan’s Restaurant, 72-74

  domestic science movement:

  and delicatessens, 167-168

  and immigrant food, 163-166

  and Italian immigrants, 193

  United States, 160-161, 224

  doughnuts, 73

  dumplings:

  accompaniments, 110

  German 12-13, 21

  green, recipe, 12-13

  potato, 109-111

  Dutch Reformed Presbyterian Church, 4

  East European Jews, and delicatessens, 169

  East Prussia:

  culinary traditions, 102-103

  history, 93-94

  Jews, 94

  Easter, Little Italy, 204

  Eat and Be Satisfied (John Cooper), 89

  eating habits, Jewish immigrant, 149-151

  Educational Alliance, 160, 162

  egg vendors, 107

  eggplants in the oven, recipe, 217

  Elizabeth Street, 198, 209

  Ellis Island:

  as “island of tears,” 131

  as molder of future citizens, 132

  deportees, 126

  description, 125-132

  detainees, 125-126, 132

  dining room, 126-131

  dormitories, 126

  food contractors at, 127-128

  inspection of new arrivals at, 136

  kosher food at, 135-140

  lunch stand, 127, 134

  poor treatment of immigrants at, 131-132

  reforms at, 132

  employment agencies, 52-53

  England, interference in Ireland, 56

  English culture in New York, 48

  Enlightenment, Jewish, 95-96

  Ermich’s, 36

  Essex Market, 19

  ethnic biases, against Italians, 187-193

  Europe:

  Age of Migration in, xi

  medieval food culture, 88

  potatoes, 107-108

  European immigration, peak, 125

  The Fair Cook Book (Congregation Emanuel), 86-87

  family supper, Italian, 195-196

  famines, Ireland, 48, 59

  The Famous Cook Book (Congregation Temple de Hirsch), 100, 110

  Farmer, Fannie, 9, 224

  farms:

  Ireland, 56-57

  Italian, 216

  fat:

  chicken, 118

  hydrogenated, 118

  Jewish use of, 111-113

  feast foods, Italian, 196-197

  feste (Italian festivals), 204-206

  Fifth Avenue Hotel, 80

  Fine & Schapiro, 169

  First Principles of Household Management, 71

  fish hash, recipe, 71

  Fishel, Harry, 136-137

  Fisher’s Alley, 23

  Five Points (neighborhood), 5, 20, 65-66, 220

  flavors, Jewish food, 149-151

  Fleischmann, Louis, 29-30

  Fleischmann’s Instant Yeast, 30

  foie gras, 114, 116

  foie gras, faux, recipe, 116

  food:

  customs, European, in America, xiv-xv

  distribution, shadow economy, 191

  expenses, Irish immigrants, 62-63

  exports, Ireland, 57-58, 77

  laws, Jewish, see kashruth

  merchants, Lower East Side, 180-181

  peddlers, Dublin, 78-79

  rackets, 115, 231-232n

  sharing, 152-157

  stores, Lower East Side, 152

  trades, ethnic, 27

  sacredness of in Jewish culture, 119

  food-joy, Jewish, 119-122

  Foods of the Foreign-Born in Relation to Health (Bertha Wood), 149

  foods, forbidden, 95-101

  force-feeding, geese, 112

  Foster, George, 76

  14th Street, as entertainment district, 39-40

  frankfurters, 22, 26, 41, 169, 170

  Frederick the Great, 108

  Frishwasser, Regina, 146-147

  fruit, at pushcart markets, 147

  Fulton Market, 14, 18

  Gabel, Paul, 166-167

  “Gallery of Missing Husbands,” 104

  Gambino, Richard, 195, 207

  gardens, home, 216

  garment industry, home workers, 202

  gefilte fish, 87-88, 91-93, 103, 155-156

  gefilte fish recipe, 92-93

  Gellis, Isaac, 169

  generosity, of tenement dwellers, 154-157

  Gentile, Maria, 206, 217

  German foods:

  in East Prussia, 103

  transmission to Americans, 41

  German immigrants, biases against, 191-192

  German Jews,

  arrival in New York, 98

  delicatessens, 168-169

  holiday foods, 105-106

  poor, foods of, 106-107

  Sabbath observances, 96

  secular education, 96

  use of potatoes, 107-111

  Germans:

  and alcohol, 34

  as model immigrants, 37

  bakers, 27-31

  breweries, 32-33

  culinary footprint in America, 55

  dialects, 21

  dinners, 118-119

  dumplings, 12-13

  food trades, 27

  grocers, 13-14

  lunch rooms, 36-37

  markets, 2

  meeting halls, 42-43

  noodles, 12-13

  northern, as fish eaters, 19

  pancakes recipe, 39

 

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