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Save the Deli: In Search of Perfect Pastrami, Crusty Rye, and the Heart of Jewish Delicatessen »

Book cover image of Save the Deli: In Search of Perfect Pastrami, Crusty Rye, and the Heart of Jewish Delicatessen by David Sax

Authors: David Sax
ISBN-13: 9780151013845, ISBN-10: 0151013845
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Date Published: October 2009
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: David Sax

David Sax is a freelance journalist originally from Toronto. He is a regular contributor to Toronto Life, and most recently New York and Portfolio.

Book Synopsis

Part culinary travelogue, part cultural history, Save the Deli is a must-read for anyone whose idea of perfect happiness is tucking into a pastrami on rye with a pickle on the side

Corned beef. Pastrami. Brisket. Matzo balls. Knishes. Mustard and rye. In this book about Jewish delicatessens, about deli’s history and characters, its greatest triumphs, spectacular failures, and ultimately the very future of its existence, David Sax goes deep into the world of the Jewish deli. He explores the histories and experiences of the immigrant counterman and kvetching customer; examines the pressures that many delis face; and enjoys the food that is deli’s signature.

In New York and Chicago, Florida, L.A., Montreal, Toronto, Paris, and beyond, Sax strives to answer the question, Can Jewish deli thrive, and if so, how? Funny, poignant, and impeccably written, Save the Deli is the story of one man’s search to save a defining element of a culture — and the sandwiches — he loves.

Publishers Weekly

“This is a book about Jewish food,” Sax's prologue reminds, “and it would be a shame to read it on an empty stomach.” It's true; just a few chapters in, and you'll find yourself hungry for hot pastrami sandwiches, matzo ball soup, maybe even ready to try some gribenes (chicken skin fried in chicken fat). As freelance writer Sax explains, however, it's getting harder and harder for even the best delicatessens to stay open; the profit margins on sandwiches are atrocious, and young Jewish families tend not to embrace the food the way their ancestors did. Still, Sax has found a few truly outstanding delis, and not just in New York City—joyful moments in this otherwise elegiac travelogue come with the discovery of delicious schmaltz in Colorado, or the legendary smoked meats of Montreal. Along the way, he interviews deli owners, meat cutters and customers, digging deep into local histories wherever he visits. The well-crafted portraits don't string together perfectly, but individual chapters shine—such as the passages on the death and rebirth of Manhattan's Second Avenue Deli or the disappointment of Poland's attempts to reinvigorate a Jewish culture almost obliterated by the Holocaust. A helpful appendix includes addresses of all the delis Sax discusses and then some; readers in the right cities are sure to start planning visits straight away. (Oct. 19)

Table of Contents

Introduction
 
Part One: New York, Nu?
1 Next! Behind the Counter at Katz's Delicatessen
2 From Pushcarts to $15 Sandwiches: A Nosh of New York Deli History
3 Formica Philosophy: Why New York Needs Its Jewish Delicatessen
4 Pastraminomics: The Dollars and Senselessness of the New York Delicatessen Business
5 Death of a Deli: The 2nd Ave Deli
 
Part Two: USA: Coast to Coast with Latkes to Boast
6 Detroit: Motown's Deli Blues and Michigan's Suburban Jews
7 Chicago: Can Deli Return to the Windy City?
8 The Yucchuputzville Diaries Part 1: Goy West Young Man (St. Louis Kansas City—Denver—Boulder—Salt Lake City)
9 I Left My Kishkes in San Francisco
10 Los Angeles: Hooray for Hollywood
11 Las Vegas: Luck Be a Brisket Tonight
12 The Yucchuputzville Diaries Part 2: Schmaltz by Southwest (Scottsdale—Austin—Houston—New Orleans—Atlanta—Washington)
13 Florida: Where Deli Goes to Die
 
Part Three:Travels in the Deli Diaspora
14 Montreal: A Smoked Meat Kingdom
15 Toronto: Home Bittersweet Home
16 London: God Save the Deli
17 The Fine Art of Jewish Delicatessen in Belgium and Paris
18 Krakow: Heartburn from Poland's Tortured Past
 
Epilogue Deli's 2nd Coming ( Just Off 3rd Ave)
 
Food and Yiddish Appendix (for the goyim or woefully assimilated)
Listing of Delis
Acknowledgments
Illustration Credits
Index

Subjects