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"Intellectuals are reliable lagging indicators, near infallible guides to what used to be true."
Charles R. Morris
" Time is really the only capitol that any human being has, and the one thing he (sic) can't afford to lose."
Edison
"Intellectuals are reliable lagging indicators, near infallible guides to what used to be true."
Charles R. Morris
"The biggest human temptation is to settle for too little."
Sweet Akita! Love your red lei-
Although I enjoy the local foods of Hawaii (a lot!) there will always be a special place in my heart for authentic Deli (delicatessen) handed out with jokey brusqueness in an urban (read: "gritty") setting. And no corporate chains, please! I did, after all, grow up on the East Coast. So only a family owned & operated place, one where you stand at the counter, qualifies.
I still remember the Koch family: Sid, Frances, Louis & Bobby, who operated a very tiny, crowded, neighborhood beacon, cop hang-out, and social service agency (for all the college students from the nearby universities: Penn and Drexel who over ran the West Philadelphia from Fall to Spring).
I was a neighborhood hippy/artiste cleaning banks at night for MY father's family business. I was proud to be working-class, and was therefore stubbornly alienated from the college kids AND the cops, but I shared Philly born & breds with the Kochs, in fact Sid had known my taxi driving grandfather.
The wait was long at Koch's Deli, but they passed around so much good sliced cheese and cold cuts on waxed paper that you were full by the time you got your sandwich. And what a sandwich! Even the glorification of memory does not exaggerate, I'm certain. Only the TOP quality stuff available, but rarely purveyed, always demanded by Sid. All piled ridiculously high on a real Italian roll that had been baked fresh that morning at Amoroso's bakery. Huge, long and "two-meals" heavy - no gristle, unnecessary fat, or additives. Just pure nourishment and joy! All proceeding from the decency and Philly Aloha of the Koch family at 47th & Locust, around 11 blocks from my grandparent's house on Cedar Avenue. These were the streets where my parents grew up, met and married.
I find myself longing for those sandwiches sometimes. Unfortunately I judge all pretenders (and they are all pretenders) by those heroic Hoagies. (you might know their pale descendants as Po` Boys or Subways).
I also pause sometimes and remember the Koch's themselves - all gone now - with love and gratitude for their generosity of spirit, roast beef, and a "tab" on long weekends with no cash. They quietly did a lot for the neighborhood oddball (trying to be a writer) now that I look back with the eyes of an adult.
And so I remain, grateful for the food, love and life lessons I learned hanging around Koch's. Returning to Philadelphia for a business trip decades later I was ready to remind Bobby who I was. "I know who you are." he said first, as if I'd been there the day before. He was the last of them and died years ago. A friend from back in the day called me here in Hawaii and sent me the obituary.
I sure would love to spend a half hour in that past, to laugh at Louis' crappy jokes (lovely man!) one more time. So thank you, Koch family. You were family to so many people, so many generations of college students. And truly to me. Nobility behind a slicer. RIP.
Today's post is dedicated to the memory of Milton Parker co-owner/operator of New York's iconic Carnegie Deli since 1976. He began each day's lunch with a foot-long hot dog. This week his daughter placed one in his coffin. He was 90 years old. And don't get me started about REAL sour tomatoes!
A L O H A! Cloudia
What can I say; it's 3AM and you've diverted me to look for a plane ticket to Philly.
ReplyDeletehaha, CC. Love this post! Amen.
ReplyDeleteLately, I have been buying footlong ham or BLT subs from Subway -- just $5, can you believe it? So I eat 1/2 for breakfast and 1/2 for lunch. Can't beat the delis in NYC, though. Miss 'em.
Thanks for the memories.
Ah lovely memories for you m'dear. I had to look twice at that beach photograph, I couldn't believe I was seeing a supermarket trolley! :0
ReplyDeleteThe Charles R Morris quote is superb.
ReplyDeleteThere's a little diner in Purcellville, Va and whenever my wife and I are back, we have to stop by for breakfast and dinner several times during the week. I'm hungry thinking about it:)
ReplyDeleteLoved--and needed--the Merton quote.
ReplyDeleteI know what you mean about the delis. We in Waterbury have the Nardelli deli. Nothing like it. The secret really is in the sauce!
Cloudia, if you get a taste for those sandwiches or the neighborhood, you might want to wait a month or two. Very cold up here still.
ReplyDeleteThat first picture made me think I'd gotten the wrong blog.
ReplyDeleteHowever, in sandwich discussion, I must defend the New Orleans Po'Boy. I'm afraid the "hoagie" would be hokey in comparison. LOL.
Oh, Cloudia! I remember Koch's so well, all the years when I was at Penn, and then living at 42nd and Pine. I'm afraid the independent delis are going the way of the dinosaur, replaced by Subway and Firehouse Subs and Quizno's and all the other chains.
ReplyDeleteBobby Koch made an impression on generations of college students-- and how many of our professors can make the same claim?
Cloudia! I don't think you mentioned in your "Aloha: Where You Like Go?" book that YOUR grandfather drove a taxi! Cool! Bravery and rowdiness is genetic! (Could skip a generation, but hope your folks are doing alright.)Cheers, DrumMajor
ReplyDeleteI haven't had a decent pastrami on rye since I left Detroit, either!
ReplyDeleteThe sad thing is to go back to where you used to live, mouth watering, ready for that heavenly sandwich only to find a Starbucks where the best sanwhich shop ever used to be.
ReplyDeleteGreat quotes as always, Cloudia. I'm a transplanted east coast person also, of course you know I'm in Seattle :)
ReplyDeleteOne of the things I still miss about the east are the deli's--Seattle boasts a few, one Russian deli that rocks, but there aren't too many. And don't even get me started about the bakeries back east :)
Hugs to you, Cloudia.
This is a great post Cloudia and a lovely tribute to your friends from way back when. We also tend to hunt out the family run, mom and pop places everywhere we go. It's getting harder to find them these days but if they're out there, we'll be walking through their doors as soon as we locate them.
ReplyDeletenow i want to eat those yummy sandwiches!
ReplyDeleteRIP to all those magnificent departed souls.
Damn it - We invented the sandwich, but you guys do them so well. Nostalgic post.
ReplyDeleteWalking Man: Pat's or Ginos?
ReplyDeleteGigi: Mahalo for dropping by!
Ake: YES! Why isn't it full of homeless gear? A mystery trolley at da beach!
Dave King; YOU R superb!
David C: Thanks for leaving a comment! We are on the same (menu) page, ;-)
Sandy: And in the SACRED sauce ;->
Junosmom: Thanks for helping the animals through it!
Charles: "Hokey Hoagie". Your charming illiteration has dazzled me into submission . . . i want a Po` Boy now TOO!!
Neil P):
"Bobby Koch made an impression on generations of college students-- and how many of our professors can make the same claim?" Oh yeah!
I'm so touched that you found this post!! Yo! glad to see ya! Please do come back. . . . . Now about the Tastykakes. . . .
Drum Major: Eyes FRONT! Well done ;-)
Deborah: I KNEW you were gritty for a swallow! Aloha, pal!
Grandpa: You just outlined a novel called: "You can't go home again."
You're in da south now, update it (you homeward angel ;-)
Hugs, Gran!!
Denise: Thanks (as always!) for stopping by. I'll see you off the beaten path, sistah ;-)
Magic Eye: Your soul is a beauty!
Brother T: How do you think we American's feel as we see China run away with innovation and manufacturing? So glad to see YOU, Sir!!
This post reminded me of the great delis in Montreal where one could get wonderful smoked meat sandwiches. They don't have any in Toronto to match the quality.
ReplyDelete