If
you ate Chinese food last night you took place in a custom as
entrenched as turkey and football, as latkes and sour cream, as…pastrami
and egg rolls?
"My personal joke is that I learned to speak
Yiddish in the Chinese restaurant from my customers." So says Ed
Schoenfeld, a Brooklyn-born Jew and owner of Red Farm, a popular Chinese
restaurant in New York City’s West Village.
Having cut his teeth
running the bygone influential Uncle Tai's Hunan Yuan on the Upper East
Side in the 1970s, Schoenfeld ascended to a culinary king, being named
"the curator of Chinese food in America" by Gourmet.
"If you're a New York Jewish guy," Schoenfeld said, "you grew up eating Chinese food. That’s what you do."
Think
a culinary marriage between Chinese and Jewish food is dubious? The
proof is in the...pastrami egg rolls, which is just one of Schoenfeld's
oddly delectable, beloved combos.
- Zachary Solomon for Jewniverse
No comments:
Post a Comment