Potatoes Are So 1910 . . .
. . . so the knish gets gentrified:
Posted: October 19th, 2007 | Filed under: Feed, There Goes The Neighborhood, What Will They Think Of Next?They may say potato is king at Yonah Schimmel Knish Bakery, but it is starting to get some competition from nontraditional ingredients.
While the bakery is still firmly devoted to its original savory and sweet cheese knishes, special knishes periodically appear on the menu that reflect the neighborhood’s changing tastes and demographics. As the knishery moves closer to its centennial in 2010, it now caters to a number of distinct crowds: the traditional knish lover who grew up on them; tourists who don’t know what a knish is; and a newer, younger generation that may not necessarily have had knishes before or know they are supposed to be eaten with a dollop of mustard.
With these varied groups in mind, Yonah Schimmel now produces special knishes, including jalapeno and cheddar, salmon and pizza — and even pumpkin-raisin in October and November.
“It tastes like pumpkin pie,” employee Dane Lepson said of the pumpkin-raisin knish.
“I invent lots of new ones,” Lepson said. “Do you know what the next knish is going to be?”
“Ice cream?” manager Alex Wolfman joked.
“Spinach and feta,” Lepson said.
This is a far cry from the knishes Yonah Schimmel himself made when he opened the store in 1910.