[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference taveng::bagels

Title:BAGELS and other things of Jewish interest
Notice:1.0 policy, 280.0 directory, 32.0 registration
Moderator:SMURF::FENSTER
Created:Mon Feb 03 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1524
Total number of notes:18709

333.0. "From the Old Neighborhood" by TSE::MAGENHEIM (Mummy: Egyptian pressed for time) Thu Jul 30 1987 16:29

    While having a conversation with an acquaintance from NYC (the Bronx,
    to be exact), we started talking about things we missed from the
    old neighborhood.   Besides "Three Boys From Italy" pizza, and cheese
    cake that sank to the bottom of your stomach, another epicurean
    delight mentioned was eggcreams, and who made the best.
    
    The brand UBET Chocolate Syrup was used in this particular recipe.  
    
    Now, I don't know if its kosher or not (doesn't matter to me), but
    does anyone out there know where this particular brand is to be
    found in the Massachusetts/Southern N.H. region?  
    
    Anita
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
333.1Seltzer and UBet available in New HavenULTRA::WITTENBERGDelta Long = -d(sin A/cos Lat)Thu Jul 30 1987 16:5121
< Note 333.0 by TSE::MAGENHEIM "Mummy: Egyptian pressed for time" >
                         -< From the Old Neighborhood >-

>     another epicurean
>    delight mentioned was eggcreams, and who made the best.
>    
>    The brand UBET Chocolate Syrup was used in this particular recipe.  
>    
>    Now, I don't know if its kosher or not (doesn't matter to me), but

    Ubet syrup  is  kosher  and  comes  in  about  10 flavors (I don't
    recommend  the lemon-lime). I don't know about the greater Maynard
    area,  but  when  I  lived in New Haven, we got it (and seltzer in
    old-fashioned  seltzer  bottles, the other important ingredient in
    eggcreams)  from  Castle  Seltzer.  They  deliver  in a large area
    around New Haven, but I don't think that they'd come this far.  

    If you know of a supplier around here (for either seltzer or UBet)
    please let me know.

--David
333.2Try BrooklineCURIE::GOLDJack E. Gold, MRO3Thu Jul 30 1987 18:043
    I believe I have seen UBET chocolate syrup at The Butcherie in
    Brookline.
    Jack
333.3Old neighborhoods, aren't they grand?PCOCK::TURNOFGreetings from the Big AppleThu Jul 30 1987 19:0010
    
    RE:0
    
    
    So, nu, Anita - where in da Bronx are you from??  I'm from Pelham
    Parkway via the Grand Concourse & 169th Street (remember Temple
    Adath Israel??)
    
    Fredda T.
    
333.4No Habla?DIEHRD::MAHLERMotti the ModeratorThu Jul 30 1987 19:155

    Spent this past weekend in New York and went to the
    Bronx Zoo.  No one speaks english there.

333.5and I'm not even from N.Y.C.!FSLENG::CHERSONabout 3 mil shortThu Jul 30 1987 19:525
    Fox's Ubet can be acquired at the butcherie.  But you don't have
    to go there, I bought a jar at a Stop & Shop.  I don't get into
    it much as I am trying to regulate my late-night eating habits (:-).
    
    David
333.6Zoo talkREGENT::LUWISHFri Jul 31 1987 13:117
    Re: .4
    
    [No one speaks english at the Bronx Zoo]
    
    Right.  Last time I went there, all they spoke were grunts and shrieks
    and squeaks.   :-)
    
333.7Uptown GirlTSE::MAGENHEIMMummy: Egyptian pressed for timeFri Jul 31 1987 17:0715
    Re: .3
    
    I'm from further uptown, near Evander Childs H.S.  I lived on a
    street called Bartholdi Street, equidistant from Burke Avenue and
    Gun Hill Road, three blocks from White Plains Road.  I'd hate to
    see what that area's like, since it was in the midst of turning
    tacky seven years ago...  As Frost says, "You can never go home 
    again."
    
    Did you move to Pelham Parkway *after* growing up on the Concourse?
    
     
    Anita
    
   
333.8PCOCK::TURNOFGreetings from the Big AppleFri Jul 31 1987 18:4122
    
    RE: 7
    
    I was going into high school when I moved over to Pelham Parkway.
    Then I left for college and came back afterwards.  I'm one of those
    "lucky" New Yorkers who inherited a cheap apartment complete with
    indoor parking from their parents!!  I didn't have to leave - they
    left me!!  Real estate being what it is these days, my building
    is going co-op!!  You know that your neighborhood is "coming back"
    when the real estate moguls start the co-oping process!!  Forget
    computers, everyone should go into real estate that's where the
    big bucks are!!
    
    I know what you mean by "never go home again", when I did jury duty
    2 years ago and had to pass through the "old neighborhood" to get
    down to the courthouse, it was a very depressing site.
    
    I think I'll go home, stop in the local lunchenette and get a U-Bet
    Egg Cream!!
    
    Fredda T.
    
333.9got a sample?IOSG::LEVYQA BloodhoundSun Aug 02 1987 05:4712
    Hi,
    
    Mind if I interrupt here? Just like to know what is Kosher/ Jewish/
    Newyork or interesting about U-Bet Egg Cream? 
    
    Is it like a Cadburys cream egg (if you know what they are)?
    
    Thanks,
    
    Malcolm
    
    
333.10Egg Creams -- RE: .9SMURF::ROBMon Aug 03 1987 12:4318
    Re: 333.9
    
    Egg Creams are delicious drinks made with milk selzer and syrup
    (in that order, if you want the white foam on top of the drink!)
    and only well known in New York City, since that is where it originated
    and is popular.  
    
    As far as being kosher or Jewish, there is nothing unkosher about
    it, and since New York has a moderately sized Jewish population,
    I would guess that most Jews who are from New York (or are still
    there, unlike me!) know how delicious they are.
    
    Up here in New England, the only lunch counters that I know of that
    know how to make an egg cream are Tommy's Lunch, in Cambridge (Harvard
    Square almost) and Eisenberg's Delicatessen in Nashua, which is
    no longer in business.
    
    --Robert
333.11Egg Creams, continuedULTRA::ELLISDavid EllisTue Aug 04 1987 13:0612
    Re: 333.10 
    
    > Egg Creams are delicious drinks made with milk selzer and syrup
    > (in that order, if you want the white foam on top of the drink!)
    
My recipe for an egg cream is different:

Pour Fox's U-Bet chocolate syrup into the bottom (about 1" high in a 12-oz 
glass), then pour in some milk (more milk than syrup).  Now add seltzer,
stirring vigorously while adding.  Foaming action will overrun the top of the
glass if you're not careful.  Skill and care will make a rich, thick head
reaching just to the top.
333.12I didn't grow up in NY, NY...CADSYS::RICHARDSONTue Aug 04 1987 16:331
    Aren't there any EGGS in an "egg" cream??
333.13DIEHRD::MAHLERMotti the ModeratorTue Aug 04 1987 16:493
    Does a bear appreciate a clean restroom?

333.14more info?IOSG::LEVYQA BloodhoundTue Aug 04 1987 17:057
    I'm still lost on these foreign words!!
    
    Can you say what's 'milk selzer' ?
    I can probably guess syrup is a runny sugar solution and 'Fox's 
    U-B i' is a branded chocolate version? 

    I really think I need a taste - but not if on a diat
333.15not since Saratoga in '73DELNI::GOLDSTEINAll Hail Marx and Lennon (Bros. &amp; Sisters)Tue Aug 04 1987 21:1712
    There are different stories about the name "egg cream".
    
    One has it that a store was making a drink with eggs & soda, and
    another store made one cheaper without the egg.  The cheaper one
    became the International Standard Egg Cream.
    
    They taste good, but you need a real seltzer bottle.  Pouring it
    from a soda bottle just won't do.  And how many decent high-pressure
    soda fountains are left?  I think I last had one in college, and
    they closed down that fountain; the new building they replaced it
    with didn't have one.  (It had the modern low-pressure soda machines.
    And no egg cream.)
333.16Believe it or not...TSE::MAGENHEIMMummy: Egyptian pressed for timeWed Aug 05 1987 00:0536
    From Arthur Naiman's "Every Goy's Guide to Common Jewish Expressions":
    
    "EGG CREAM
    
    A NYC soda fountain drink made with milk, flavored syrup (usually
    chocolate) and seltzer (carbonated water).
    
    No eggs, no cream - though one theory has it that originally cream
    was used instead of milk and the name "egg cream" began as "ekht
    cream" - pure cream.  This would explain how the word "egg" got
    in there, since everyone agrees that egg creams never had any eggs
    in them."
    
    BTW, I highly recommend this book -it's a complete dictionary of
    Jewish expressions you;'re likely to come across in a conversation,
    joke, book or movie.  It also has origins of words/phrases, etc.,
    as well as jokes using the words or phrases.
    
    One example:
    
    High up in the castle, the dotted swiss curtains flutter in the
    wind, and the light of the full moon falls through the open window
    onto the flagstone floor of the princess' bedroom.
    
    A sudden rustle at the window - a vampire has perched on the window
    sill.  He slips down to the floor and creeps toward the princess
    in her bed.  As his shadow falls across her face, she stirs in her
    sleep and opens her eyes.
    
    Terror distorts her delicate features.  She wrenches herself upright;
    one hand clutches her nightgown tight around her neck, the other
    snatches a silver crucifix from her bedside table.  This she holds,
    trembling, between herself and the vampire's drooling fangs.
    
    He looks at the crucifix, smiles, and says:  "Sorry, lady, 'svet
    gornisht helfen."
333.17Ahh memoriesMAY20::MINOWJe suis Marxist, tendance GrouchoWed Aug 05 1987 03:036
It's what we in the midwest used to call a chocolate phosphate.

And, yes, you do need a high pressure soda fountain.

Martin.

333.18NYJMIS::HORWITZBeach BagelWed Aug 05 1987 21:094
    Re: .16
    
    So that's were Polansky got that scene for the "Fearless Vampire
    Killers".    
333.19Evander Anyone?TOPDOC::TEMPLETue Aug 11 1987 14:5615
    
    Re: .7
    
     Anita,
                                                                    
    Are you an Evander graduate?  I graduated in 19 mumble mumble. 
    Lived on Wallace near Allerton.  My folks had a yarn store on 
    Allerton, diagonally across from the Allerton Theatre (which 
    eventually turned into a porno flick movie house, now it's gone)
    
    I was back there last year.  Except for some minor changes - kosher
    bakeries to Chinese Restaurants, clothing stores to OTB places,
    it hasn't changed all that much.
    
    Charlotte
333.20Ben & Jerry's Egg CreamUSWAV1::ROMANLindaTue Aug 11 1987 17:333
    I was in a Ben & Jerry's ice cream store recently (in Marblehead,
    Ma.) and they listed egg creams as one of their beverages. I think
    it was about 90 cents.
333.21Is anyone born in Miami?WAGON::RITTNERThu Sep 10 1987 19:089
    I just happened to look at this note even though I'm not from New
    York City (though I've spent a lot of time there and went to school
    upstate). I grew up in Miami and Miami Beach. You can get some good
    egg creams down there, too! Of course, you'll probably tell me they
    were imported from New York (and they probably were!)!
    
    Thanks for the memories...and the recipes...
    
    Elisabeth
333.22Another former resident!OBLIO::DROBNERFri Sep 11 1987 01:2112
    		- I was -
    
    I was born and raised in North Miami Beach (near West Dixie Highway
    and Miami Garden Drive).  I even went to school in Miami (FIU),
    but as soon as I recieved my degree I left and will never return.
    
    I was planning on going back down for a visit (first time in over
    5 years) to visit with some friends who did not leave Florida, they
    just moved further north to West Palm Beach.  Anything to get out
    of Miami!
    
    /Howard
333.23And AnotherDARTH::SCHORRFri Sep 11 1987 13:306
    I grew up in North Miami Beach (Which is not part of Miami Beach).
    I lived on 175th St. and 11 Ave.  I went to Norland High graduated
    in 1965.  My wife also comes from the area around Norland.  I wouldn't
    want to live there now.
    
    WS
333.24Moon over Miami...WAGON::RITTNERFri Sep 11 1987 15:3917
    Most of my immediate family still lives in North Miami, Surfside,
    and the Kendall area of Miami. There are some good sides to south
    Florida!! Lot's of young people live there (many more than when
    I was growing up). There's lot's more culture (concerts, museum,
    theatre, very good restaurants, etc.) than when I was growing up!
    No snow for those who are not interested in snow. Yes, some of the
    changes aren't great, and you do have to be careful about your safety
    in some areas more than others. As the saying goes, I also love
    New York, but I'm very careful when I'm in New York too.
    
    Nothing personal - I just like to balance negative comments about
    South Florida with some positive comments.
    
    Elisabeth
    
    PS - And you can grow mangoes, oranges, grapefruits, bananas, and
    avocadoes in your backyard!!
333.25I disagreeDARTH::SCHORRFri Sep 11 1987 16:238
    The changes are more drastic.  My mother and mother-in-law have
    been mugged several times.  My mother in her own garage (private
    home).  They both live in Hollywood.  My cousin lives in Kendall
    area and their level of parania is extremely high.  But then again
    maybe it isn't parania but normal vigalence.
    
    WS
    
333.26just a different view...WAGON::RITTNERFri Sep 11 1987 16:316
    I agree that South Florida changed drastically and in some very
    negative ways over a very short period of time. I feel very sad
    about these changes. I just wanted to balance the negatives with
    some positive aspects of living in South Florida.
    
    Elisabeth
333.27A part-timerMAY20::MINOWJe suis Marxist, tendance GrouchoFri Sep 11 1987 20:3011
I went to Junior High in Miami for a few months when I was 12 -- my
grandmother was ill and my mother went to stay with her for a while.
The contrast with Chicago was extraordinary.  I'd have to look at
a map, by I think we lived south of Lincoln (or is it Collins) near
a park (Flamingo?).

It was a far more social school than my old one, but the homework
was much easier.

Martin.

333.28WAGON::RITTNERFri Sep 11 1987 21:056
    Yes, you're right - south of Lincoln Road by Flamingo Park. I went
    to "summer day camp" at Flamingo Park the summer before junior high.
    That area is part of Miami Beach, as opposed to Miami (two different
    cities). That area has definitely changed a great deal!! 
    
    Elisabeth
333.29Buyer For N.Miami Condo/Car??????CRETE::LEVITANTue Sep 15 1987 20:5720
    To those of you who have written about North Miami - you are
    reaffirming a terrible feeling that my family has.  You see, my
    parents have a condo in Point East in North Miami.  It's a beautiful
    2 bedroom and has to be sold.  My father is ill and is now in a
    nursing home up here - my mother is with my brother waiting for
    housing - and she not only has to sell her new car (1987 Mazda with
    less than 3,000 miles in case anyone is interested) but she also
    has to sell the condo.  
    
    Living up here this winter is going to be very difficult.  But the
    most difficult is that she must sell the condo - and the prices
    down there have dropped drastically.  Her only hope is selling to
    someone already down there who wants to buy for a family member.
     
    If anyone knows of anyone who is interested in Point East - and
    the car - please contact me at 223-5054.  Oh - the car is a steal
    at $10,000 and she'd like to sell the condo at $60K.  It's a beauty
    but it is North Miami.  Any help would be appreciated.
    
    
333.30WAGON::RITTNERWed Sep 16 1987 18:4125
   > It's a beauty but it is North Miami. Any help would be appreciated.
    
    First, I'm sorry about the difficulties your family is going through...
    
    Second, it might help if you would express a more positive attitude
    about North Miami. I have tried to balance some of the less than
    positive comments about Miami in this topic with some positive aspects
    of living in Miami. Most or all cities have their serious problems.
    Miami got a large dose of serious big-city problems after being
    a fairly small-town city. The government certainly hasn't helped
    as much as it could have at certain times of crisis down there -
    a lot of the people who live there are doing the best they can!
    Anyway, my parents live in North Miami - I certainly don't mind
    visiting them as often as I can. I hope you understand my feelings
    that Miami is used as a scapegoat sometimes (as real as many of
    the problems are - and shows like Miami Vice don't help - there
    are positive aspects to Miami).
    
    I really do hope things work out for your family. If I hear of anyone
    looking for a condo I'll let you know. And I'll mention it to my
    family.
    
    Sincerely,
    
    Elisabeth
333.31Back to eggcreams (and old New York)DSSDEV::CHASENHarris ChasenTue Dec 29 1987 19:3041