Boogaloo On 2nd Avenue

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Boogaloo On 2nd Avenue Page 34

by Mark Kurlansky


  "Really? You won't laugh?"

  "Where?"

  "Yellowstone Park," she confessed.

  "Yellowstone Pa ... Why?"

  "I want to see the geyser, and the bears. And I miss mountains."

  "I always wanted to go to Carlsbad Caverns."

  "What do they have?"

  "Bats, I think—"

  "Oh," said Sonia. "Sarah got into a preschool."

  "With swimming lessons?"

  "I don't know."

  "Learning swimming is important. It says so in the Talmud."

  Nathan knew that he would never again taste that dangerous hunger. He would never dare, though it might occasionally visit him in a dream, just as Klara had intruded on Harry's sleep unexpectedly all his life. Nathan would have to live with his lie. That was Karoline's curse on him. And he knew that it was not his dreams that he needed to worry about. Someday, in a dark tunnel under Manhattan, a nameless demon would once again, without warning, grab him by the throat and cut off all the air.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  The Kishka Good-Bye

  NATHAN AWOKE remembering his dream. The sidewalk was lined with palm trees that hissed in the breeze, and the sun was so bright that it hurt his eyes. He saw Birdie Nagel in a sundress with a green parrot perched on her shoulder. And Mrs. Skolnik in a red-and-white bathing suit with a red wraparound skirt and large red-and-white hoop earrings. Arnie was sitting on the sidewalk in a turquoise shirt with red parrots and green leaves. He was sitting under a hot pink parasol that was torn and a little faded, and he was still wearing his wool beret but had a pink flamingo pin stuck on it.

  "I found it on the beach," Arnie explained, and Nathan knew he meant the umbrella.

  "God, it's great to see you. I thought you were dead."

  "You know, they ship you to Staten Island and then to Boca."

  Suddenly he heard someone singing. Nathan recognized it. It was Irving Berlin.

  I'm going on a long vacation,

  Oh, you railroad station,

  First in years, so give three cheers...

  "Dad?"

  It was Harry Nathan ran up to him, but on the way, still dressed in army fatigues, he saw Finkelstein, who had died at Khe Sanh.

  "How could you be here?"

  "How? What do you mean, how? I'm from the neighborhood. They offered me a package—car rental included, medium compact!"

  When Nathan woke up and reviewed this dream, he remembered that neither Arnie nor his father was going to show up in Boca or anywhere else. Harry did not exist anymore. His existence had been canceled. Like Ruth, Nathan understood this but could not comprehend it.

  "What's this about being Italian?" Chucho Vega wanted to know.

  "There was no future in being a Puerto Rican grocer," said Felix. "The Italians are doing well. The Puerto Ricans are going out of business. Let's face it, the Loisatda es cast acabado. This neighborhood is finished."

  "Yeah," Chow Mein said reflectively, stroking his stubby ponytail by the side of his neck. "Fartik. Finished. Like boogaloo."

  "No," said Felix. "Boogaloo might come back. But this is gastado, acabado, finito, se acabo—it's over."

  Twelve Recipes

  from the Neighborhood

  CAPONATA

  SAL FIRST'S CAPONATA

  This is my mother's recipe. Any other way of making caponata and they would just laugh at you in Palermo.

  2 nice big eggplants

  Sicilian sea salt from Trapani

  Olive oil, cold-pressed, virgin Sicilian—don't use that stuff from Tuscany

  and Italy, and if you use Spanish, you should shoot yourself

  1 large onion, sliced

  3 ripe plum tomatoes, peeled, seeded, and chopped

  1 cup Sicilian red wine vinegar—if you use French, you'll be sorry

  2 tablespoons Sicilian salted capers, soaked and dried

  1 cup of the big Sicilian green olives

  Freshly ground black pepper

  Cut the eggplant into small cubes. Let stand in salt for 2 hours.

  Heat the olive oil in a skillet with I cube of eggplant. When the eggplant starts to sizzle, add the rest.

  In a separate pan, saute onions and tomatoes and then a bit of water. After 10 minutes, add the rest of the ingredients and cook for another 10 minutes. Nothing else! Leave it alone.

  SAL A'S CAPONATA

  2 nice big eggplants

  Salt

  Olive oil

  1 large onion, sliced

  4 ripe plum tomatoes, peeled, seeded, and chopped

  2 teaspoons sugar

  1 cup red wine vinegar

  2 tablespoons Sicilian salted capers, soaked and dried

  1 cup of the big Sicilian green olives

  ½ teaspoon unsweetened cocoa powder

  Freshly ground black pepper

  2 ounces blanched sliced almonds

  Cut the eggplant into small cubes. Let stand in salt for 2 hours.

  Heat the olive oil in a skillet with I cube of eggplant. When the eggplant starts to sizzle, add the rest.

  In a separate pan, saute onions, then add tomatoes and a bit of water. After 10 minutes, add the rest of the ingredients except the almonds and cook for another 10 minutes.

  When finished, sprinkle top with sliced almonds.

  SALT COD

  ROSA'S FRIDAY BACALA POMIDORA

  Buy only a nice, well-cured bacala that you can grab by the tail and the whole thing will stick straight out like a board of wood. Soak for 3 days. Keep changing the water. For the last 24 hours, pinch off a taste from time to time. It should taste not too salty, but a little. Be careful not to soak all the salt out, or the curing, the soaking, the whole thing was for nothing.

  Fry the fish in virgin olive oil. Heat a tomato sauce that can be made only in the summertime from ripe summer tomatoes skinned, seeded, and simmered slowly with a pinch of salt and a pinch of sugar and fresh-picked oregano leaves. Pour the sauce over the fish. The sauce freezes well to use the rest of the year.

  SAL FIRST'S SICILIAN BACALA

  First of all, forget about this Neapolitano thing with all the tomatoes. You soak the bacala until it is soft, then you saute it in Sicilian olive oil with 2 chopped tomatoes, I teaspoon of soaked salted capers, and a handful of fresh oregano leaves.

  Then—this is the part I don't like to talk about—you get one of those little hot green peppers and chop up only half of it and saute it with the tomatoes and capers.

  CONSUELA'S BACALAITOS

  I remember in Puerto Rico, bacalaitos were sometimes full of chopped vegetables, especially red and green peppers, which made them very colorful. But when making bacalaitos, it is essential to understand that a lot of people like bacalao, but everybody likes garlic.

  Buy a I-pound box of salt-cured boneless bacalao. Soak the cod in water until it is soft—anywhere from 15 minutes to a day. Take equal amounts of cold water and flour and mix into a batter. It is nice to soak the fish in advance and then use that water for the batter. Add 7 or 8 finely chopped garlic cloves, a pinch of hot pepper, a little finely chopped cilantro. Chop fish into small pieces and work it into the batter with a wooden spoon or potato masher until you have a smooth but still liquid batter. If it's not liquid, work more water into the batter.

  Heat cooking oil, olive is good, in a skillet until very hot, and carefully drop dollops of batter in. If the batter is the right consistency, it will spread out flat. Turn after 1 minute, and after both sides are brown place on a paper towel, which will absorb excess grease.

  PUERTO RICAN HOLIDAY SPECIALTIES

  MRS. RODRIGUEZ'S NUYORICAN

  CREAM PASTELES

  I make several pastdes, but these are my best, the ones I make for Christmas Eve. If they do not make them this way exactly on the island-we-love-so-much-we-all-had-to-leave, it's because these are better, no matter what certain snobs like to say.

  Before you can make pastdes, you have to make some chicken broth, though the people in Cabo Ro
jos who are so fine use only water. But here in America, where we don't have to live on bananas and snails, we sometimes like to take a big hen and cook it slowly in water with onions, oregano, cilantro, garlic, salt, pepper, and some saffron until the chicken is falling off the bones, and that leaves a very nice broth that can be used in many things, including pasteles.

  To make a sofrito, take a pan and heat olive oil. Add achiote seeds, diced cured ham, sliced garlic, I chopped onion, I chopped green pepper, salt, and ground black pepper. Stir until well sautéed and then add 5 skinned, seeded, and chopped tomatoes, a few leaves of cilantro, some leaves of culantro, and some fresh chopped parsley Stir until it becomes a tomato sauce.

  To make the filling, take I pound of pork and dice it. Put it in a pan with 3 cups chicken broth and 2 or 3 chopped garlic cloves. When the liquid is about half gone, spoon off I cup to use later. Add a little less than 1 pound of cured ham cut into large chunks, I cup of sofrito, ½ cup soaked and cooked chickpeas, and ½ cup raisins. Cook slowly with cover for 20 minutes.

  To make the masagrate, take 10 peeled green bananas, 2 pounds peeled taro root, and 2 pounds peeled potatoes. They should all be grated finely Mix this thoroughly with your fingers and add the leftover stock and ½ cup warm heavy cream. It is this cream to which so many self-appointed guardians of Boriquismo object, but that is also why my pastdes are best! Stir with a wooden spoon until the batter is smooth as satin and does not stick to the spoon. If it is too thick, add more cream and stock.

  To put together, take 12 banana leaves and cut into about 9-inch squares. Fill a baking dish about halfway with hot water. Take a leaf square and dip it in the hot water so that it becomes soft. Pat it dry with a paper towel. Do all the leaves. Lay out the leaves and spread each with a thick coating of masa. Put filling in the center and fold over the leaves into a packet. Tie them shut and place them in a shallow pan of water. Cook for 45 minutes.

  This recipe makes 12 pasteks, but if you make it right, you will need at least twice that many.

  CONSUELA'S SATURDAY GANDULES

  When we first decided to leave Puerto Rico, the first English I learned was that gandules in English were called "pigeon peas." One of the first things I learned in New York is that no one has ever heard of a pigeon pea. They are just gandules or, to Jamaicans, peas. You can buy them here dried and soak them in water for 2 hours with a smoked and split ham hock, some garlic, bay leaf salt, and black pepper. Simmer on low heat for another half hour. If you have prepared I pound of gandules, add 2 cups sofrito (my sofrito is made by sautéeing tomatoes, onions, garlic, green peppers, and little cubes of spanish-style ham in olive oil). Keep simmering another half hour, stirring occasionally.

  DRINKS

  TED'S PINK MARTINIS

  AS MADE AT SAGITTARIUS

  These are definitely the martini of the future. Pour vodka into an old shaker (I like the art deco ones). Use a 5:1 ratio of vodka to cranberry juice. Then add equal amounts of triple sec and lime juice, the same quantity as cranberry juice. Add cracked but not crushed ice and stir gently. DO NOT SHAKE!

  CHAIM'S ORIGINAL EGG CREAM

  Chaim left this recipe to his son in his will, which was fortuitous, even though his son hated the store and sold it to Koreans at the first opportunity. Were it not for the will, his son never would have thought to give the formula to the Koreans, who followed it scrupulously and kept egg creams in the neighborhood.

  In a tapered—the tapering is indispensable—paper cup, give 3 good squirts of chocolate syrup, which should yield no more than 2 ounces in the cup. Add 3 ounces of milk that is nearly frozen. It should be the consistency of the slush that we are forced to step in at every intersection of Second Avenue while it is cleared away for nice folk in uptown neighborhoods. But maybe this lack of experience with slush is why no one uptown can make a good egg cream. Fill the cup with seltzer by holding a spoon over the milk so that the seltzer shoots in from the hose, spins off the spoon, and hits the slush with enough force to cause an explosion of bubbles.

  ALMOND COOKIES

  SAL FIRST ON HIS MOTHER'S

  MINNI Dl VIRGINI

  This is my mother's recipe, so you know what I mean. She takes powdered almonds with a little flour and a lot of butter and works it together into a dough, then adds sugar until it is sweet and I egg for about every 4 cups of dough so that it holds together and is easy to work. Chill it awhile. Roll the dough out about ?-inch thick and cut it in circles with an upside-down old-fashioned glass. Put on the center of each a zuccata—you know, the long Sicilian squash, soaked in jasmine petals and water and then candied like a preserve.

  Sometimes you can buy this already candied or you can take some American squash that doesn't have any taste and is gone to seed. Soak jasmine leaves in water for a day or two. My mother always says "a day," but then how come I see these pots of flower petals around for half a week? Cook the squash (you could even use gourds) until they are tender, and dry them for an hour. It is best to dry them in the sun; my mother dried them on a wall, which is why in New York this is a good thing to make in the summer. Then make a thick syrup with sugar and water and cook the squash slowly, adding about I cup of jasmine water and cooking it down slowly until it is thick and jamlike.

  Each circle should have a big hump of the squash. Then you put another circle of dough on top and stick it together with beaten egg white on the edge. You also brush the egg white on top. Then you bake them in the oven until they are browned, and that's it. Eat them while they are still warm, and it's unbelievable. But don't put anything on the top unless you want people to think you are some jerk from Catania who knows nothing.

  BERNHARDT MOELLEN'S ISCHLER KRAPFERLN

  This is from Ischl in the part of Austria where they have lakes and salt mines and mineral baths for your health. Wealthy people went for the baths, including the Emperor Franz Josef, and where there are wealthy people there are famous pastry makers.

  70 grams, which is 2½ ounces powdered almonds

  50 grams, which is 1¾ ounces sugar

  100 grams, which is 3½ ounces butter

  150 grams, which us 5½ ounces flour

  Place all 4 ingredients neatly on a board and work them together with your fingers until you have a workable dough. Leave it for 30 minutes and it will be better. Roll to 1 centimeter thick, very thin, and with a cookie cutter cut circles and bake them in a 180° Centigrade, which is 3500 Fahrenheit, oven for 30 minutes. After they cool, take the circles and make little sandwiches with either apricot or raspberry preserves in the center and cover with melted dark chocolate.

  PASTRY

  KAROLINE'S KUGELHOPF

  This is not like my father's Austrian kugelhopf, which is the eastern extreme of kugelhopfs. Mine is the western extreme, from Alsace, and it is much more buttery It is all about how much butter a light pastry can hold. It is made in an earthenware mold, which if used regularly becomes infused with butter so that it doesn't have to be greased before using.

  ½ cup granulated sugar

  1 cup amber rum

  1 cup raisins

  1 cup chopped almonds

  2 teaspoons salt

  2 tablespoons sugar

  2 1½ tablespoons milk

  3 tablespoons bakers yeast

  2 teaspoons warm water

  3¾ cups flour

  6 eggs

  1 pound butter

  12 whole almonds

  Powdered sugar

  Everything in this recipe must be done in this exact order. The day before baking:

  1. Heat the sugar with the rum until the sugar crystals dissolve. Add the raisins and chopped almonds and remove from the heat. Store until tomorrow.

  2. In a mixer, dissolve the salt, sugar, and milk.

  3. Dissolve the yeast in the warm water until it is creamy.

  4. Add the flour to the mixing bowl and mix well with the salt, sugar, and milk.

  5. Add the yeast.

  6. Beat 2 minutes on a low speed.

&nbs
p; 7. Add 4 eggs and beat until homogeneous.

  8. Add 2 more eggs.

  9. Beat on medium speed for 10—15 minutes until it feels silky and no longer sticks to your fingers.

  10. Cut up the butter into egg-size pieces and add them to the dough while beating. This must be done quickly and must take no more than 2 minutes.

  11. Cover the bowl with a cloth and leave in a warm—not hot— place until the dough doubles in size. This could take as little as 90 minutes or as much as 2½ hours.

  12. Slap it to let out the air and reshape into small bowl. Avoid too much handling. Place it in the bowl, cover with cloth, and place in the refrigerator.

  13. After 2–3 hours, it will have doubled again. Slap it down once more and leave it to rise overnight in the refrigerator.

  The next day:

  Butter the mold if necessary If you cannot find an earthenware one, there are many fluted, circular metal molds that provide a hole in the middle. At the bottom of each flute, place I whole almond. They will form a crown at the top once the cake is turned out. Roll the dough into a rectangle. Place the rum-soaked raisin-and-almond filling down the center. Roll the dough into a tube and wrap it around the center of the mold. Bake in a medium oven until the room is filled with the wonderful scent of butter. Take it out and turn it out. After it cools, dust it with powdered sugar.

  Also available from Vintage

  MARK KURLANSKY

  1968

  The Year That Rocked the World

  'A riveting, evocative, entertaining read'

  Observer

  Encompassing the worlds of youth and music, politics, war, economics, demonstrations and the media, 1968 shows us how we got to where we are today.

  It was the year of sex and drugs and rock and roll; it was also the year of the Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy assassinations, the Prague Spring, the Chicago convention, the Tet offensive in Vietnam and the anti-war movement, the student rebellion that paralysed France, civil rights, the beginning of the end for the Soviet Union, and the birth of the women's movement.

 

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