Why the Knish Became New York's Miss Congeniality (2024)

"People used to say, 'the streets in New York are paved in gold,'" Laura Silver said to me over the phone. "No they're not. They're paved in knishes."

Born in Brooklyn and bred in Queens, Silver is the world's leading authority on the knish. And as the author of the authoritative and charming Knish: In Search of the Jewish Soul Food, she knows just how vital it is to Jews'—and New Yorkers'—culinary heritage, even if everyone else forgets about the poor thing.

A bomb of starchy fillings like nutty kasha groats or mashed potato with caramelized onions, wrapped in a thin sheet of dough and baked, the knish is claimed by Russians, Poles, and Ukrainians, and came to New York on the backs of Jewish immigrants. The way Silver sees it, the knish is a quintessential New York food, one that filled stomachs for pennies on the dollar and granted immigrants an economic opportunity to build a future for their children's children.

Why the Knish Became New York's Miss Congeniality (1)

"[The knish] was a conduit to a better life and a different social status," Silver says. Knishes first started showing up on Lower East Side around 1910, when Yonah Schimmel reportedly opened on Houston Street. In 1916, the New York Times reported from the front lines of the Lower East Side's knish scene. In an early instance of Times reporting on the food, an article titled "Rivington St. Sees War" covered a long lost place called Max Green's, which it deemed "the originator of the great knish" and the first to sell it. Knisheries opened up wherever Jews moved, from Shatzkin's in Coney Island to Adelman's in Midwood to Knish Nosh in Forest Hills.

Silver's book is stuffed with anecdotes and historical notes that show just how important it was to Jewish life in New York. In its prime, she writes, the knish was a must-eat on the city's political circuit, a flag for any candidate to rally behind to demonstrate his support for the Jewish community. It was a Jewish pop culture muse, from Yiddish theater to comedy, where it was sometimes used as slang for women's genitals. It's all part of a tradition, Silver explains, that began with Jewish female comedians in the 1950s and continues to this day in the raunchy routines of Sarah Silverman.

New York still has its knisheries, but compared to the bagel and bialy, the knish just never made it big as a culinary icon. It appears in few guide books as a must-eat dish. Few people, these days, will kvell about a knish. That's a shame, as it deserves to be more than a historical footnote.

The knish, when it's done right, is just as delicious as the bagel. There's a filling of onions cooked to golden caramel in chicken fat, then painted onto a belly-hugging potato canvas. That carby mass is then wrapped in thin, pliant dough and blistered in the oven. It's great with deli mustard.

No, the knish is not sexy. It's brownish and rotund and anything but elegantly shaped. But it is food that will make you feel good, fill you up on the cheap before a long day of work, or sop up the pain of loss or an unexpected breakup.

Some New Yorkers believe that it's no longer easy—or possible—to get a good knish. Silver disagrees, and she makes a strong case with her "Where To Eat A Good Knish" map, which includes Judy's Knishes, established in 2014, among her growing list of 16 approved sources in the five boroughs. So why isn't the knish more popular?

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Silver believes that the knish was a victim of its own success, arguing that knisheries gave immigrant Jews a living, if only meager, that allowed them to take the first steps up the social ladder. As upwardly mobile Jews left poor neighborhoods like the Lower East Side, the knisheries that boosted economies a generation ago lost business and eventually closed. New knisheries opened where Jewish communities landed: Long Beach on Long Island, Baldwin in Westchester, and elsewhere. The knish sustained itself, but didn't see breakout success like the bagel did.

As part of her efforts to spread the knish gospel, Silver started teaching classes on its history. At one such class, a Staten Island native named Noah Wildman showed up, finding in Silver a fellow obsessive. Wildman had gone to culinary school, worked at Brooklyn charmer Franny's, and once wanted to open up his own pizzeria. But he eventually ditched the slice to launch a brief-lived knishery in 2011.

Growing up, Wildman thought every American household stocked knishes. "It had never occurred to me that this wasn't something that was common from here to California and beyond," he says.

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Like Silver, he grew up with Ms. Stahl's, because his mother was from Brooklyn. After his mother died, he returned there for the first time in years only to find the knishery had disappeared. He felt like he lost a part of his mother, the way one might if a family home is torn down. "That was how she fed me. Feeding me part of her own childhood, it connected us—I didn't appreciate it at the time, but now that it's gone it's so glaringly obvious."

People like Wildman and Silver attach a profound importance to the knish. To see why more people don't, I turned to Jim Leff, the founder of Chowhound and a retired food obsessive who once catalogued outer borough eats.

"Is there an expectation that foreign traditions ought to permeate our culture?" Leff asked back. "When something does make that jump that's the exception rather than the rule. But it's not like football play-offs; the worthiest don't make the cut via a series of trials. Stuff just sneaks in. One can trace why tacos did make it, but there's no explaining why knishes didn't. Yes, they're delicious, when right, but a great many things are delicious when right."

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There might've been something else, though, that held the knish back. I reached out to Leff because of comments he made for a 2003 New York Times article about the disappearance of street knishes. The knishes in question are popularly known as the Coney Island knish, square-shaped and deep-fried specimens that are turmeric-yellow in color. They were invented on Forsyth Street on the Lower East Side in 1921 and continue to be produced by the family company, Gabila's, in Copiague in Suffolk County.

The company was very successful and their knishes became widespread in delis and at hot dog carts, so much so that when many modern New Yorkers say "knish," they mean Gabilla's. When the company's factory caught fire in 2013, alarmist headlines declared a knish shortage and famine.

But some, including Leff, just don't care for Gabilla's. As he tells it, these mass-produced knishes are pretenders to the throne, which by right belongs to the one true knish: the baked, handmade variety with far more delicious fillings, which he calls, for lack of a better term, the ur-knish.

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"Since ur-knishes hadn't penetrated American mainstream consciousness to any serious extent, it was easy for most people to link the name to the Gabila objects," Leff added. "If they were delicious, you'd hear no objections from me. But they're not delicious. They're a convenience item invented by some dude trying to move product."

Fortunately, some rustlings in the knish underground signal the beginnings of change. Like pastrami and bagels, knishes have migrated with Jewish expats and popped up in nouveau delis out west. In San Francisco, King Knish sells decidedly non-traditional, very treyf flavors like curry beef and chocolate.

In his review of the Russ and Daughters Café, New York Times restaurant critic Pete Wells praised their knishes as "light and fluffy specimens" that stood out from the crowd of dense, flavorless carb bombs.

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"I kind of concluded early on that [knishes] weren't for me, and left them alone," Wells told me. "I have no use for the turmeric-colored ones sold out of hot dog carts, and this is coming from a man who at one point in his life ate a single hot pretzel with mustard for lunch every day."

Though Wells enjoyed the ones from Yonah Schimmel's more than the street cart knishes, he said he never craved them enough to make the store into a regular stop when he lived on the Lower East Side. But what if, I asked him, you had discovered a knish like the one at Russ & Daughters earlier in life? Or had took the subway to Knish Knosh in Queens, Ms. Stahl's, or had even met the famed Ruby, whose specter haunts the internet and inspired a devoted Facebook group? Would you be singing a different song?

"Oh for sure," Wells responded. "If I'd met a knish like that in my formative years there's no telling what might have happened."

March 2015

Why the Knish Became New York's Miss Congeniality (2024)

FAQs

Why the Knish Became New York's Miss Congeniality? ›

The way Silver sees it, the knish is a quintessential New York food, one that filled stomachs for pennies on the dollar and granted immigrants an economic opportunity to build a future for their children's children. "[The knish] was a conduit to a better life and a different social status," Silver says.

What is a New York knish? ›

The knish, when you really stop to think about it, is a pretty hilarious food: Eastern European–Jewish in origin (the word is Yiddish), it's basically a dense ball of mashed potato (or some other, usually at least partially starchy ingredient) encased in fairly thin pastry when baked, and thicker pastry when fried, ...

What is the history of knish? ›

Knishes began to be baked (rather than fried) around the same time that the potato was popularized in Eastern Europe, and the dough wrapper gradually became more like pastry than bread. The first knish bakery in America was founded in New York City in 1910.

What does knish taste like? ›

A knish tastes like a potato filled pastry. It's a perfect pouch of smooth, creamy mashed potatoes with a hint of onion. They are soft in the center and slightly crispy on the outside. While round ones come in a seemingly endless variety of flavors, the square ones are almost exclusively filled with potatoes.

What is a knish in English? ›

Knish is a Yiddish word with a Russian root, knysh, "cake" or "dumpling." These petite snacks are either baked or fried, and can be round or square, with fillings that sometimes include cheese or kasha in addition to potatoes.

What makes a good knish? ›

While the filling is what makes a knish more appetizing, the perfectly cooked exterior also plays a crucial role in its taste. Once our artisan chefs create the well-balanced filling and stuff them inside the dumplings, they brush the exterior with eggs and bake them to perfection.

When should I eat knish? ›

Knishes can be eaten at any time of day, as they are often served as a snack or appetizer, served hot or cold.

How long does a knish last in the fridge? ›

*Knishes can be kept in the refrigerator for 7-10 days if left in vacuum sealed pouch. Please do not freeze knishes. Place the Kugel in it's frozen state on a flat surface/tray and allow to completely defrost (thaw).

Can you eat knishes cold? ›

Do You Eat Knish Hot or Cold? Potatoes knishes are most commonly enjoyed hot, but they are also delicious at room temperature and even cold. They're very versatile for that reason and are great for packing in lunches and taking on picnics.

What do people eat with knishes? ›

There's no wrong way to eat a knish, but we like ours served hot, with a side of good mustard. Enjoy one as an appetizer, midday snack, or served alongside a soup or sandwich.

Is a knish baked or fried? ›

It's a soft, pillowy piece of dough, filled to the brim with seasoned mashed potatoes. Each piece is traditionally rolled into a round ball and baked, although they can be formed into squares and deep-fried for a crispy exterior.

Can you reheat knishes? ›

Reheating Instructions:

Microwave: Place knish on microwave safe plate, and heat on high for 15 seconds or to desired temperature. Conventional oven: Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Place knish on oven safe baking sheet and heat at 375 degrees for 5 minutes or to desired temperature.

What is the outside of a knish made of? ›

Knishes are fist-size snacks consisting of mashed potatoes wrapped in paper-thin pastry dough and then baked or fried. Other varieties include fillings made from sweet potatoes, mushrooms, spinach, broccoli, cabbage, cheese, or kasha, which is made from buckwheat groats.

What do you eat with knish? ›

There's no wrong way to eat a knish, but we like ours served hot, with a side of good mustard. Enjoy one as an appetizer, midday snack, or served alongside a soup or sandwich.

Do you eat knish hot or cold? ›

Knishes can be eaten at any time of day, as they are often served as a snack or appetizer, served hot or cold. They can be enjoyed as a quick bite on the go or as part of a greater meal.

What is a coney island knish? ›

One of my earliest notable food experiences was eating potato knishes with my dad in Coney Island. I mean, mashed potatoes in a warm, flaky pastry? This potato fiend will have two, please. Back then, their secret was the copious amounts of chicken fat, aka schmaltz, but here I'll show you how to succeed without it.

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