Become a Member
Food

Tradition bites back

May 21, 2015 16:25
Return of the monster:  Ziggy Gruber is the star of DeliMan

By

Stephen Applebaum,

Stephen Applebaum

3 min read

There used to be thousands of kosher delicatessens in the five boroughs of New York. Today, there are close to 140 Jewish delis in the whole of North America. This depressing statistic is the backdrop to Deli Man: a celebratory, affectionate and thought-provoking documentary about the past, present, and possible future of a Jewish-American cultural phenomenon, from the American independent film-maker Erik Greenberg Anjou.

The film is the final part of a trilogy that takes facets of Jewish cultural, ethnic or religious tradition — “cantorial music”, “klezmer music” and now deli — and, says Anjou, “sees to what extent that part of the tradition lives in the past and what part is changing in modernity”.

Adaptation, as has been the story of the Jews throughout most of history, is the key to survival. But how much variation can a tradition sustain before it ceases to be authentically Jewish? And what does authentically Jewish mean?

German Jews opened the first delis on New York’s Lower East Side in the 1850s. They were basic at first, often without seating and offering sandwiches wrapped in brown paper — a far cry from the bustling eateries that, years later, would include sandwiches piled high with pastrami. These “monster sandwiches”, served up at classic delis such as Katz’s and Carnegie, are an expression of American-Jewish success, says Anjou. “What other restaurant is serving a dish like that and going, ‘Yes, we’ve made it. Now sit down and eat’?”