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Russian markets — Brooklynian

Russian markets

About Russian stores...
Anyone who shops at any "American" supermarket ought to have their head examined. Besides all the additives in the foods, monster-foods, gallons of corn syrrup, and the total absence of taste - the prices are too high. So, never mind the lines or the pushy people, it's worth it to go to a Russian store for food that has taste and where shoppers still remember what real food looks and tastes like. Not to mention the hundred varieties of cold-cuts. I'm not sure, but I remember reading somewhere that even starving Somarian refugees refused donations of monster food - no one is willing to eat supermarket food unless they are nuts.

Comments

  • MOD NOTE: split from "Anyway" thread

    Ballalaechka, are there any particular stores you recommend?
  • Well, most moneyed, well-to-do folks who don't want to go to Brighton because it's too bustling - go to a place on 3664 Nostrand - there are two stores, one is called Belarus - don't go to that one unless you want to poison your mother-in-law. The other won, next to the library is very clean, they have a cook on the premisses and sell ready meals. The owner's name is Yannik (Johny in Eng.) He really takes care of his place, fresh stuff, a bit more expensive than Brighton, but way cheaper then supermarket junk.

    Damn, i sound like an advertizing, but the place is terriffic - he expands every year buying up stores on each side - it's crowded though, but they serve everybody - every color and creed. Just walk up to the register, the old woman is his mother, ask for Yannik, he'll take care of you.

    Try the marinated cow-tonge salad (yazzikoviy salad) golubtsi (meatballs stuffed into bell peppers) duck, la-kebab, salad oliv'ye, they have an awesome meat roll with matzarella-like cheese, dunno what it's called but I usually just say meat & cheeze roulette.

    In Bensonhurst there are two stores on Bath between Bay 26th and 20th Ave. - the one on the corner is best, but less variety.

    On Brighton proper - there is International Foods - they got it all from A to Z and they have a nice patio on the roof where you can eat and have bevereges. Just don't go there friday or saturday afternoons - it's too crowded. Then there is Zolotoy Klyutchik (Golden Key - if you read Pinochio ;) it's on the corner of Brighton 12th, further up, on the same block there is another one, but dunno it's name, but you can buy salads and disher like in a salad bar or places where you can shovel food - like a food court :)

    There is big russian supermarket on West 5th, another right next to Sheapsheadbay station, it's big.
    Almost forgot, although the owner hates me, DOMINO on E17 and Kings Highway - fantastic variety of the most exotic salads and dishes, pricey, but not overly so.

    Never be afraid to ask to taste stuff - ask and they will be glad to help.

    Thing is, nobody but the most recent arrivals want to work in these stores - the job is a killer, 12 hour shifts, a stream of buyers all day long, always on their feet - so the girls who work there don't speak much English, some do, but generally it's rare, use your fingers to point and ask to taste the stuff.

    Russian chocolate candy, not the boxed stuff, but those in the candy bin sold by the pound - buy some, you'll thank me,
  • thanks! i'll check one of these places out next time i'm in the neighborhood.

    (no one spoke much english in my favorite stores in chicago, either -- at the one i liked best, i'm not sure how the staff even communicated with each other, since they spoke so many different languages: russian, various balkan languages, spanish, etc. one time a disgusted old lady turned to me after asking a spanish-speaking stock boy for help, and said, in an accent thick as potatoes, "Doesn't aneeybudee speeek ENKLISCH aneeymurr?" priceless.)
  • And despite all than EVERYONE goes to chinese stores and orders takeout from chinese - none of them speak english and yet everyone can order and everyone knows what wantons are - same for Japanese - sane peole order shitake soup for the first time and don't complain. Hmmmm I always wondered about thet, russian cuisine has more or at least as much variety as chinese, with much more interesting dishes, but can't get mainstream even in NYC. Same barriers - I told the owner of one store to simply post all the food on one menu using latin alphabet - they just don't. Even I can't remember the names of all the cold cuts - I try one, it is great, I ask, what's it called, but there are so many varieties of salami and other meats that I can't remember them all - and the owners won't post menus.

    But the food is in demand, people like exotic stuff, although, for Europeans, such food is a staple and commonplace. Look at the Russian Vodka Room in the City - it is teaming with midtowners after work.
  • Cold-cuts - the cold-cut manufacturers (international foods mostly) make up funny names for salamis. For example> Putinskaya - not they care for balding KGB president, not at all, but they named a salami after him (there is some pun in it, but I can't figure it out) Then there is Stalinskaya - dark humor - but the salami is good. Yevreiskaya(Jewish) salami - beef.

    Black Forest ham, canadian bacon, and double ham ...hams...

    Some day, I'll stop this internet forum nonesence and type up all the names of all foods in one menu - in English - open a store and become the next D'Agostino :)
  • ballalaechka wrote: Hmmmm I always wondered about thet, russian cuisine has more or at least as much variety as chinese, with much more interesting dishes, but can't get mainstream even in NYC.
    welllll....remember all that stuff you posted about how unwelcome americans are at russian restaurants? word gets out. i'm pretty adventurous, very gluttonous, and not put off by accents and language barriers, but russian food is the only thing i can think of in this city that i'm intimidated about trying. and i do know a (very small) amount about it, so it's not the food itself that puts me off.
  • sweet tea wrote: [quote=ballalaechka]Hmmmm I always wondered about thet, russian cuisine has more or at least as much variety as chinese, with much more interesting dishes, but can't get mainstream even in NYC.
    welllll....remember all that stuff you posted about how unwelcome americans are at russian restaurants? word gets out. i'm pretty adventurous, very gluttonous, and not put off by accents and language barriers, but russian food is the only thing i can think of in this city that i'm intimidated about trying. and i do know a (very small) amount about it, so it's not the food itself that puts me off.

    when I want russian food, I generally head to the anyway cafe in the east village. haven't tried the ones in brooklyn.
  • can't say that city joints offer authentic dishes. Maybe some, like pelmeni (dumplings, three or four types of stuffing: meat (chicken+veal) farmer's cheese, potatoes (w/or without mushrooms) and sour cherries) the ones stuffed with meat are served with butter, russian mustard or vinegar or sour cream -- or both, some eastern centra asian varieties sprincle them with greek nuts. the other dumplingsa are served with sour cream.

    They are also sold in every store packaged - you'll find them in the frozen food fridge.

    There are also several varieties of Katleti (cutlets) hamburger's predicessors. Their contents are ground meat or cut meat, onions, various green herbs like parsley, corleander, dill, some also have ground bread - eggs, and seasonings. Some varieties come with mushrooms, potatoes, and vegetables.

    If you are a vegetarian - try BORSCHT - no, don't laugh. Igredients are: slised cabbage slightly sorteyed with onions on a skillet before adding to soup. beets (boiled separately, sliced and diced and slightly sorteyed on a skillet before adding to soup, potatoes diced, salt, pepper, some green herbs added after removing pot from flame. There are two types of borscht, with meat or purely vegetarian - the vegetarial is lighter, but healthier, methingks. It can be served hot or cold, with sour cream or without.
  • sweet tea - I don't know, the store I told you about, the one on nostrand, elderly 'americans' shop there and you know how fussy they are about us immigrants, people from the hood acress the street shop there humming hip-hop tunes - they especially love the small pastries called eggclairs (sp?) with cream. or "napoleon" cake (layered thin crusts spread generously with white butter cream)

    smoked makarell (called skumbria) is good, ballik is another type of salted fish.

    Chicken Kiev - chicken cutlets with bread-crumb crust fashioned to look like drumsticks - they have butter inside so when you heat them the butter tends to dribble when you bite. I suspect Col. Sanders hot his idea for fried chicken from tasting Chicken Kiev, only he could not figure out how come there was no bone inside the drumstick.

    Another dish that I like is French Blini - yep, we took some French ideas back in napoleonic times and made them our own. Basically, a blin (pronounced bleen, like spleen) is a flat pancake cooked fast by pouring pancake batter onto a hot skillet swiped with oil, it takes the shape of the skillet or a pan, then a stack of them cools. Knishes are made with mashed potatoes wrapped in a blin. French blini are sliced chicken and mushrooms sorteyed on a skillet with onions and then wrapped in a blin. It has the appearance of a tubular golden brown roll. If you are going to order these say "blini po Franctzusky)

    Blini are also served by themselves with syrup, honey, sour cream, fruit preserves or a combination of all of these :) You can also buy alrady rolled blini with cheese (bline s tvorogom)or with cherries (blini s wishney) Or, simply by ready-made blini and some red caviar ($20 per pound) (don't buy black caviar unless you've made your mortgage payment already) -- simply put a teaspoon of red caviar in the center of the blin, wrap it - it goes well with vodka.

    Ask to taste the caviar before you buy it - at twenty bucks per pound you've a right to taste it. It should be granular and separate but not too tough so as they pop when you bite them - no the contrary, the grais of caviar must melt in your mouth, skin too - rubbery or tough grains mean it's not fresh and not worth the money.

    Ask to taste everything before you order.

    Chebureki (pronounced che - boo - reki) This is more eastern or Cent. Asian dish. They resemble tacoes from Mexico - made with a circular flattened dough, cut up meat with onions and green herbs are placed in the middle of the circle, the dough is folded to resemble a half-moon and fried. Served with pickles and beer they go like hotcakes.

    :)
  • If you're in Bensonhurst, try Cherry Hill on the corner of 86th Street & 22nd Avenue. Big variety, good prices and nice people. Smaller, but also good is Russian Bear on 86th between Bay Parkway and Bay 31st Street. Both places remind me of my bubbe's kitchen.
  • Subject: Russian Restaurants in Brooklyn

    If you are already trying good Russian food stores, then you guys should definitely have dinner at the most popular Russian restaurant in Brooklyn, RASPUTIN. They seat over 350 people, live Russian & European music all night long, and serve some great dishes. My parents love their Calamari salads, Foie Gras, and Rack of Lamb. I tent to go for their Soft Shell Crabs and Seafood mix. I’ve been going to Rasputin for almost 14 years and is worth trying out.
  • Subject: Re: Russian Restaurants in Brooklyn

    IgorM wrote: If you are already trying good Russian food stores, then you guys should definitely have dinner at the most popular Russian restaurant in Brooklyn, RASPUTIN. They seat over 350 people, live Russian & European music all night long, and serve some great dishes. My parents love their Calamari salads, Foie Gras, and Rack of Lamb. I tent to go for their Soft Shell Crabs and Seafood mix. I’ve been going to Rasputin for almost 14 years and is worth trying out.
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