James Beard medal James Beard Foundation Nominee 2010

Thought For Food

Featured Restaurant: Cafe Edison

Chopped Liver Sandwich at the Polish Tea Room. Left, 47th Street entrance. Right, lobby entrance.

So I’m schlepping around the Schmatte District looking for a bowl of matzoh ball soup and a nosh when I realize I’m all the way up on 46th street outside of The Hotel Edison (site). I walk through the hotel lobby all the way in the back through a nondescript door leading into a little coffee shop. Cafe Edison (view) aka the “Polish Tea Room” is not at all fancy-pants like the Russian Tea Room. In fact, it’s a bit schmutzy but haymish.

I get a booth and order the soup. The kneidlach are to die for. Better than the 2nd Avenue Deli’s if that’s possible. It was a shonda that this was not included in AlwaysHungryNY.com’s Top Five Matzoh Ball Soups! Then I order a bissel of the Kasha Varnishkes on the side, the Chopped Liver and the Hot Roumanian Pastrami on Rye. The bowtie pasta, buckwheat and onions are superb, the chopped liver with hard-boiled eggs needed a touch of salt, but the pastrami, though not up to Katz’s or the 2nd Avenue Deli’s standards, is just fine.

I am a maven when it comes to Chocolate Egg Creams and this one is poifect. Being a fresser, I cannot leave without ordering the blintzes, all three of them (the waiter already thinks I’m meshuga). The cheese, cherry and blueberry fried crepes make me think of my old bubby who was a waitress at Ratner’s when she was a girl. I ate so much I could plotz.

Café Edison is truly a time machine if you want to go kibitz or kvetch for an hour. I must return to try the Latkes, the Matzo Brei and the Gefilte Fish.

 

Kasha Varnishkes.

 

Hot Roumanian Pastrami on Rye.

 

Matzoh Ball Soup.

 

Blueberry, Cheese, and Cherry Blintzes.

 

Chocolate Egg Cream.

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