Guss' Pickles
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Guss' Pickles is a famous pickles vendor located on the Lower East Side of New York City. Considered one of New York's cultural landmarks, and for many years located on Hester Street, it is often included as a site of interest in tours of the Lower East Side, much as is Katz's Deli and Kossar's Bialys. As a wholesaler, Guss pickles was also a major purveyor of pickles to many of the hotels in the Catskills and Las Vegas while the storefront on Hester Street served as the focal point for its retail operations
From an open storefront, Guss' vendors sell different types of pickled goods (including four varieties of pickles) straight out of huge barrels. They also sell sweet peppers, hot cherry peppers, giardiniera, marinated mushrooms, pickled tomatoes, sauerkraut, olives, horseradish, sweet relish, pickled celery and more. The men and women, wearing thick sweatshirts advertising the store, scoop out large bowls of pickles and cram them into quart containers for the often long line of people on the sidewalk.
Guss' Pickles was also featured in the movie Crossing Delancey.
[edit] History
Guss' Pickles was founded by a Polish immigrant, Isidor Guss. Guss arrived in New York in 1910, and like hundreds of thousands of other Jewish immigrants, settled in the Lower East Side. Like many of his fellow immigrants, Guss rented a pushcart and sold produce - including his now famous pickles - on the Lower East Side. Clustered in the "pickle district" of Essex and Ludlow streets, early 20th century pickle vendors gave birth to what would be known as "New York style" pickles.
Guss at first worked for L. Hollander and Sons, before later opening his own store. At the time, the neighborhood was teeming with 80 other pickle shops. However, immigration restrictions, a ban on pushcarts and the steady economic decline of the Lower East Side felled almost all of these shops.
Guss' Pickles survived these fallow times and now stands as the last holdover from the days of the Essex Street empire. In 1979, Harry Baker and his partner Burt Blitz took over Guss' Pickles. Through the 1980s and into the 2000s, Baker and his son Tim ran the store. The only 3 living people who know the original Guss' secret recipe are Andrew Leibowitz, Stephen Leibowitz, and Harry Baker.
[edit] Current Ownership
In 2002, Tim Baker sold his ownership of Guss Pickles to Andrew Leibowitz.
The Guss Pickles trademark now belongs to Crossing Delancey Pickle Enterprises Corporation. The headquarters is now in Cedarhurst, NY. Andrew Leibowitz is the CEO of the company. They maintain a factory in the Bronx and a farm located in New Jersey. The official website is gusspickles.com.
The Manhattan store has been granted permission to also use the name, but it is a separate business to the Cedarhurst business.
[edit] References
- Faye Lederman - The New Old Country
- Jewish Roots in a Multicultural Neighborhood
- Lower East Side Tenement Museum - Pickles In New York
- 43 Places - Guss' Pickles
- History in a Pickle
- The Best Pickle Predicament
- In a Pickle
- The Best Pickles
- New York's Pickle Palaces
- New York City - The Big Pickle?
- New Style New York
- Timeline Touring - New York Tours
- NY Area Guide
- Recrossing Delancey
- NYC Weekend