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Home › Work
› Newspapers ›
NY Daily News
» Yuca
Holds its Mojo /
May 2006
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|
A
snapshot of the VNY story with a photo by Jorge Sarmiento. |
ubans
are fewer and fewer in New York. Among the city's foreign-born groups,
they went from being ranked 6th in the 1970 census to a distant
26th in 2000.
But
you would never suspect this if you surveyed Cuban restaurants,
which have gone from only a handful a decade ago to over twenty
nowadays – ranging from luncheonettes and neighborhood cafés
to upscale dining rooms with live music and on-site cigar-rolling.
And
the growth has not stopped just yet. At least five brand-new Cuban
eateries are being planned as you read this.
You
may be wondering, then, if so many Cubans have left for the suburbs
or South Florida, who is dishing the ropa vieja these days?
The
answer is, an assorted bunch of American, European and Latin American
businesspeople –including first-timers and experienced restaurateurs-
who literally stepped up to the plate as they realized there was
an underserved demand for Cuban food in a city that's growing more
and more Latin.
"The
Cuban thing is very, very hot," says Jeremy Merrin, 47, an
Internet bubble alumnus with an MBA from Columbia University. Merrin
made his debut in the restaurant business in 2002 with Havana Central,
off Union Square. Since then, he has opened a second, bigger branch
half a block from Times Square, and is now planning an even more
spacious third location.
ogether
with Merrin, who is American, the roster of Cuban-restaurant owners
includes Italian Marco Britti, his Franco-Italian cousin Jean Claude
Iacovelli and American Dan Houle at Cubana Café; Argentinean
Mario Zárate at Azúcar; his Bolivian partner Luis
Skibar, who also owns Cuba and Havana Alma de Cuba; another American,
Tommy Vicari, at Cuba Café; and Peruvian Sofía Luna
and her family, owners of four branches of Sophie's Cuban Cuisine.
What they all realized is that non-spicy Cuban food is friendly
to most palates and that there was a lack of Latino restaurants
in certain neighborhoods and certain markets. Add Cuba's status
in the American collective consciousness as an enchanted forbidden
island… and you get an instant formula for success.
|
Un
Cubano, por favor |
| There
are more Cuban restaurants owned by non-Cubans, but this does
not mean restaurateurs from the island are extinct. Here are
some of the city's Cuban standards.
Victor's Café 52:
On 52nd Street in the Theater District, Victor's is an established
institution for upscale Cuban dining. Víctor del Corral,
84, first opened it on Columbus Avenue in 1963. "He still
calls every day" from Florida, granddaughter Natalia
Zaldívar-Bonzón reports.
Rincón Criollo: Jesús
René Acosta, 71, and brother Rodobaldo, 74, created
this traditional restaurant in Corona in 1976 – when
they were surrounded by Cuban residents and businesses. Today,
they are the last ones standing, with classics like arroz
con pollo, vaca frita and black beans.
Little Havana: "Everything
here is homemade," says Lidia Sharpe at her small, cozy
West Village spot, where she does all the cooking. Ever since
opening in 1998, she makes sure her beans are organic, her
meat, prime cuts. "Almost everything that I buy is special,"
she says. And the menu, she adds, is kept "very simple."
Havana New York: Havana-born
Raúl Febles, 46, opened up shop on West 38th Street
in 1991. "If it doesn't have sofrito, it's not going
to have the taste," is his motto.
El Sitio: Tucked underneath
the 7 train tracks at 69th street in Woodside, this luncheonette
is another old-timer, renowned for its cubano sandwich.
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"It
shot up", says Zárate, 60, about business at his Eighth
Avenue restaurant after he decided to convert it last summer from
underperforming Italian Terra to Azúcar. Similar reincarnations
took place at Calle Ocho on Columbus Avenue –formerly American
family-style eatery Main Street–, Havana Alma de Cuba on Christopher
Street –a diner in its previous life-, and at Cubana Café
on Thompson Street, previously a panini shop.
In
the case of Sophie's, a chain aimed at the lunch-hour crowd, success
was such that it has opened six restaurants since 1997 (although
two neighboring the World Trade Center were closed after Sept. 11.)
Besides two new locations in the works, the chain intends to sell
franchises as early as the end of the year, says Luna, 28, one of
four siblings in the business with their mother.
ut
how do non-Cuban restaurateurs ensure their food is the real thing?
Most
say they rely on chefs who are Cuban or are trained in Cuban food.
"I'm not pretending to be a Cuban chef," says Merrin,
of Havana Central. "I took authentic elements of a wonderful
culture and turned it into a business."
Of
course, if you ask for opinions among the Cubans who own restaurants
in the city, reactions range from polite shrugging to mostly off
the record complaints about people rushing to join a profitable
trend.
"Everyone
started opening restaurants named Havana, Havana, Havana…"
says Lidia Sharpe, 73, owner and chef at Little Havana in the West
Village.
"I
don't have a problem with that, but it's very important that they
do enough research," says Natalia Zaldívar-Bonzón,
28, who, as the granddaughter of the city's Cuban food pioneer Víctor
del Corral, is in charge of Victor's Café 52.
Not
surprisingly, all non-Cuban owners say Cubans love their food.
"They
are surprised," says Skibar, 38, owner of Cuba on Thompson
Street and Havana Alma de Cuba on Christopher Street. "They
don't understand how, with Luis being Bolivian, we can have these
restaurants," adds his secret weapon, Cuban wife Beatriz de
Armas, 35.
What
everyone agrees on is that demand will remain high for Cuban food.
"I
knew the Spanish thing was going to take off," says of Hispanic
food Tommy Vicari, 51, owner of Cuba Café in Chelsea and
five other restaurants of assorted cuisines. "The Spanish population
is growing and there's a demand for more Spanish restaurants, music,
everything."
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