Sunday, March 9, 2014

[UPDATED] Black Hound New York closes East Village retail location today



As we pointed out on Wednesday, the 26-year-old dessert-cake shop is closing its retail location at 170 Second Ave. near East 11th Street today.

The sign on their window says Black Hound will be open until 10 tonight. (EVG reader Andy, who took this photo, says there wasn't much left for sale. So maybe you call ahead before making a special trip…)

Per the sign:

"The East Village has been out retail home since 1988, and we've seen out neighborhood evolve from eclectic to trendy."

Also, local customers can "still enjoy Black Hound treats" via a delivery service from their Greenpoint bakery. You can also pick up orders by appointment there.

From their Facebook page Wednesday:

We’ll continue connecting with you through Facebook, emails, friends@blackhoundny.com, 800.344.4417, and www.blackhoundny.com. Thanks to our loyal customers and friends for your support!

And back to the sign, which states, "Looking ahead, we want to resume our retail presence in NYC and will seek investors to help us on this journey."

UPDATED 5:54 p.m.
Per our Facebook friends, Black Hound sold out of everything and closed around 5.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Black Hound New York closing Sunday after 26 years in the East Village (26 comments)

Week in Grieview


[East 7th Street the other day via Derek Berg]

Cab crash on Second Avenue (Sunday)

A Gathering of Tribes looking for a donor to buy its East 3rd Street home (Tuesday)

A tour of Kossar’s Bialys (Friday)

No 7-Eleven for the retail space at Arabella 101 (Monday)

A new art and performance space on East 4th Street (Thursday)

New residential building for East 7th Street (Wednesday)

Out and About with Eric Danville (Wednesday)

Black Hound New York is Closing (Wednesday)

A knockout attack on the Bowery? (Thursday)

Irish guy steals Sabrina's bear coat (Sunday)

Behold the sofritas from Chipotle (Monday, 18 comments)

SVA dorm for sale on Third Avenue (Friday)

Views from the World Trade Center in 1978 (Friday)

FREE PANCAKES (Tuesday)

A tiny roof deck with a lawn and phone booth? (Thursday)

Ashes to go on Astor Place for Ash Wednesday (Wednesday)

Some people can't figure out where the new USPS retail store is on East 14th Street (Wednesday)

HiFi launches monthly Reading Series (Tuesday)

Laundro-cafe opens on East 1st Street (Thursday)

Lindsay Lohan gives us the middle finger at the Houston/Bowery mural wall (Sunday)

Former 7A looks to keep sidewalk cafe (Thursday)

Noted

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Spring for a day



Tompkins Square Park this afternoon… photo by Bobby Williams…

Reminders (Or, A Reminder)


Clocks forward at 2 a.m.!

[H/T Stack of New York Times at Associated]

Up in smoke



Second Avenue and East 13th Street … photo by Grant Shaffer. (Steam courtesy of Con Ed.)

EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition


[The old Mars Bar space via Goggla]

How hipsters ruined the Bowery (Gizmodo)

At the William Barnacle Tavern on St. Mark's Place: "It feels both experimental and trapped in time" (The New Yorker)

The Mexican First Lady and a Jewish Anarcho-Feminist Walk Into An East Village Tenement… (Off the Grid)

Local chef's favorite EV food spots include Sunny & Annie's, Ray's Candy Store and Zaragoza (Serious Eats)

More about the hawks nesting at the Christodora House (DNAinfo)

Work by members of Murphy's Law now on display at the Art on A Gallery (NY1)

The East Village of "200 Cigarettes" (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

24 people applied to be on Community Board 3 (The Lo-Down)

Citi Bike may raise its rates (Gothamist)

Want to take a Tom Waits-themed vacation? (Dangerous Minds)

… and important tweets from the morning…



… also, it's really nice outside.

A new design for Citi Bikes?



EVG reader Mark Smith spotted this today at the Citi Bike docking station on East Fifth Street at Avenue C … a new spring-look for the bikes? A rogue Citi Bike artist? What is going on…?

The Citi Bike blog has the answer:

For the first time, a handful of Citi Bikes will shed their iconic blue for a springtime hue. In celebration of Armory Arts Week, ten Citi Bikes will don artwork created by The Armory Show‘s 2014 commissioned artist, Xu Zhen. While eight of the special bikes circulate in the Citi Bike system, two will be on display at The Armory Show, at Pier 94, through Sunday, March 9.

Friday, March 7, 2014

The 'Show' must go on



Here's Built to Spill at Irving Plaza with "Stop the Show" from 1999. The band will be at the Bowery Ballroom on May 21. Tix went on sale today at noon.

A view of the East Village (and more) from atop the World Trade Center in 1978

Earlier this morning, we posted the photo (via Time magazine) of the neighborhood from atop of the One World Trade Center ...



East Village resident Felton Davis just shared this ... a scan from one of several hundred Kodachome slides from the World Trade Center Observation Deck from the 1970s (this particular shot is circa 1978)... showing the neighborhood (and more) from a similar angle...



Also, as a bonus, here's a photo at sunset showing the shadow of the Twin Towers extending all the way across the East River and into Williamsburg...

Report: Building housing TD Bank and SVA dorms on 3rd Ave. and E. 10th St. hits the market

The 5-story building that houses a TD bank on Third Avenue and East 10th Street is for sale for $28 million, The Real Deal reports this morning.

The building "has 28 one-and-two bedroom apartments and will be delivered vacant." (Actually, isn't this a dorm for SVA students?)

Also, there are "an additional 7,802 square feet of as-of-right air rights," per The Real Deal. Perhaps NYU will take another crack at this property? The school originally wanted the site, according to The Villager.

Prior to construction of this new building, the address housed Bendiner & Schlesinger blood labs. The place was demolished in 2005... there was a plaque on the East 10th Street side commemorating Peter Stuyvesant, whose family once owned the buildings.

At Kossar's Bialys



Photos and story by EVG contributor Stacie Joy

I had my first bialy at age 17 when I moved to New York City. And I was hooked. Immediately.

Through the years, I’d had bialys from many locations, but my go-to was Kossar’s Bialys at 367 Grand Street. It’s a straight line downtown from my Avenue B apartment. There were seemingly always open and had delicious oniony bialys (as well as bagels).



I quickly developed a breakfast habit: bialy, sliced across, toasted with butter, smattering of sea salt. And a strong cup of coffee.

So when I heard that Kossar’s was being sold, like many regulars, I panicked.

When Marc Halprin (president), Evan Giniger (co-owner), and David Zablocki (director of operations) took over last September, they managed to improve the quality of the bialy without losing any of the things that made Kossar’s so famous and reliable. Bialys were fresh-baked every day, and end-of-day leftovers given to Food Bank for NYC as well as local houses of worship.


[David Zablocki]

David and Marc were kind enough to grant me a tour of the bakery (which, by the way, is available if you call ahead and request one!) and allow me to shoot some photos and pester them with bialy based questions. (Hey! Being a bialy ambassador is about bringing bialy knowledge to the people.)



Bialys are made up of only four ingredients (not including the onion or garlic findings that go in the center dent): Water, flour, yeast and salt. Skimp on the quality of any of them and the final product suffers. Bakers start at midnight mixing the ingredients, shaping, resting and proofing the dough (called kuchen). It’s a 3-hour process from start to finish, not including the eating portion. A small piece of every batch is set aside to be blessed by Rabbi Fishelis, and so the bakery can continue to receive its Parve rating.



And no, you do not have to be Jewish or Polish to enjoy a bialy. “All humans can enjoy bialys,” David says.

According to Marc, the best way to eat a bialy is to toast first, then slice. If you must. David admits to putting a pat of butter in the center of a hot bialy and just chowing down. Since Kossar’s is a bakery, not a restaurant, they cannot add a schmear but you can buy a tub of cream cheese at the shop’s fridge and do it yourself at the counter.



One hundred years ago there were bialys everywhere on the Lower East Side. It’s nice to see tradition being carried into the modern day. David told me that old-world food is his heritage and passion and that the bialy hasn’t changed much since Kossar’s started selling it in 1936. In fact, it hasn’t changed much from its Bialystok, Poland, origins.

Anyone who wants to can head down to the bakery early (really early) in the morning to watch the bialys, pletzels, and bagels being baked. The goods will last about three days if kept wrapped in plastic, or will keep if frozen.