Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Rossy's Bakery & Café to close after 15 years on 3rd Street

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy

A family-run bakery and café that's served its neighbors for the past 15 years is closing. 

Rossy's Bakery & Café, 242 E. Third St. between Avenue B and Avenue C, will soon shut down after opening in June 2010. 

Owner Roselia "Rossy" Caba confirmed the news, citing rising costs and the impending retirement of her mother, Norma Ortiz, who founded the business.
"After so many years, we decided to call it quits," said Caba, whose brother Gabriel Escalante is also part of the business. "With the way things are, it makes no sense for us to continue… We can't keep trying to be affordable to the community and still make money anymore. There is no profit. We just can't do it anymore."
Ortiz (below) began baking cakes for family and friends from her Second Street apartment. Demand quickly grew beyond her kitchen's capacity, and soon, the mother-daughter team opened their own storefront just a few blocks away.
Over the years, Rossy's became known for its hearty and affordable lunch plates — BBQ ribs, baked chicken, and rice-and-beans combos. Empanadas and smoothies were also popular picks for kids in the neighborhood.
But even with a loyal customer base, Caba says the numbers no longer add up. "I haven’t made a profit in a while," she said. "Everything we use is quality here, and that screwed me over. There's no margin." 

She's also taken on debt just to keep the business afloat. The business — minus the name — is now for sale as a turnkey operation, including the lease, equipment and established location. Caba says there are a few years left on the current lease and that the landlord is open to an extension. 

As for what she hopes comes next for the space? "Something for the community. A restaurant. Maybe Spanish food. Staying in the roots." 

Caba plans to return to her previous work in nightclub accounting. 

Ortiz, meanwhile, is officially retiring. "She's not baking cakes anymore. So if you want one, you’d better get it in now," Caba added. 

Rossy's will be missed — not just for its food, but for the sense of neighborhood it helped sustain. Who goes to Rossy's Bakery & Cafe? Neighbors, teachers, postal workers, construction and sanitation crews, police officers, firefighters, EMS, and other first responders. UPS and FedEx drivers. Kids after school. People craving home-style Dominican and Spanish food or a fresh-baked treat. The morning and midday crowd needing a Bustelo fix — coffee with frothy, sweetened milk. Regulars with a standing dinner plate order.
It was a place that served everyone and made everyone feel like a regular. Caba remembers your order — "She doesn't like pieces of fruit in her smoothie, so make it extra smooth," she reminds the staff. You may catch her out front in her fire-engine red muscle car, always quick with a joke and a smile. 

A neighborhood needs places like Rossy's.
Previously on EV Grieve

Neighborhood invited to help shape future of ABC Playground

Residents of the Lower East Side are invited to have their say in the future of a local park. 

NYC Parks is kicking off the design process for the renovation of ABC Playground, located adjacent to P.S. 20 on Houston Street between Essex and Norfolk, and is seeking community input.
A virtual public meeting takes place Thursday evening (May 29) from 6:30-8 to gather ideas and feedback from local residents. Attendees can share how the playground could better serve the neighborhood, from improved play structures to green space enhancements or accessibility upgrades.

Ideas collected during the meeting will help shape a preliminary design, which will later be presented to the Community Board 3 Parks Committee for public review.

Interested community members are encouraged to register in advance (link) to attend the meeting. 

Those who can't make the meeting can leave comments online afterward — for up to a week. The link will be here after Thursday's session.

This is a chance for local voices to help reimagine a community space that reflects the needs and priorities of those who use it most. 

Here's a look at the current playground...
... and we hope the frog will be part of any new plans!

Wash Rite Laundromat has closed on 4th Street

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Wash Rite Laundromat at 112 E. Fourth St. is now closed here between First Avenue and Second Avenue.

Workers started clearing out the space in recent days...
As we reported on May 5, the owners weren't able to come to terms on an affordable lease renewal with the landlord.

Monday, May 26, 2025

Monday's parting shot

An early morning view along Seventh Street between Avenue A and Avenue B...

ICYMI: In Tompkins Square Park, Amelia and her new mate welcome first brood together

ICYMI: Amelia, the resident female red-tailed hawk in Tomkins Square Park, and her new male friend have three chicks in their nest this spring. 

Mark Hado shared these photos this past week...
Given how quickly the hawklets grow on that steady diet of pigeons and rats, they are likely 2x this size by now. 

As Goggla has documented, all three of the hawklets appear to be doing well. This is the first family for the new male this year (going as M2, per Goggla). This marks Amelia's eighth season raising chicks in Tompkins. 

Visit Goggla's site for a primer on M2 (link) ... and the latest on the kids. 

We'll be on fledge watch in the next few weeks. 

Previously on EV Grieve

Monday's opening shots

Photos by Stacie Joy 

An observance of Memorial Day, and likely the Fourth of July, at Key Food on Avenue A...
We do not know what might remain of the Key Holiday Decorating Budget for the remainder of the year.

Also, we still need to post the updates on the new self-checkout scanners and "cakes for all occasions" signage, whose place is being kept warm by the Heritage American flag bunting.

Where you can get a copy of the Ray's Candy Store photo book

Photo on May 17 by Stacie Joy

We've mentioned "Candy Store," a years-in-the-making photo documentary about Ray's Candy Store.

Photographer Whitney Browne worked part-time at Ray's at 113 Avenue A from 2012-2017 and documented the late-night scene there. 

A percentage of each sale will go to Ray. (During the book launch on May 17, sales generated $1,000 for Ray.)

Anyway, several readers have asked where they buy a copy (we were vague with "select bookstores"):

• Bluestockings, 116 Suffolk St.
• Mast, 72 Avenue A
• The Strand, 828 Broadway
• Village Works, 12 St. Mark's Place

They are also available on Browne's website.

Sunday, May 25, 2025

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a rainbow shot from Friday evening by Jeanne Krier)... 

• Park access shifts again: What's open and closed in East River Park starting Memorial Day as construction moves to the north (Thursday)

• Me-Wow! FDNY rescues Nico the Cat from East Village tree (Tuesday

• Skim City: ATM at Avenue B Duane Reade hiding a high-tech heist (Friday

• Fresh sod and DanceFest crowds come together in Tompkins Square Park (Monday)

• Housing lottery winding down for units at the all-new 280 E. Houston St., aka The Houston (Wednesday

• A few moments from the annual Dance Parade and DanceFest (Sunday)

• A quick look at the May CB3 SLA agenda (Monday

• Restaurant space at 88 2nd Ave. hits the market after 4 years of turnover (Thursday

• First look at the 'Caught Stealing' trailer, filmed partly in the East Village last fall (Wednesday

• The Juicy Lucy kiosk reopens on 1st and 1st for the season (Thursday)

• The Brant Foundation has a free exhibition featuring the work of Glenn Ligon (Tuesday

• A new campaign stop on Avenue A (Thursday

• A Sweetgreen for the Lower East Side (Thursday

• Kijitora in soft-open mode on 14th Street (Sunday

• Signs of life at Taverna East Village (Wednesday

• The last jiggle: Viral dessert shop Ănjelly closes on St. Mark's Place (Wednesday

• Power move: Citi Bike's new charging station lands on 1st Avenue and 14th Street (Wednesday)

• Global chain Sanku Maots'ai opening its first U.S. outpost on 1st Avenue (Monday

• Signage alert: YoYo Chicken on 14th Street (Monday

... and several people have noted the arrival of hand-painted signage this past week for Maya, opening this summer at 115 Avenue A near Seventh Street. As we previously mentioned, the well-regarded taqueria has two outposts in Brooklyn (photo by Stacie Joy)...

At the hardcore matinee in Tompkins Square Park yesterday

Photos by Stacie Joy 

From yesterday in Tompkins Square Park, Drew Stone's lively NYHC show with Sonic Bomb, End of Hope, Butterbrain, NonResidents and Rebelmatic. 

I caught the set by NonResidents...
... and off the stage...

Kijitora in soft-open mode on 14th Street

Kijitora is now (as of Friday) in soft-open mode at 534 E. 14th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B. (Thanks to Russell for the photos!

As we mentioned, Kijitora is a cat-themed coffee shop with two Brooklyn locations. 

Aside from a coffee service, the cafe offers a slate of Japanese-inspired drinks, pastries and food. You can find their menu here.

Saturday, May 24, 2025

Noted

Photo by Stacie Joy 

A flyer on Avenue A for new East Villagers — noting "gentrification guilt" — and encouragement to attend the 38th annual Loisaida Festival tomorrow (Sunday!) along Avenue C.

The notice, which isn't part of any official Loisaida Festival signage, states: "We'll be there surveying our locals for knowledge to aid our anti-gentrification efforts... and serving lemonade."

'Assholes breaking windows'

An EVG tipster shared three photos this morning (in an email with "Assholes breaking windows" as the subject line)... three businesses on the east side of Second Avenue between 11th Street and 12th Street had their windows vandalized overnight...
It did not appear that the establisments, Vin Sur Vingt Wine Bar, Pangea and Cacio e Pepe, were burglarized

The Lower East Side Festival of the Arts continues this weekend at Theater for the New City

The Theater for the New City's 30th annual Lower East Side Festival of the Arts continues today and tomorrow with free performances. 

Per the EVG inbox:
Theater for the New City has scheduled over 200 performing arts organizations, independent artists, poets, puppeteers and filmmakers for its 30th annual Lower East Side Festival of the Arts.

Admission is free, but donations will be gratefully accepted.

Indoor performances will take place from 6 p.m. to midnight daily, utilizing two of TNC's four theaters. From 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday, vendors and food sellers, including booths from nearby restaurants, will set up in the closed-off block of 10th Street between First and Second Avenues. 
Find more info at this link

TNC is also presenting a group art exhibit (through July 13) titled "We Will Not Be Silent — Speak up For Democracy." Find the gallery guide here.

Friday, May 23, 2025

Friday's parting shot

Crossing Houston at Orchard this evening...

All or 'Nothing'


Sunflower Bean is back with the trio's fourth full-length release, Mortal Primetime. 

The video here is for the single "Nothing Romantic." 

The band is now touring in support of the new record. (Last night was the official release show out at Warsaw.) 

P.S.
As we've mentioned, bassist-vocalist Julia Cumming was born and raised in the neighborhood.

Skim City: ATM at Avenue B Duane Reade hiding a high-tech heist

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

First of all, yes — that was the Secret Service at the Duane Reade/Walgreens on Avenue B and Second Street this morning.
The Secret Service was part of a multi-agency investigation after a skimming device was discovered in the store's Citi ATM ... part of an ongoing federal investigation into fraud known as Operation Flagship. 

The device — a slim, nearly invisible metal bar with a pinhole camera — was attached to the right-hand side of the ATM and designed to steal card information and PIN codes, which are then sold on the dark web. 

Law enforcement officials on the scene showed me the skimmer but requested that it not be photographed or touched as the device is part of an active investigation.
According to investigators, these skimmers are frequently found in lower-income neighborhoods and areas where EBT cards are commonly used. 

The agencies involved in the operation included the U.S. Secret Service, the USSS Police and Criminal Investigation Division, and the NYPD Task Force. While the Secret Service is known primarily for presidential protection, it also investigates complex financial crimes, including fraud. 

Despite the presence of multiple law enforcement agencies, operations inside Walgreens appeared to continue as usual, with staff largely unfazed. 

Also, no one ran out of the store with a 12-pack of Budweiser while this investigation took place.

Sunday marks the 38th edition of the Loisaida Festival

The 38th annual Loisaida Festival is happening on Sunday, May 25, from noon to 5 p.m. 

Per organizers: 
On Loisaida Avenue, culture isn't just celebrated — it's lived. The festival becomes a reunion for neighbors, friends, and families who gather to dance, laugh, and remember what it means to belong. It's a Puerto Rican celebration that wraps the whole community in music, memory, and that undeniable feeling of home. 
The year's festival also honors Marlis Momber, the longtime Lower East Side documentarian and activist who passed away on April 1 after a battle with cancer. 

The event, which unfolds along Avenue C-Loisaida Avenue between Fifth Street and 12th Street, includes more than 50 artisans and 10 food vendors. 

There's also a slate of bands and musicians on the main stage and elsewhere on the festival grounds. Visit this link for details.
Festival poster created by Ana Teresa Rodríguez and María Domínguez.