The pastry, however, receives no fanfare at Holtermann’s: there’s no banner proclaiming the shop the last bastion of Charlotte Russes in New York; the little turbaned pastries are not set apart on a golden tray. In fact, they sit in a corner of the display case on a plastic tray alongside their pastry peers. While I'd raced across the Verrazano, afraid they'd sell out, on the day of my visit the other customers were buying rye bread, doughnuts, and apple cake.
According to an article on the lost foods of New York, the Charlotte Russe—reportedly pronounced “Charley Roosh” and nicknamed “the Brooklyn Ambrosia”—was sold in the early to mid-1900s from street carts, candy stores, and bakeries as a quick after-school treat. Kids loved the novelty of pushing the cake upward, licking their way through the layers of cream, jam, and cake, and the challenge of achieving the right proportions of each in a single bite.
Though it looks heavy, the Charlotte Russe is actually airy. Removing the cherry—and savoring its waxy, syrupy, one-bite burst—reveals the enticing hole at the center of the cream spiral. The only way to eat the cream is to scoop at it with one’s top lip, rotating the cardboard shell as you go. Once the cream has leveled out with the scalloped top of the cardboard (which can be licked clean later), you start to crave a new texture. It’s time to start pushing it!
You position your thumb at the center of the bottom of the shell and urge the pastry upward. With a squeaky rasp of waxed cardboard, the concoction rises like an elevator, revealing the golden coin of cake and leaving the Swiss-dotted cardboard behind like a discarded pinafore.
After conquering the pastry’s crown, the real joy of the Charlotte Russe begins: the contrast of textures between the cloud of cream; the cool, sticky dab of jam; and the spongy, grainy cake. As one schoolchild I know observed, it’s not unlike a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, the Charlotte Russe’s successor in the realm of after-school treats: sweet and salty; smooth and crumbly; creamy and acidic. No matter how many times we’ve eaten it, it always surprised and delights us with its symphony of contrasts—not unlike New York City itself.
12 comments:
Loved these as a kid. Sold in the bakery where I lived in Queens. I still look for them in bakeries and ethnic shops but have never found any. We called them Charlotte Roos. I had one very upscale version once in the Russian Tearoom in NYC. Russe I'm assuming means Russian.
thank you Caitlin! My Mom always talked about these... and I've never tasted one! She had them in the 40's in the Bronx....
graziemille
Annie
They were so delicious!!
Wonderfully Written, Great Reading Experience!! BRAVO!!
I am completing a book about the city of Newark, where I was born and raised and have been involved throughout my life. One of my earliest memories is of going downtown and eating a Charlotte Russe sold at Woolworth's on the city's busiest thoroughfare.
I would like to include a photo of this 1950s treat in my book and am seeking permission, photo credit info, and a high-resolution image. I would very much appreciate hearing from you.
Sincerely,
Helen Lippman
973-747-2770
Wish i could find one in New Jersey
Remember having these as a kid when we visited my Grandma and Grandpa in Jersey City. We loved them. Can I order them from Holtermann's Bakery and have them delivered to NJ.
Buttah in Ridgewood also has Charlotte Russes! They use a raspberry jam roll base. Check them out!
Normandie Bakery in Hazlet has them!
Buttah in Ridgewood also makes Charlotte Russes! They use a raspberry jam roll base. Check them out too!
Loved them as a kid! Used to get them at Roosevelt Field Mall.
My grandparents would talk about these and I always wanted to see one and taste one. Been very difficult to find.
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