Current location:home page > Marketing

David's New Bay Ridge Brisket House

admin2 days agoMarketing3
Bed-Stuy mainstay David's Brisket House is one of Brooklyn's most unusual restaurants. It was founde…
Brisket House

Bed-Stuy mainstay David's Brisket House is one of Brooklyn's most unusual restaurants. It was founded in the '70s as a Jewish deli, slinging exemplary pastrami, corned beef, and roasted beef brisket.

Nearly 30 years later, it remained a fundamentally Jewish deli, only now run by observant Muslims who realized the fundamental concordance of Halal and Kosher food, and dedicated themselves to keeping the quality high and the meat cheap.

And the place was a bit hit, not only with co-religionists at nearby mosques on Fulton Street, but with the local population in general.

Now the institution has expanded to Bay Ridge's Fifth Avenue. The menu remains the same, with a premises slightly expanded and a tad more comfortable.

We went on a Saturday afternoon and tried their signature sandwich -- brisket with brown gravy on the side. The meat boasted caramelized edges and we went for the sauteed onions on top, deglazed with beef juices to amplify the beefy flavor.

The sandwich is available in $7, $10, and $13 denominations, but believe us, the smallest is plenty for any normal person, served with three sour pickle spears.

You can get the smallest sandwich on a variety of breads, but a club roll is best, because the new branch is pioneering a new technique -- hollowing out the bread, cramming in the meat, and then pressing the roll down, panini-style. Maybe they're doing it in response to a local request for fewer carbs, but we doubt it -- it just makes the sandwich denser and more delicious.

We also had a side of sweet/sour slaw (good, but more than one person can eat, once again due to density) and a pastrami sandwich, which we dutifully ate half of, and then wrapped up the rest and ran.

How was the pastrami? Very good also, but a little crumbly, which sometimes happens with pastrami. Proving, when it comes to the brisket-based meats, there's no such thing as a completely reproducible event, and every beef brisket is different.


Related articles

Vietnam yet to receive UK warning on dragon fruit exports

According to deputy director Ngo Xuan Nam, the Vietnam Sanitary and Phytosanitary Notification Autho…

Chile's dehydrated plum enters India

A few months ago, at the 10th Dry Plums EXPO, Pedro Pablo Díaz, the president of Chileprunes stresse…

Serious Sweets expands reach with fresh acquisition

The Serious Sweets Company (SSC), a Harrogate-based independent confectionery business, has acquired…

Grape prices have inexplicably started to fall too quickly in the Spanish market

The Spanish table grape campaign is ahead of schedule this year. After two weeks of good sales, pric…

Food giants team up to provide climate-neutral transport between Denmark and the UK

Arla, Danish Crown, DFDS and DSV have teamed up in a new partnership to develop a climate-neutral tr…

At the time of selling, we don't know how much truth is there in statements reporting a higher deman

Everything points to this campaign being again "an unusual and, according to our customers, difficul…