- Appetizing store
An appetizing store, typically in reference to
Jewish cuisine , is best understood as a store that sells "thefood s one eats withbagel s.""Appetizing" is used as a
noun by itself to refer to these type of foods. Appetizing includes bothdairy and "pareve" (neither dairy nor meat) food items such aslox (smokedsalmon ),whitefish , andcream cheese spreads. These foods are typically eaten forbreakfast orlunch and, based on Jewishkashrut dietary laws , include nomeat products (kosher fish products are not considered meat). The simplest distinction is that an appetizing store is a place that sells fish and dairy products, whereas adelicatessen sell meats (but not dairy products, if it's a kosher deli).The term is used typically among
American Jew s, especially those in theNew York City area, where one can find "appetizing shops" selling cooked fishes and dairy products in some neighborhoods with large Jewish populations. [cite journal|author=Michael Pollak|title=F.Y.I.|journal=New York Times|date=27 June, 2004|url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D03E5DD1638F934A15755C0A9629C8B63] [cite journal|author=Joseph Berger|journal=New York Times|title="No more Babka? There goes the neighborhood"|date=2 July, 2007|url=http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/07/02/no-more-babka-there-goes-the-neighborhood/]Pareve and dairy restaurants inToronto ,Canada also have "Appetizers" as part of their name who are bothKosher andKosher style .Name
Also can be heard as "appy table," "appetizing table," or just "appy." Appy is short for an appetizing store or appetizing in the way deli is short for
delicatessen (the meat or the store).References
ee also
*
Jewish cusine
*Delicatessen
* Kosher
*Cuisine of New York City
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