Court Pastry Shop
Keeping it real (and delicious) on Court Street.
Summer, 1989.
The sky is the color of sherbet, boys are throwing baseballs and the ice cream truck can only be a few blocks away because already I’m humming along to Joplin’s “The Entertainer.” But forget the truck. I’m sitting on my Sackett Street stoop anxiously waiting for Dad to come home from work. Mom says that when Dad gets home, we can get ices. Where is he?
For me, Court Pastry wasn’t the “cookie store” growing up -- it was the “ice place.” Rarely did my family even go inside! No, we were the Italian ice junkies. That first lick off the top of a chocolate ice stimulated so much pleasure in my brain... that I always forgot that I liked the lemon ice, too. (Tip: combine them.)
***
Whether you’re new to the neighborhood or not, chances are you’ve been to Court Pastry. Let me rephrase that. Chances are you’ve smelled Court Pastry. It only takes one customer to swing that door open. And once that’s done, you have to forgive yourself. It’s okay that you're just another victim held hostage to an aroma so nutty and so sweet that you're forced to stop what you’re doing and immediately brainstorm an excuse as to why you’re about to buy a pound and a half of cookies. (Um, shouldn’t everyone celebrate President’s Day with a pound and a half of cookies? No?)
***
Around 8 p.m. on an icy weekday night, I am following co-owner, Gasper Zerilli, 62, to the back of his shop, and into the kitchen. Steve Miller Band is playing loudly on the radio, but Zerilli does not turn it down. Instead, he does a quick wipe of his hands down the front of his flour-dusted apron and gets right into it.
“My father, Salvatore Zerilli, was born in this country in 1917. In 1919, his parents died from the Spanish influenza. He had a sister who was eleven, and they both got sent back to Italy to get raised because they had no family here. So they went back to Marsala, Sicily, and my father grew up with one grandmother and my aunt grew up with another grandmother. They never really came into contact. They never really associated while they were young.”
“He came back to this country when he was fifteen,” Gasper continues. “His uncle called him over.”
(I’m confused. Didn’t he say there was no family here?)
“They called him ‘uncle’ but he wasn’t really…”
(Ah. Say no more.)
“So his uncle’s name was Carmelo, and he owned a pastry shop on Columbia Street. When he got to the shop, he made friends with one of the kids who used to work there. This kid taught him English, taught him how to get around, taught him how to work. That was the starting point for my father.”
And we all start somewhere.
Over the next fifteen years, Salvatore took jobs in both Brooklyn and Manhattan, trying his hand at a variety of bakeries, trying his hand at a variety of baking speeds. It was after working for Carmelo that he took a job with a man named Mr. Spina. Mr. Spina’s business was in wholesale biscuits. (Think Stella D’oro, but before Stella D’oro.)
“When you work in wholesale, it’s a different story,” Gasper explains. “Most pastry shops are taking their time, going slow, making everything perfect. But when you work wholesale, in order to make money, you gotta produce, you gotta go fast.”
Surely, a valuable skill in the baking business, but what Salvatore really wanted to do was master the pastries a baker’s “uncle” could be proud of. So he went to work for an older man named Mr. DeBella who owned a pastry shop on Avenue U and West 5th Street in Gravesend, Brooklyn.
“How do you say… when you make something and you see all your own work and everything is done by you so whatever you sell, it’s yours, all yours, and so you have an appreciation for the stuff?”
I’d call that self-satisfaction.
And it makes a difference. In fact, it inspires you to get in touch with your friend, Anthony Caraciolla, during the summer of 1948, and open up your own shop in Cobble Hill.
“Tony and my father – they were partners for thirty-two years. In 1975, a few years before Tony retired, I became a partner. Three partners. And then Tony retired in ’81 and my brother, Vincent, took his place."
Today, in the back, we have Gasper, Vincent, two bakers and a kid who comes in on weekends. In the front? Girls.
“So the recipes are pretty much the same. I may have added some pies and cheesecake to the mix, but the cannolis are the same, the sfogliatelles are the same,” Gasper says.
***
All of a sudden, it’s hard to concentrate.
I’m glad the conversation began in the kitchen because now we’re up front and I’m distracted. Seven-layer cookies, stacked like adorable, little birthday presents. Deep almond and apricot flavors accentuated by a pencil-thin layer of chocolate on top and bottom (obviously my favorite). Macaroons. Cuccidati. Rococo. Chocolate things. Can I be another girl that works here? Please?
“See these?” Gasper points to cookies covered in pine nuts. “These are gold. Spanish pignolis. $25/lb. Just for the nuts!”
But you don’t have to be nuts to know that if you use the best materials, you get the best results. That’s just how Court Pastry rolls. I've never been surprised to see a line of customers snaking around the shop, all waiting to "get a box."
The wall is lined with prices. $11/lb for the mixed cookies/sugar free cookies; $6.50/lb for the regina and twist cookies; $2.25/pastry; $2.75/sfogliatelle. If you want 21 pastries, the price is up there.
And for good reason. Trust me, your brain can't compute math when you're at Court Pastry.
Joe Guitar
10:20 am on Monday, February 21, 2011
My Fav is Canoli The best anywhere and I dont care what anyone says ITS THE BEST!!! That and a cup of coffee form D'Amico and your set. 2 of the best places in the world as far as I'm concerned....By the way I grew up on Degraw st. 29 years
Andrew
1:15 pm on Monday, February 21, 2011
best. cannolis. ever.
Sylvie Morgan Flatow
1:22 pm on Monday, February 21, 2011
cannolis = #1 bestseller
Danielle
4:51 pm on Monday, February 21, 2011
Sylvie, I loved the story - thanks!
Sylvie Morgan Flatow
9:26 pm on Monday, February 21, 2011
you're very welcome!
Chris Barker
10:35 am on Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Best cannolis I have ever eaten
Debra Robbins
8:24 pm on Sunday, February 27, 2011
Best lemon ices in the neighborhood. Can't wait for the little window to open. Anyone know when???? Great article, as always. Thank you.
Laura Eng
12:59 pm on Monday, March 21, 2011
Wonderful story that really captures the Court Pastry experience!!!!! Keep them coming!
lisa
1:15 pm on Monday, March 21, 2011
Hey great story. Check out South Brooklyn Post's story on Court Street Pastry, featuring a great photo gallery by Brooklyn photographer Joshua Kristal! http://southbrooklynpost.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=382&action=edit&message=1
Frankie
1:43 pm on Monday, March 21, 2011
Two words: S cookies, or is that a letter and a word. Either way, they're the best. And it's not Summer unless lemon ice is consumed.
Danielle
9:42 pm on Monday, March 21, 2011
Frankie - I love their lemon ice!
Paolina
8:52 am on Friday, March 25, 2011
Hmmmmmm, the smell of those pastries was hypnotic! I grew up on Court Street. We lived across the street from Buscemi which became Monetleone's.......all in the neighborhood. My Dad owned the Superior Press for most of my life. Sacred Heart's school graduate 1954 and we still stay in contact with classmates, some still live in the neighborhood. I live in Staten Island now but my brother Joe lives on President Street and he just brought St. Joseph's pastries to my Dad, who is 103, and he lives in N.J.
The neighborhood is in our blood, our roots are there; our hearts are there. Pauline
Paolina
5:18 pm on Friday, March 25, 2011
I forgot to mention the St. Joseph's pastries, Sfinga, were, of course, from The Court Pastry, we all enjoyed them.
OMG! how delicious!.
Court Pastry is a landmark on Court Street; we couldn't survive w/o their delectable treats. Thank you Court Pastry!
Can't wait for Easter goodies....... : - ) I'm almost tempted to drive over the bridge right now for some treats.
VincentMVNY
9:19 am on Friday, March 25, 2011
Note to Harvard Business School:
How do you keep a food craft business going and growing for more than 50 years?
Stay true to the recipes that were handed down to you by your grandfather and father. Don't chintz on the ingredients, buy and use the best you can find. Share your skills and train interns to learn your craft. Instill good customer service habits in your cutomer contact personnel. The rest takes care of itself.
Gaspare and his father before him have stayed true to these principles and have been rewarded with success when so many others have failed.
Paula Capuano
12:07 pm on Friday, March 25, 2011
I have been out of B'klyn for well over thirty years. Every time I come back I go to Court Pastry. This past Nov. we were in town and went to the pastry shop. Yes, the smell as you walk in is to die for, brings back so many wonderful memories of having the pasteries at my First Holy Communion, Confirmation, Wedding and our children's Christenings.
We went on-line after we got home because I wanted to see if they would ship the cookiers. That service is not available, however, I hope they will consider doing that soon.
Las Vegas cookie lover
Danielle
1:33 pm on Friday, March 25, 2011
Paula, what are you doing in Vegas? Come back home! ;-) P.S. DiFara's Pizza in Midwood is coming to Vegas this Summer. Enjoy!
Catherine Aufiero
10:12 am on Tuesday, April 5, 2011
Just visited the Pastry Shop this past summer and brought my girls with me.
My Aunt Katy lived on Sackett Street and we always went there for Lemon Ices
(the best in the state). I now have a Grandson and will take him there this summer. So many wonderful memories. I live in Farmingdale now but Carroll
Gardens hold a special place in my heart. Thanks for the memories, Catherine
Aufiero
Frank Notaro
4:51 pm on Tuesday, April 5, 2011
Frank Notaro
I agree. The best connolis ever. Haven't lived in Brooklyn for sometime now, but whenever we're in the neighborhood, Court Pastry is our last stop before heading back home.