When New York Bagel opened in Detroit 100 years ago, bagels were still a decidedly Jewish bread and the bagel man came around on foot, delivering hand-formed rings that dangled from ropes like holiday garland.
鈥淎nd if nobody was at the store to receive them, they鈥檇 hang them on the doorknob in the alleys,鈥 says Howard Goldsmith, who represents the third generation of Goldsmiths behind the veritable bagel institution. 鈥淐an you imagine doing that now?鈥
The century-long story of Detroit鈥檚 New York Bagel tracks the assimilation of 鈥淛ewish doughnuts鈥 鈥 as the Detroit Free Press called them in a 1977 article about their growing popularity 鈥 into the wider American culture, where their popularity was firmly cemented in part by a 1990s bagel boom driven by the likes of Bruegger鈥檚, Einstein鈥檚, and Lender鈥檚.
When Goldsmith was a kid, the greatest demand for bagels came late on Saturday nights. After Shabbat, a crowd of mostly Jewish patrons would stretch out the door waiting to pick up a spread of bagels and lox for Sunday morning. Today, at the register of New York Bagel鈥檚 Ferndale location, a small retail counter hiding a nearly 4,500-square-foot production facility that doubles as the main bakery for its three stores, you can buy a $1 pin that celebrates the diversity of the contemporary bagel crowd. 鈥淎merica is an everything bagel,鈥 it reads.
To Toast or Not to Toast?听
How to store and reheat a New York Bagel, according to Phil Goldsmith
鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 ever toast a bagel straight out of the oven. That鈥檚 sort of sacrilegious. But if you bought it in the morning and want to have it as an afternoon snack or for dinner, our bagels are great toasted. If you want to put it in the refrigerator overnight to keep it fresher, you can also toast it. If you want to freeze them 鈥 and our bagels freeze very well 鈥 you should slice them before you freeze them and again, you can toast them or stick them in a 300-degree oven. It won鈥檛 be as good as straight out of our oven, but it鈥檚 good in a pinch.鈥
And it certainly looks that way during the weekend morning rush, now the busiest time of week. The line spills out the door, revealing a mix of people ranging from hung-over line cooks on their way to banging pans at brunch, to city workers in their neon vests, to families in church clothes stopping in for a dozen on their way to a relative鈥檚 house. Warnings of 鈥渉ot salt!鈥 or 鈥渉ot sesame!鈥 ring out every 15 minutes or so, punctuating the sweet, bready air.
鈥淣ew York Bagel is pure nostalgia for me,鈥 says Brad Lutz, an up-and-coming Detroit-based baker who grew up eating New York Bagel bagels. 鈥淚 remember hot bagels getting dumped and steaming up the plexiglass. You knew which ones to get because that鈥檚 where the plexiglass was fogged up the most.鈥 Lutz, who recently launched his own bagel sandwich pop-up, says the shadow of the bagel leader looms large in Detroit, even as it turns 100 years old. 鈥淎nybody who I talk to right now and tell them about Doughtown Bagels and what I鈥檓 doing, the first question out of their mouth is: 鈥楬ow does it compare to New York Bagel?鈥 鈥 Lutz says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been that standard bearer for my entire life and presumably for generations before me.鈥
As Goldsmith tells it, in 1921 a bagel baker from New York City came to Detroit to open a bakery. Situated in what was then the heart of Detroit鈥檚 Jewish community on Hastings Street, New York Bagel thrived as an ethnic bakery delivering its goods to back alleys and shops in the area then known as 鈥淟ittle Jerusalem.鈥
According to news reports at the time, Howard鈥檚 grandfather Morris Goldsmith, a Jewish immigrant from Russia who arrived in Detroit the year the bakery opened, joined the business in 1923, eventually becoming a partner in the successful wholesale operation. 鈥淲e essentially followed the Jewish community,鈥 Howard explains. 鈥淎fter Hastings Street, the bakery moved to Linwood and Clairmont. And then in the 鈥50s, they moved the store up to Seven Mile and Schaefer, once again with the Jewish migration.鈥
By the time Morris Goldsmith died in 1979, New York Bagel boasted five retail locations 鈥 in Detroit, Southfield, Oak Park, Ferndale, and Troy. (Today, Ferndale and Southfield remain, along with a third outpost in West Bloomfield.)But it was Morris鈥 son, Howard鈥檚 father, Harvey, who revolutionized the business and turned New York Bagel into the institution it remains today. Harvey joined what was by then the family business in the late 鈥40s, fresh off a stint in the Navy.
It was Harvey who introduced bagel automation technology in the 鈥60s that allowed for the company鈥檚 massive mid-century growth. Dough boxes allowed the team to efficiently store uncooked bagels; revolving ovens allowed for greater production; a drying oven ensured a crisp crust in the final product; and a bagel-shaping machine increased output. The machinery is still used at the Ferndale location. When something breaks, replacement parts must be custom-made.
The automation era ushered in pre-packaged frozen bagels from rapidly growing brands like Lender鈥檚 and, suddenly, the country鈥檚 first mass-market bagel boom was underway. Detroit was no exception. 鈥淗alf my customers are gentile, and the biggest rush for hot bagels is after Sunday church services,鈥 Harvey Goldsmith told the Detroit Free Press in 1967.
By 1971, Detroit 黑料网, in a story headlined, 鈥淭he Goldsmith Bagel Gang Move In on the English Muffin Monopoly,鈥 proclaimed that half of all bagel sales in the area were now being made to non-Jews. 鈥淭he persons responsible for the upsurge of bagels in Detroit are known as the Goldsmith Gang,鈥 the magazine declared in the irreverent tone of the era. 鈥淭hey are 25 members strong and are led by Harvey Goldsmith, whose motto is, 鈥極ur bagels are baked with love.鈥 鈥
What Makes a听New York Bagel?
The bagel-making process 鈥 and much of the original automation machinery from the 1960s 鈥 remains unchanged at New York Bagel鈥檚 Ferndale production facility. Flour, water, yeast, and malt is mixed into a 500-pound dough ball that鈥檚 then divided into 4-ounce chunks. These are sent through a bagel-shaping machine then stored on trays, where the uncooked bagels proof for 20 minutes or so. After proofing, the bagels are boiled for 1-2 minutes in a kettle, sprinkled with the appropriate toppings, then run through a drying oven before being plopped face down directly onto a hot oven shelf. The process imparts the trademark shiny exterior shell while maintaining a doughy, soft interior.
The article details Harvey鈥檚 70-hour work weeks spent driving between locations and his in-the-trenches approach to business, which helped make New York Bagel the second-largest bagel company in the country at the time, serving accounts as far afield as New York City 鈥 the irony of which was not lost on Harvey.
鈥淪hipping bagels into New York is a little like shipping crude into Saudi Arabia,鈥 he sheepishly told the magazine.
Harvey Goldsmith died in March at the age of 93, having seen his family business reach the fourth generation and a full 100 years in operation. 鈥淗e couldn鈥檛 have been happier,鈥 says Harvey鈥檚 grandson, Phil Goldsmith, of his grandfather seeing him join New York Bagel.
Howard had been unsure of reaching a fourth generation. In 2014, he told a local publication that he鈥檇 be surprised if one of his children took the reins. But just a year later, Phil joined the family business, giving up a career as a certified public accountant to accept the bagel throne. 鈥淗oward and myself are here every day,鈥 Phil, 39, says. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 get to a fourth generation if the ownership isn鈥檛 present and working side-by-side with people.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful,鈥 Howard, 70, says of his son鈥檚 involvement as co-owner. 鈥淲hat a privilege to have your son work with you.鈥
Like his son, Howard also explored other interests before settling into the bagel business. In 1969, he left for college and stayed gone for nearly two decades. (He earned a Ph.D. in speech and hearing sciences and was an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee.) But the pull of the family business was difficult to resist.
So, in his mid-thirties, Howard came back to New York Bagel in 1987, partnering with his father at a time of intense growth. According to a 1995 Detroit Free Press report, the number of American households that ate bagels roughly doubled from 1988 to 1994.
Things have cooled off a bit since those heady days of the 鈥90s, the Goldsmiths say, partially because of increased competition and partially because customer preferences have shifted as the customers themselves have evolved from the previous generation. Fewer people are buying bags by the dozen in favor of bagel sandwiches and other prepared foods. That trend has only magnified since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
New York Bagel By The Numbers鈥
100 years in business
4听generations of Goldsmith family ownership
3听locations:
23316 Woodward Ave., Ferndale
19731 W. 12 Mile Road, Southfield
6927 Orchard Lake Road, West Bloomfield
60K听bagels made weekly
24听varieties of bagels, including 鈥渄ogels鈥 for furry friends
3听delivery trucks on the road servicing wholesale accounts
45 employees across the company
鈥淲e鈥檝e seen a lot of bagel shops come and go,鈥 Phil says. 鈥淚 guess it says something about us and those guys who could stick around the entire time. We鈥檝e got staying power because we do things the traditional way and we鈥檝e been doing it for a long time.鈥
Like his father before him, Phil isn鈥檛 so sure he鈥檒l ever hand off the bagel baton to yet another generation of Goldsmiths. At this point, it seems unlikely. His daughter is an only child and just 6 years old. It鈥檚 really too early to say.
鈥淏ut,鈥 he says, 鈥渋t would be something to get to five generations.鈥
This story is featured in the November 2021 issue of 黑料网 Detroit magazine. Read more stories in our听digital edition.
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