About
The largest of New York’s five boroughs, Queens is the home of over two million people, half of them born outside the United States, speaking more than 150 different languages. It’s perhaps the only place on the face of the planet where Tagalog bumps up hard against Romanian. It’s also home to countless immigrant stories of the most classic kind: a newcomer arrives and sets up shop – or, more frequently, cart – selling the food of his or her homeland as the first step towards making it in America. As a result, for the culinary explorer, Queens is truly the promised land. On this deep dive into the immigrant cooking experience in Queens, we’ll visit Corona and Jackson Heights, two unassuming neighborhoods that have managed to stay under the radar while other parts of the borough have become increasingly popular destinations. We’ll start our day off in bustling Corona Plaza, in the shadow of the elevated tracks of the 7 train, for a visit to a family-run Mexican bakery and, not far away, a taste of handmade tortillas and, on the weekends, pit-roasted goat. Also near the plaza, we’ll stop into a small bakery and café, owned by an immigrant who got his start toiling in the back kitchens of Manhattan restaurants, for a traditional cemita, the behemoth sandwich that’s the pride and joy of Puebla, Mexico. From there our walk will continue along Roosevelt Avenue, the area’s main artery and Queens’s own version of the Pan-American Highway, ducking into markets and stopping by vendors representing Mexico, Ecuador and Argentina. Before leaving Corona and its Latin American kitchens, we’ll make our way to a beloved Uruguayan bakery and then head over to neighboring Jackson Heights, home to a number of thriving immigrant communities from throughout Asia. As we walk through the vibrant neighborhood, our stops will include a Tibetan momo food truck and a street cart selling highly addictive Bengali snacks. We’ll end our Queens food tour in the neighborhood’s central plaza with some Indian sweets from a nearby business, another reminder that what has always made America great is the ability for anyone from anywhere to come here and make a successful new start.
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