I got an email from my brother Mike in Ohio the other day:
"You probably hate people telling you what to do on your blog," it correctly stated. "But since I AM your brother ..."
Older brother, actually. Which might hold sway in some sibling relationships, but, and perhaps to Mike's chagrin, never has in ours.
Until now.
"Since it is summer," Mike went on, "how about a recipe for Willie's Lemon Ice? I'm sure you remember those hot summer days in the school yard when we were kids, and all those trips around the corner to spend a nickel or a dime for a cup at Willie's. Right?"
Right. This, in fact, is the type of cup that my brother recalls. It is still used by Italian ice stands, only the stuff that fills it hasn't cost a nickel in a while. Lemon, which was occasionally joined by cherry or chocolate as a flavor choice back in Willie's day, is but one of possibly thousands today. I was standing on line at an ice stand in Queens recently and watched people order flavors such as Cookie Dough and Holi Cannoli, even Vanilla Peanut Butter with Chocolate Covered Pretzels. Not one of the people ahead of me ordered a lemon ice, which, by the way, was dubbed Lick Me Lemon.
Willie's Lemon Ice, now long gone, was located on the eastbound side of Atlantic Avenue, between Essex and Linwood Streets, in the East New York section of Brooklyn. The stand was open only in the summer months. Barely more than a formica counter measuring around four feet wide and as many feet high, Willie's was tightly wedged between two other commercial ventures, Sal's Tire Shop (run by the Albanese family) and Barney's candy store (the Samartanos).
Nobody, and I mean nobody, didn't crave Willie's lemon ice. It was sweet and tart and slushy and, well, about as thirst-quenching and satisfying as a thing could possibly be on a hot summer's day in the city. To anybody who grew up at the same time and place as Mike and I did, Willie's is the standard by which all Italian ices are judged. It's no wonder my brother and his wife Marie, who grew up two blocks away from Willie's, or twice as far as Mike and I did, attempt to recreate the ice every summer.
"It's as close to Willie's as you can get," Mike assured me. "I only wish that I had the paper cups to serve it in."
Almost Willie's Lemon Ice
Recipe
Serves 4 to 6
3 cups very cold water
3/4 cup sugar
2/3 cup lemon juice
2 teaspoons lemon zest
Mix all the ingredients together to dissolve the sugar and refrigerate (the colder the mixture is to start, the better it will freeze).
Place the mix into any 1- to 1 1/2-quart ice cream maker until frozen to a soft fluffy consistency. Half the recipe can also be made for 2-3 people and it does freeze better in small quantities.
Oh How I remember those cups!! where can we get them!! your brother is right....the cups make it!
ReplyDeleteIt is like the breyers ice cream with the wooden spoon...does not taste good without the spoon.....
Lets try to find the cups!!!
it sounds so gross now, but we used to suck those paper cups of every sweet, lemony (or whatever flavor we bought) drop and THEN chew the cup until we spit it out as an inert wad of yuck! Talk about getting our nickel's worth. We bought our ices from the italian pastry shop LoBasso's on Avenue U in Gravesend, Brooklyn. It was a summer evening ritual.
ReplyDeleteMy name is tony and I worked for
ReplyDeleteWillie back in 1976 I was 11 and
Made 1.50 a hour worked for him
For 3 summers scooped many many
Ices