Guss' Pickles

85-87 Orchard Street, 516-642-2634 [view website] [map]
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In Guss' Pickles…

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  • Kristen
    3 entries
    Worth visiting!

  • timobrien
    1 entry
    Worth visiting!

  • mike
    Worth visiting!
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    Entries

    Kristen
    New York City

    A tip I have about this place  — 2 years ago

    Worth visiting!

    You can try any pickle (or just get a couple to go), two for a dollar!

    Kristen
    New York City

    A rumor about this place  — 2 years ago

    Worth visiting!

    Hours:

    10 a.m. to 6 p.m. — Sunday through Thursday
    10 a.m. to 4 p.m. — Friday
    Closed Saturday.

    timobrien
    Cafe Express - Main

    Pickles!  — 2 years ago

    Worth visiting!

    Magnificent pickles.

    Kristen
    New York City

    A little history:  — 2 years ago

    Worth visiting!

    A genuine Lower East Side institution, Guss’ Pickles has been providing area residents, epicures and intrepid travelers with delicious pickled products for almost a century.

    It’s fitting that one of the Lower East Side’s landmarks was founded by a Russian immigrant. Russian native Izzy Guss arrived in New York at the dawn of the 20th Century with thousands of other European newcomers. Like many of his fellow immigrants, Izzy rented a pushcart and sold produce-including his now famous pickles—on the Lower East Side.

    Peddling pickles was a ready, if hardly ideal, first business for immigrants: it was a low-skilled job that required relatively little overhead. Indeed, cheap rental fees for pushcarts and the large market for pickles meant that anyone willing to work long hours could not only earn a profit, but eventually buy their own cart or even open a shop.

    Izzy Guss took the latter route, opening his own pickle shop on Hester Street in 1920. At the time, the neighborhood was teeming with 80 other pickle shops. However, immigration restrictions, a ban on pushcarts and the steady economic decline of the Lower East Side felled almost all of these shops.

    However, Guss’ Pickles managed to survive these fallow times and now stands as the last of the area’s old pickle shops. Tim Baker, the current owner of Guss’ Pickles, began working at Guss’ 22-years ago. Then a high school student, Tim learned the secret flavors of pickling: coriander, mustard seed, bay leaves, peppercorns, red peppers and garlic. Though the neighborhood may have changed, Guss’ pickles, peppers and other famous goods remain as tasty as ever.

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