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By Kelli
Anderson
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Caffe Trieste boasts live opera and fresh-roasted coffee.
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When Ed Moose
moved to San Francisco in 1961 after a stint in Rome, he was drawn
to North Beach because of its life, its spirit, its vita.
Nearly 40 years later, he remains for the same reason. "Every 10
years or so, my wife and I say we have to move, we've been here
too long," says Moose, a restaurateur who opened the Washington
Square Bar and Grill in 1973 and Moose's in 1992. "But after looking
at SoHo, the Village, and some other places, North Beach still looks
pretty good."
North Beach
still smells and tastes pretty good, too, thanks largely to the
irresistible pull of Italian food from the neighborhood's delis,
restaurants, bakeries, and cafés. The fading display of yellow,
green, and red packaging of Italian exotica in the windows of Molinari's
deli still beckons, as does the aroma of freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
cheese from the 60-pound wheels at Florence Deli and the sweet crunch
of florentines from the Danilo Bakery. In coffeehouses such as Puccini,
Roma, and Trieste, you can still find people writing poetry and
listening to scratchy jukebox opera.
Which is not
to say Little Italy hasn't changed. The Broadway nightclubs that
helped launch the careers of Barbra Streisand, Woody Allen, and
Phyllis Diller, among others, are long gone, replaced by strip joints
that have yet to be displaced. Beatniks and cheap rents are a thing
of the past, too, and old institutions like the Square, Tony Nick's
bar, and the U.S. Restaurant seem to disappear every week. But a
remarkable number of old neighborhood places survive, and they do
so more because of tourism than despite it.
"Tourists allow
us to keep our doors open," says Mario's Bohemian Cigar Store manager
Julie Crismani, whose father, Mario, added his wife's now-famous
focaccia sandwiches to the menu in 1973 when rising rents inspired
him to find a clientele beyond the old men who sat at his tables
sipping grappa all day. According to the North Beach Chamber of
Commerce, two-thirds of the neighborhood's business now comes from
tourists.
Of course,
tourist is a fairly broad category. You'll find throngs of people
in North Beach, particularly on weekend evenings in the summer,
when certain well-known restaurants like the Stinking Rose can have
waits of well over an hour. But it's difficult to tell if the people
clogging the sidewalks on Columbus Avenue live in Knoxville or the
neighborhood.
"I'd say North
Beach mostly gets regular people," says Ron Minolli, co-owner of
Gino and Carlo, a 58-year-old bar on Green Street. "It's not like
Fisherman's Wharf or Pier 39, where the tourist who would go to
Venice just for the gondola ride would go. We get the tourist who
takes the initiative to find something different."
Many visitors
come for a sentimental journey, where the hiss of an espresso machine,
the smell of freshly baked amaretti, or the lyrical rush of spoken
Italian evokes a remembered Italy, or at least an imagined Italy.
That North Beach doesn't necessarily evoke the real Italy
will be beside the point as long as the area's vita still
thrives. And until Ed Moose starts packing his bags, you can trust
that it does.
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