The best way to write is to write.
A blog about technical writing in Los Angeles, LA in general, and other things...
Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Lincoln Heights Days of Old: Italian Moonlight Serenades

Fruit tree blossom with spider web I received another great reminiscence letter from my dad recently about a lovely family tradition practiced in Lincoln Heights in the "old days" - late night serenades.

My dad, who is in his eighties, comments that he does not know how his Sicilian immigrant parents and their contemporaries managed to accomplish so much, which echoes what I have been thinking lately about our fast-paced twitter and tweet lifestyle - so much, so fast.

Anyway, for those of you wanting to know a little more about East Los Angeles life in the early part of last century, here is a great snapshot.

My dad wrote:

In an earlier letter I mentioned that Tony Giampietro [a close friend of his parents] was a superb mandolinist, and had studied at some prestigious music schools when he lived back east in New Jersey. He also played the triangular-shaped, Russian balalaika, which he played in the Jeanette McDonald-Nelson Eddy movie of old, "At the Balalaika." Anyhow, he and my dad played together at almost every family party or picnic. Dad never studied music at any conservancy, but had a real "ear for music," which [my dad's brother] Anthony inherited.

Back in the good old days, everyone of my parents' friends, like my parents, were self-employed, and most worked extremely long hours in their businesses, often 6-7 days a week. Thus, they were pretty "physically beat" by the end of each workday, yet they had the stamina to do things socially, that would be "out of the question" with even my generation, and for sure your generation.

One of the "social niceties" of that era was late night musical serenade. Whenever one of the couples was celebrating an anniversary, the ladies would do the planning, and several couples would actually gather at someone's home at midnight. Then all would caravan to the "anniversarees'" home, go in the gate, and gather at the bedroom window of the couple. Dad and Tony Giampietro would then softly play an old, old, popular tune, "I Love You Truly," and everyone would sing along. The neighbors would not be "pissed off," as they would today, at being awakened, and when the song was over, everyone would clap, and the anniversary couple would turn on the lights and invite all (including the neighbors) in for a cup of coffee and a cookie.

Mind you, this would now be 1:00 - 1:30 AM in the night hours! After about a half an hour, all would leave, drive home, and most would be at work by 7:00 AM the next morning...ready for another 12 hour day! Sheesh! Don't know how they did it?

Oh, if said anniversary happened to be my parents', or Lucy and Tony's [Giampietro], then there were always other guitar players or mandolinists who would fill in. My uncle, Emil Sanfedele, who lived in our courts, could play a little guitar, but mandolin very well. A guy named Rudy Marino, who was music-school trained and a par to Tony Giampietro. Or my cousin Dick Giaimo played the violin well.

So the custom of an anniversary "serenata" lived on. In Happy Valley [a nickname for the part of the Lincoln Heights where they lived] a similar custom was carried on by the Mexican community as young men would hire a small mariachi group to serenade their brides-to-be, again, in the wee hours of the morning! I always enjoyed the mariachis because of their beautiful, close harmony in singing, accompanied by a lone guitar!

I can say this. The immigrant members of society then were very hard workers, but they made the time for social interface and fun, though it was simple in nature. I think it was what kept them going in the face of adversity that we'll never know. I'm glad I had the privilege of growing up in that era!

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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Tech Writer Tales: Ptomaine Tommy's and Mrs. Hummel's Pies

I was born and raised in Los Angeles, as was my dad. This is a story about L.A. back in the good old days. Its telling requires a little background.

My dad's parents emigrated from Sicily at the turn of the century (the 20th century, not this one). In the early 1920's they moved from New Jersey to California, to remove themselves, as the story goes, from an increasing involvement with the... Cosa Nostra. But that's another story.

Where they lived was in the portion of East Los Angeles called Lincoln Heights. Back up toward the hills there is the area known as Happy Valley, and that's where my grandparents owned a corner grocery store, lived in the house behind it, and also owned the small apartment court next door - some of the tenants were our relatives. The store and "the courts" are still there.


The store and the courts today

There were a couple of celebrities who came from that neighborhood whose families were customers of my grandparents, including the big cat trainer Melvin Koontz, and Robert Preston of The Music Man fame, whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. Meservey, were friends of my grandparents. I have a couple of stories from my dad about Mel Koontz that I'll tell at another time.

I never knew my grandparents, but have always had a great fascination for my Sicilian roots (genealogy in general, actually). So I've spent quite a bit of time over the years interviewing family members for their recollections. Anyway, recently I found a great Lincoln Heights history website, and printed off some pages to send to my dad for his birthday. As I hoped, my dad's reminiscences about what I sent him have resulted in some neat stories that I've decided to share here.

Today's story is about a local burger joint in Lincoln Heights on N. Broadway called Ptomaine Tommy's. According to the story, Ptomaine Tommy's was the originator of the "chili size," the hamburger covered with chili. The Lincoln Heights history site writes about it here (scroll down the page), and this is what my dad had to say about Ptomaine Tommy's and Mrs. Hummel, another of my grandparents' customers.

The timeframe was the 1930's and 40's, that period sandwiched between the Great Depression and World War II. As today, things were not easy, and part of what my dad says resonates.

Another favorite place of ours, as teenagers, was the place called "Ptomaine Tommy's" as it was famed for its chili, and they invented the dish of a hamburger patty smothered in chili, called a "chili size." What made their chili different was the beans (pintos) were cooked separate from, not cooked in with the meat chili. When you ordered chili and beans, the guy would put a big ladle of beans in a bowl, then ask, "Do you want mild, medium, or hot chili, over the beans?"

Then he'd ask, "Do you want a smother of chopped onions?" (They did not put cheddar cheese on their chili.) Believe me, if you said you wanted hot chili, you'd darned well better have an asbestos mouth! (I never got beyond medium).

The other thing I want to add to your knowledge of the place was they were also famed for their pies. Many people just assumed they were baked on premises, but the people of our little valley all knew the pies were all baked by one of our customers, a lady named Mrs. Hummel, from Germany.

Her husband was disabled in a work accident and could no longer work. She had three kids to raise, and everyone knew of her fantastic fruit pies. So, one of the neighbors, an LAPD cop, went to Ptomaine Tommy's and asked them if they'd try the apple pie he'd brought. Well, one taste and the deal was made; Mrs. Hummel then made all of Ptomaine Tommy's pies, and she financed her family!

She was an amazing lady, in being able to care for an ailing husband, raise three kids, and bake pies seven days a week. She had a carpenter remake a chicken coop into a cooking/baking area, piped with water and natural gas.

She used nothing but rendered pork fat in her pie crusts, and I've never, ever, tasted such tender, flaky, tasty crusts. She had a cauldron on a small stove, and rendered (melted) the long sheaves of pork fat sliced off the pig's bellies. As a kid, I'd have to put these huge packages of "leaf lard", wrapped in Dad's butcher paper, on my shoulder and walk a block down to her house. Obviously, sanitation codes then aren't what they are today, as the pies were obviously not baked/made under the most sanitary conditions?

She was so thrifty that in the rendering of the leaf lard, little pieces of meat and crispy fat would float to the top of the vat. She'd skim these off and sell them in paper bags to the Mexican folks in the Valley, as they considered them a delicacy. Our store never sold her pies, only commercial pies, as Dad knew most of the Valley residents who wanted a "Hummel Pie" bought it directly from her.

Even Dad, who was a dessert freak, would often phone her and order one of her apple or cherry pies. I'd then go pick it up from her, and Dad would deduct the cost from Mrs. Hummel's tab at the store (in those days, everything was done/transacted on the "honor system").

And a lot of movie stars did drive all the way over to "The Heights" for a bowl of chili, or a "size."


Downtown LA from Lincoln Heights

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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

What Else Does a Tech Writer Do?

Well, sometimes her trusty chauffeur drives her around Los Angeles, and they take photos.


Downtown LA near 4th Street





Downtown LA



Downtown LA - Garment District





Lincoln Park - former home of the Luna Park Zoo, which housed the largest collection of certain animals in the US in the 1930's. My dad grew up in Lincoln Heights. He has a great story about the zoo that I will have to dig up.

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