Alexandrian women are flocking to the city's Sporting Club to attend classes by Youssra, the latest dance and aerobics sensation. To read more click on the link http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2012/1092/li1.htm
AMICALE D'ALEXANDRIE: HIER ET AUJOURD'HUI
AAHA get together in New York
The "Amicale" get together twice a year: May and October. Should you happen to be in New York at this time of the year, join us. We would love to meet you over lunch and talk about the Golden years. Contact LevyViviane@Yahoo.com
Friday, April 13, 2012
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
ALI BABA, HERE WE COME
Hello “Eskandaranis”,
I am happy to confirm that our next get-together will take place on SUNDAY May 6th , 2012. We are going to change venue and try a new restaurant. It is Ali Baba’s Terrace, 862 Second Avenue (at 46th street), www.alibabasterrace.com, (212)888-8622. As usual we will meet from 12:00 until 4:00 p.m.
As you might already know, street parking is allowed everywhere on Sundays, except on East 46th street between 2nd and 1st Ave, unless you have a diplomatic license; but street parking is allowed on 2nd Avenue, and on 46th street between 2nd and 3rd Ave. If you cannot find street parking, there are two garages on 46th street between 2nd and 1st Ave. (The second one charges $10.00) .
The meal will start with a sheppard salad;“mazzas” will include tarama, Babaganoush, and imam bayaldi; the “pieces de resistance” will be one of 4 choices: stuffed cabbage, chicken shish kebab, kofta, Trout stuffed with spinach and salad, all with rice pilaf and mixed vegetables; for desert, a platter of “hallaweyat” will be served. As far as beverages, you will have a choice of sodas, and tea or coffee. The cost is $48.00; it includes tax, tip and all of the above. Please notice that you will not have to make any choices in advance. Only the alcoholic drinks will be extra, and will be available at the cash bar. If the weather permits it, we might be able to “shem el Hawah” on the terrace on the roof top of the restaurant.
I hope that we will see each other again, and catch up on happy family and vacation news. So, please fill out the Registration form that is below. Kindly mail the form with your check made out to me, Viviane Levy, before April 30; my address and telephone number are: 5 Westbrook Road , Westfield , NJ -07090, (908)232-1758. In case you need to cancel the morning of the luncheon, otherwise we will be charged, kindly call my cell at (908) 377-8886. Please do not hesitate to contact me if you have any questions or concerns.
If you know of any interesting books, articles, lectures or essays related to Egypt, please email me (levyviviane@yahoo.com) the details so that I can put together a list to be distributed. Also, if you wish to speak, for 5 min., about your specific “Egyptian” expertise, a nokta, a short story, a C.D., or a short account of a recent trip to Egypt , let me know ASAP, in advance, or indicate it on the registration form.
Please feel free to recruit more friends from Alexandria to join us, as friends from Cairo and any others are also welcome. In the meantime, we are all looking forward to this wonderful Hafla.
Happy Easter and A Sweet Passover,
See you soon!
Viviane Levy - Acker
Friday, October 28, 2011
A tribute to our friends from Cairo: GROPPI: A CAIRO LEGEND -
A history of the most celebrated tea-room
GROPPI, once the most celebrated tearoom in Cairo, was the creation of Giacomo Groppi (1863-1947) a native of Lugano, Switzerland. In time Maison Groppi became chief purveyor of chocolate to monarchs and pashas throughout the MidEast. Whenever pashas, beys and resident-foreigners traveled to Europe they took with them cartons filled with Groppi chocolates. During WW-II King Farouk air freighted via Khartoum, Entebbe, Dakar, Lisbon, Dublin a lacquered box emblazoned with the royal arms of Egypt and Great Britain. Inside, to the delight of the then-princesses Elizabeth and Margaret of England, were 100 kilos of Groppi chocolates.
After a short apprenticeship with an uncle in Lugano and a brief employment in Provence, south of France, Giacomo Groppi arrived in Egypt in the 1880s to take up employment at Maison Gianola, a popular Swiss pastry and teashop on Bawaki Street, Cairo. In 1890, Giacomo Groppi, now aged 27, bought out Gianola's interests in its Alexandria's Rue de France branch and proceeded to open his own pastry and dairy shop.
By 1900 Groppi was running a successful enterprise annually exporting 100,000 cartons of eggs to the United Kingdom.
for more ...
At Maison Groppi's second Alexandrine branch, on Cherif Street, Giacomo introduced crème chantilly for the first time in Egypt. This was a new technological feat which he acquired while touring the Exposition Universelle in Paris. Groppi was also the first chocolatier in Egypt to employ a female staff. In 1906, he sold his company to a Frenchman, Auguste Baudrot, and retired. For the next 60 years, Baudrot was regarded first amongst equals whenever compared to Alexandria's other famous tea rooms: Pastroudis, Trianon and Athineos. All three were run by Greeks.
Having lost his entire savings during the economic depression of 1907 Giacomo Groppi was obliged to return to what he knew best: making chocolates, pastries and dairy products. But out of deference to Baudrot, Groppi moved his activities to Cairo's al-Maghrabi Street (later, Adly Pasha Street). With only "La Marquise de Sévigné" and "Maison Mathieu" (renamed Sault) pausing as competition, Maison Groppi was ensured success in the nation's capital.
The formal opening took place on 23 December 1909. By the time WW-I broke out, Groppi's Tea Garden had become a favorite with the British Army of Occupation. A deli was added enhancing Groppi's image as the purveyor of quality food products.
In 1922 Maison Groppi inaugurated its own cold storage company--Industrie du Froid--employing over 120 workers and producing a daily output of 2,400 blocs of ice.
In 1928, Giacomo Groppi's son, Achille, launched his famous ice cream, a technology he imported from the United States. The names of his delicious specialties were as exceptional as they tasted: Sfogliatella, Morocco, Mau Mau, Peche Melba, Maruska, Comtesse Marie, Surprise Neapolitaine. Cairenes were grateful to Achille for yet another creation: the Groppi tearoom situated on Midan Soliman Pasha (now, Talaat Harb).
Decades later, Groppi of Cairo would open a terrace café in Heliopolis overlooking Avenue des Pyramides and the legendary Heliopolis Palace Hotel (now, Uruba Presidential Palace).
Groppi's Cairo Rotunda located on the ground floor of a new building designed by Italian architect Guissepe Mazza, was inaugurated on Thursday, March 12, 1925 . The morning after the papers were all praise about the new Parisian-style café and the titanic reception that Achille and Giacomo Groppi had given to mark the occasion. The description in the Egypte Nouvelle, better left in its original French for fear of reducing the effect was as follows: "Il serait dificile, en effet, de rever cadre plus somptueux et, en meme temps, de meilleur gout que celui dans lequel se deroula cette soirée inoubliable... Avec ses piliers gainés de marbre, sa cloture aux larges vitres garnies de brise-bise mordorés, et l'immense et splendide verrière en rosace qui forme le plafond de sa coupole tronquée, la vaste rotonde, constitue un palais féerique, le plus élégant, le plus beau qui a été, de mémoire d'homme élevé ici à Terpischore..."
International celebrities visited the Rotunda whenever in town. All admired the art deco design and the wonderful mosaic display by A. Castaman. Soon enough Cairo's top social and official functions took place there and the rotunda became the rendez vous. Not surprising since Groppi's famous non-stop concert dances featured a 20-piaster set menu. Performers inthose days included leading orchestras such as the Mondial Boys, Alexander Kontorowicz, Cherry Pickers. And on Sunday mornings the Rotunda was home to concerts performed by the Egyptian State Broadcasting's (E.S.B.) Small Symphony orchestra.
In the interwar period, Cairo's first outdoor cinema was launched in Groppi's garden at the Soliman Pasha branch. In her book Cairo In The War 1939-45 Artemis Cooper relates how Groppi was one of the few smart places open to everyone. There were two Groppi's, "one on Midan Soliman Pasha and the other on Adly Pasha Street which boasted a garden where pashas came to sip coffee and eat cream cakes with their Levantine mistresses and where officers on leave looked out for female companionship."
To accommodate the less privileged Maison Groppi launched a chain of pastry and coffee shops "A l'Americaine". By the 1940s, Groppi owned its own farm situated outside Cairo at Geziret al-Dahab. On 1,400 feddans Maison Groppi operated a dairy and poultry unit as well as a herb, veggies and exotic fruit plantation. A laboratory equipped with the latest technology was imported to ensure the highest quality control. The public was invited to visit Maison Groppi's laboratories and installations on any Monday between 10 and 12 a.m.
For many decades society's best catered exclusively from Groppi. All it took was one telephone call from the royal palace, a pasha's villa or an embassy and Groppi took over. This premium service continued uninterruptedly despite the 1961 nationalization of Egypt's entire private sector. Even the presidential chefs could not replace Groppi.
Thankfully Groppi's two main branches miraculously escaped complete destruction during the anti-British Black Saturday riots of January 1952 which ended with the burning of Cairo. Yet an eyewitness report states how at around 14:00 a black Citroën entered Soliman Pasha Square. From the car window the passegners frantically waved Egypt's crescent & three stars) green flag. Suddenly, a rousing mob came as if from nowhere and the traffic came to a complete stop. The flag-waving car made three or four more turns around the Soliman Pasha's statue and disappeared. Suddenly, there was the sound of shattering glass as Groppi's display windows were stoned. Some of the frenzied mob went inside and escorted the employees safely outside while others climbed the wall reaching out for the Groppi sign in an effort to dismantle the royal emblem next to it. Sacks of sugar and flour were dragged into the square. Soon everything was blacked out because of the smoke which carried with it the aroma of burning sugar.
Groppi survived Black Saturday adn resumed its unchallenged position as Egypt's leading chocolatier. But somehow it would unwittingly find itself a reluctant pawn during the squalid political machinations that followed. In March 1954 Egypt's emerging strongman Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser ordered the placing of a bomb in Groppi's patisserie. While the detonation caused widespread panic, thankfully no one was hurt.
The objective of Nasser's macabre exercise was to promote a feeling of public insecurity. The power struggle among the Free Officers had reached a new climax and the vicious smear campaign against Egypt's first president General Mohammed Naguib had somehow made its way inside Groppi.
Forty years later, the legend of Groppi exists in name only. The rot and decay of the socialist 1960s had taken their heavy toll. By the time Egypt returned to the ways of an open economy, Groppi's descendants had already abandoned the trade and left Egypt.
Written by Kamal W. Abaza (Alexandria University)
GROPPI, once the most celebrated tearoom in Cairo, was the creation of Giacomo Groppi (1863-1947) a native of Lugano, Switzerland. In time Maison Groppi became chief purveyor of chocolate to monarchs and pashas throughout the MidEast. Whenever pashas, beys and resident-foreigners traveled to Europe they took with them cartons filled with Groppi chocolates. During WW-II King Farouk air freighted via Khartoum, Entebbe, Dakar, Lisbon, Dublin a lacquered box emblazoned with the royal arms of Egypt and Great Britain. Inside, to the delight of the then-princesses Elizabeth and Margaret of England, were 100 kilos of Groppi chocolates.
After a short apprenticeship with an uncle in Lugano and a brief employment in Provence, south of France, Giacomo Groppi arrived in Egypt in the 1880s to take up employment at Maison Gianola, a popular Swiss pastry and teashop on Bawaki Street, Cairo. In 1890, Giacomo Groppi, now aged 27, bought out Gianola's interests in its Alexandria's Rue de France branch and proceeded to open his own pastry and dairy shop.
By 1900 Groppi was running a successful enterprise annually exporting 100,000 cartons of eggs to the United Kingdom.
for more ...
At Maison Groppi's second Alexandrine branch, on Cherif Street, Giacomo introduced crème chantilly for the first time in Egypt. This was a new technological feat which he acquired while touring the Exposition Universelle in Paris. Groppi was also the first chocolatier in Egypt to employ a female staff. In 1906, he sold his company to a Frenchman, Auguste Baudrot, and retired. For the next 60 years, Baudrot was regarded first amongst equals whenever compared to Alexandria's other famous tea rooms: Pastroudis, Trianon and Athineos. All three were run by Greeks.
Having lost his entire savings during the economic depression of 1907 Giacomo Groppi was obliged to return to what he knew best: making chocolates, pastries and dairy products. But out of deference to Baudrot, Groppi moved his activities to Cairo's al-Maghrabi Street (later, Adly Pasha Street). With only "La Marquise de Sévigné" and "Maison Mathieu" (renamed Sault) pausing as competition, Maison Groppi was ensured success in the nation's capital.
The formal opening took place on 23 December 1909. By the time WW-I broke out, Groppi's Tea Garden had become a favorite with the British Army of Occupation. A deli was added enhancing Groppi's image as the purveyor of quality food products.
In 1922 Maison Groppi inaugurated its own cold storage company--Industrie du Froid--employing over 120 workers and producing a daily output of 2,400 blocs of ice.
In 1928, Giacomo Groppi's son, Achille, launched his famous ice cream, a technology he imported from the United States. The names of his delicious specialties were as exceptional as they tasted: Sfogliatella, Morocco, Mau Mau, Peche Melba, Maruska, Comtesse Marie, Surprise Neapolitaine. Cairenes were grateful to Achille for yet another creation: the Groppi tearoom situated on Midan Soliman Pasha (now, Talaat Harb).
Decades later, Groppi of Cairo would open a terrace café in Heliopolis overlooking Avenue des Pyramides and the legendary Heliopolis Palace Hotel (now, Uruba Presidential Palace).
Groppi's Cairo Rotunda located on the ground floor of a new building designed by Italian architect Guissepe Mazza, was inaugurated on Thursday, March 12, 1925 . The morning after the papers were all praise about the new Parisian-style café and the titanic reception that Achille and Giacomo Groppi had given to mark the occasion. The description in the Egypte Nouvelle, better left in its original French for fear of reducing the effect was as follows: "Il serait dificile, en effet, de rever cadre plus somptueux et, en meme temps, de meilleur gout que celui dans lequel se deroula cette soirée inoubliable... Avec ses piliers gainés de marbre, sa cloture aux larges vitres garnies de brise-bise mordorés, et l'immense et splendide verrière en rosace qui forme le plafond de sa coupole tronquée, la vaste rotonde, constitue un palais féerique, le plus élégant, le plus beau qui a été, de mémoire d'homme élevé ici à Terpischore..."
International celebrities visited the Rotunda whenever in town. All admired the art deco design and the wonderful mosaic display by A. Castaman. Soon enough Cairo's top social and official functions took place there and the rotunda became the rendez vous. Not surprising since Groppi's famous non-stop concert dances featured a 20-piaster set menu. Performers inthose days included leading orchestras such as the Mondial Boys, Alexander Kontorowicz, Cherry Pickers. And on Sunday mornings the Rotunda was home to concerts performed by the Egyptian State Broadcasting's (E.S.B.) Small Symphony orchestra.
In the interwar period, Cairo's first outdoor cinema was launched in Groppi's garden at the Soliman Pasha branch. In her book Cairo In The War 1939-45 Artemis Cooper relates how Groppi was one of the few smart places open to everyone. There were two Groppi's, "one on Midan Soliman Pasha and the other on Adly Pasha Street which boasted a garden where pashas came to sip coffee and eat cream cakes with their Levantine mistresses and where officers on leave looked out for female companionship."
To accommodate the less privileged Maison Groppi launched a chain of pastry and coffee shops "A l'Americaine". By the 1940s, Groppi owned its own farm situated outside Cairo at Geziret al-Dahab. On 1,400 feddans Maison Groppi operated a dairy and poultry unit as well as a herb, veggies and exotic fruit plantation. A laboratory equipped with the latest technology was imported to ensure the highest quality control. The public was invited to visit Maison Groppi's laboratories and installations on any Monday between 10 and 12 a.m.
For many decades society's best catered exclusively from Groppi. All it took was one telephone call from the royal palace, a pasha's villa or an embassy and Groppi took over. This premium service continued uninterruptedly despite the 1961 nationalization of Egypt's entire private sector. Even the presidential chefs could not replace Groppi.
Thankfully Groppi's two main branches miraculously escaped complete destruction during the anti-British Black Saturday riots of January 1952 which ended with the burning of Cairo. Yet an eyewitness report states how at around 14:00 a black Citroën entered Soliman Pasha Square. From the car window the passegners frantically waved Egypt's crescent & three stars) green flag. Suddenly, a rousing mob came as if from nowhere and the traffic came to a complete stop. The flag-waving car made three or four more turns around the Soliman Pasha's statue and disappeared. Suddenly, there was the sound of shattering glass as Groppi's display windows were stoned. Some of the frenzied mob went inside and escorted the employees safely outside while others climbed the wall reaching out for the Groppi sign in an effort to dismantle the royal emblem next to it. Sacks of sugar and flour were dragged into the square. Soon everything was blacked out because of the smoke which carried with it the aroma of burning sugar.
Groppi survived Black Saturday adn resumed its unchallenged position as Egypt's leading chocolatier. But somehow it would unwittingly find itself a reluctant pawn during the squalid political machinations that followed. In March 1954 Egypt's emerging strongman Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser ordered the placing of a bomb in Groppi's patisserie. While the detonation caused widespread panic, thankfully no one was hurt.
The objective of Nasser's macabre exercise was to promote a feeling of public insecurity. The power struggle among the Free Officers had reached a new climax and the vicious smear campaign against Egypt's first president General Mohammed Naguib had somehow made its way inside Groppi.
Forty years later, the legend of Groppi exists in name only. The rot and decay of the socialist 1960s had taken their heavy toll. By the time Egypt returned to the ways of an open economy, Groppi's descendants had already abandoned the trade and left Egypt.
Written by Kamal W. Abaza (Alexandria University)
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