NEW YORK —The last Passover matzos have rolled out of a century-old bakery on Manhattan’s Lower East Side – a neighborhood that’s been dubbed the “Jewish Plymouth Rock.”

The Streit’s factory is the oldest in the nation still churning out the unleavened flatbread that’s essential for Jewish holidays. About 2.5 million pounds of matzos were baked for April’s Passover holiday and distributed worldwide.

Streit’s is planning to shut down its nine-decade-old ovens by year’s end and move to a 21st-century computerized plant somewhere in the New York area. The contract has yet to be signed.

“For decades, immigrant Jews and their descendants have made pilgrimages back to the Lower East Side – the Jewish Plymouth Rock – to reconnect with their history and, of course, delight in the shopping and eating that gives the neighborhood its flavor,” said Annie Polland, a historian at the Lower East Side Tenement Museum. “With the Streit’s closure, you have a significant chapter of Jewish Lower East Side history closing.”

The bakery first opened during World War I, serving struggling Jewish immigrants. By 1925, the business moved to Rivington Street, where the original assembly line winds through four six-story buildings – once overcrowded tenements with narrow stairs that are still used.

But the 48,000-square-foot factory doesn’t live off nostalgia. It’s a smartly run family business with annual sales topping $20 million on about 5 million pounds of matzos sold worldwide.

Advertisement

The other mass manufacturer of matzos in the U.S. is Manischewitz, with Israeli imports and traditional round handmade crackers also filling store shelves.

Demand is growing for matzos even among non-Jews who enjoy them as a healthy snack baked with no fat or artificial additives, and the old factory simply cannot keep up, said Aaron Gross, head of sales and marketing at Streit’s and one of three cousins running the operations.

“I’m fifth generation, and if we want this to last another five generations, we need to make sure that we strengthen the company to remain relevant in a very competitive market,” said Gross, the great-great-grandson of Aron Streit, who started the business after emigrating from Austria.

“The name Streit’s conjures up so many happy memories of not only my childhood but of the decades since,” says Karen Kriendler Nelson, whose relatives organized a pre-Passover family reunion at the factory.

The current Streit’s production line dates back to the 1930s and the baking process is strictly timed.

It may take no more than 18 minutes.Beyond that, the dough rises – forbidden for this food that symbolizes the biblical flight of the Jews from Egypt, who were so rushed they had no time to finish baking their bread.

But tradition is disappearing in the neighborhood home to Jewish immigrants for much of the 20th century. Property values have skyrocketed, with galleries, boutiques and restaurants opening in renovated tenements.


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.