Tradition and revitalization along E. Passyunk Avenue

February 23, 2010|By Kia Gregory, Inquirer Staff Writer
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  • Little has changed since 1940, when Philip Mancuso was a 4-year-old and his father, Lucio, an Italian immigrant, opened the cheese shop in South Phila. Above, he rings up purchases for Rosalia Gentile and Joseph Squillace.
  • Little has changed since 1940, when Philip Mancuso was a 4-year-old and his father, Lucio, an Italian immigrant, opened the cheese shop in South Phila. Above, he rings up purchases for Rosalia Gentile and Joseph Squillace.
  • Most of the new shops are run by first-timers, says Renee Gilinger of the East Passyunk Avenue Business Improvement District. Above, its logo in steel.
  • Mancuso visits with Frank Mattio, who owns a TV and video shop across the street from the cheese shop. "I'll probably die here," Mancuso says.
  • Philip Mancuso has a way with curds. Over the decades, he has seen the fortunes of the East Passyunk shopping district molder and ripen from his cheese shop. Nineteen businesses have opened there in the last year. The new mix "keeps the avenue authentic," another store owner says.
  • Fuel restaurant owner Rocco Cima (with waitress Lauren Popa) credits "attitude" for area's success.

Staring out the window of his cheese shop one slow afternoon, Philip Mancuso declares himself "the last of the Mohicans."

After almost 70 years on Passyunk Avenue near Mifflin Street, the store's competition is long gone, along with many of the old-timers who craved Lucio Mancuso & Son's handmade cheese.

Nowadays, hardly anyone makes homemade anything, Mancuso says plainly, more observation than criticism. Dinner, he says, comes frozen or ready-made.

Then, there's the flat economy. But Mancuso, 73, holds on, a signpost for the new generation of enterprising mom-and-pops setting up shop.

"Gimme a twist of mozzarella!" customer Pete Jacovini shouts, tracking in slush.

Story continues below.

The well-fed Jacovini also orders a half-pound of hot cappacuolo and a loaf of Italian bread for the bottle of red wine awaiting him at his South Jersey home.

Jacovini, 72, who grew up in the neighborhood and runs a nearby funeral home, has shopped at Mancuso's for 40 years.

"Phil has the best stuff," he says, "the best bread, the best cheese, and the best advice."

Mancuso shrugs, saying, "I can't say I'm a nice guy. Folks have to tell me."

On the avenue, one of the city's oldest shopping corridors, Mancuso - married, with three sons - has witnessed waves of revitalization, watching businesses come and go.

In the last year, 19 businesses have opened on the avenue between Ninth and Broad Streets. Drawn by cheap rents and cooperative landlords, the new owners have created an eclectic patchwork of bistros, galleries, and boutiques, joining fixtures such as Di Cocco Family's St. Jude Shop, where girls for 20 years have bought communion dresses, and Mancuso's, where mothers once lined up outside to buy handmade ricotta for Sunday dinner.

Such a mix, "it's what keeps the avenue authentic," says Adam Erace, 25, co-owner of Green Aisle Grocery, which opened three months ago up the street from Mancuso's, where Erace remembers shopping with his mother. True to the avenue's roots, Erace's neighbor, a seamstress who owns his building, often brings him homemade Italian dishes for lunch.

"It's a great balance," Erace says, "and I hope it stays that way."

South Philly native Erace, a food critic, and his brother Andrew, who works in real estate, opened the grocery with their savings, selling local produce and food crafted by small producers.

Their customers are mostly transplants, Erace has noticed, natives of Los Angeles, Portland, Ore., and as far away as Turkey.

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