If you missed our most recent NY1 segment–the shows airs Fridays and Sundays–be sure to watch it online here. Last week’s show was on the brand new butcher shop Brooklyn’s Heritage Foods USA just opened in the Essex Street Market on the Lower East Side. (Edible Manhattan covered their forward thinking director, the Slow Foods USA co-founder Patrick Martins, a few years back.)
Until now Heritage, which is based on Graham Avenue, only sold its meats directly to chefs and restaurants or online, serving as broker between small family farms who can’t afford to process their proteins or don’t have a place nearby to do it and the city customers who want sustainably sourced meat but can’t work with a whole animal. Last week they took over part of the space that used to house Jeffrey’s Meat Market, the butcher who shuttered his decades-old family business earlier this year. (They now share their space with another borough of Kings business: Brooklyn Taco, which sells taqueria treats just next door.)
While the focus on procuring pork, beef, sausages, bacon, goat and rabbits has shifted to heritage breeds raised by small American family farms, fans of the fourth-generation shop should be pleased to see the smile of Dionisio Silva (he’s usually called “Silva”), the butcher who’d been working at Jeffrey’s since 2004 and stayed on to work the counters at Heritage Meat, which were built, along with the shelving, in the workspace behind Roberta’s.
Their bakers now supply the bread Heritage Meat Shop now slathers with butter and ham, layers with American-made charcuterie or tops with salad made from sustainably sourced tuna or pairs with their American “prosciutto” plate. With any luck, they might one day open up a similar shop in the indoor market on Moore Street in Bushwick.