In a constant search for Morningside’s finest, Bwog was eager to weigh in when a dispute arose about the best cookie in the neighborhood. Secretary of Snack Alison Herman followed the aroma wafting over Morningside Park and investigated.
After an honorable mention of Levain Bakery in our Bwog Thanksgiving, an anonymous tipster indignantly called us out on our blinkered view of the local confectionary landscape. “Fuck those yuppies and their $4 cookies,” she proclaimed. ” Right across the street, on 118th just east of Frederick Douglass, is a bakery called Lee Lee’s that has been making and selling the best rugelach in the five boroughs since long before the Upper West Side started to franchise.”
Bwog could not resist such a challenge, especially when so forcefuly endorsed: “These tiny rolls of goodness will bring you to your knees, and your bubbe to hers.” Although it specializes in rugelach, Ashkenazi Jewish pastries of rolled dough wrapped around a filling, Lee Lees’s also offers cookies—Levain’s claim to fame. Clearly, a showdown was in order.
A trip across Morningside Park and up Frederick Douglass Boulevard will bring hungry Columbians to the Harlem location of Levain Bakery. Don’t be distracted by the scones or brioche: the real stars of the show are the gigantic cookies. The buttery calorie-bombs weigh in at over six ounces (according to the bakery’s website), cost $4, and come in chocolate chip walnut, dark chocolate chip, oatmeal raisin, and peanut butter chip varieties. The price may seem steep, but the cookies are big enough to serve as a full meal. They’re also mind-blowingly delicious: melty, soft but crisp around the edges, and begging for a glass of cold milk to wash them down.
Walk up to 118th Street and turn right and one finds Lee Lee’s. Decorated with floral wallpaper and a red-and-white color scheme, the bakery even looks like your Jewish grandma’s Brooklyn apartment. The rugelach—apricot on the day we visited, but Yelpers report chocolate and walnut flavors as well—are $0.80 apiece, and chocolate chip cookies are three for $1. It’s definitely more of a bargain than Levain, although the cookies pale in comparison. The rugelach, on the other hand, are flaky, chewy, and generally delicious; get a bagful to go and keep them in your dorm room for finals stress-eating and you won’t be sorry.
While Levain is marginally closer and the clear cookie champion, Lee Lee’s rugelach are both a great deal and a great find (who knew there were Jewish bakeries in Harlem?) In the end, comparing the two proved impossible, largely because the two bakeries have such different areas of expertise. Bwog declares this showdown a draw.
10 Comments
@Anonymous If we’re talking bakeries on FDB around 118th-ish, Bwog, you now have to go back and give Patisserie des Ambassades (on FDB between 118 and 119) its due. On second thoughts, don’t! More for me!
@Anonymous Um. I don’t know how to pronounce rugelach.
@anon you shouldn’t be encouraging them to eat carbs!
@Anonymous Carbs? But I thought cookies were made of magic…
@lee lee's is not a jewish bakery per se. by a cu student: http://marcussamuelsson.com/news/lee-lee’s-baked-goods
@Anonymous You should not be encouraging students to cross Mornigside Park. This is irresponsible. Stick with Broadway.
@Anonymous it is fine. just don’t go at night/after dark.
@Anonymous Hi mom.
@Anonymous Stick with Broadway? Hahaha even if Morningside Park were the den of iniquity you’re making it out to be, why does staying out of it mean we should also avoid everywhere but one ave?
@Anonymous I do hope that is some poorly executed sarcasm… If you stay in the Columbia bubble the whole time you’re here, you’re really missing out on one of the most important reasons to have come to college in NYC in the first place. And yes, I recognize the comment is specific to Morningside, but I think it is indicative of an insular and segregated sentiment shared by all too many CU students.