The Family Behind Philly’s Favorite Soft Pretzels

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Reddit Comments

Are they still closed from their electrical fire?

👍︎︎ 25 👤︎︎ u/topscholar2 📅︎︎ Jun 17 2023 🗫︎ replies

I love that place.

👍︎︎ 9 👤︎︎ u/DelcoInDaHouse 📅︎︎ Jun 17 2023 🗫︎ replies

This place is good but Furfaris in Fishtown was the best pretzel place in the city until it closed down

👍︎︎ 3 👤︎︎ u/clumsysuperman 📅︎︎ Jun 17 2023 🗫︎ replies

Very bummed they are still not opened back up! Hope they open soon and can rebound. I'd really hate to see them go the way of Ippolito's (which, btw, are they still insisting they are reopening?).

👍︎︎ 2 👤︎︎ u/ItsAllInYourHead 📅︎︎ Jun 18 2023 🗫︎ replies

Impressive.

👍︎︎ 1 👤︎︎ u/BreezyViber 📅︎︎ Jun 17 2023 🗫︎ replies
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[ Horn honks ] -Our bus drivers come by. They honk the horn down at 9th Street. We get their pretzels ready, we do a quick swap. -Have a good one. -Alright. -Have a good day! And then they get right back on the bus and they get the hell out of here. This is a regular occurrence, yes. ♪♪ My name is Erika Tonelli Bonnett. I am the Chief Operating Officer of Center City Pretzel Company. We've been here for 42 years. My father started this, I believe I was six years old? So back, I guess, in, what, '81-ish? He had this idea. And he wanted to do something that was better than what was being done. He put a different face on the soft pretzel. He put a different face on this industry. The recipe has never changed. We are still flour-yeast-water. I think when you start to get into trying to elevate and elevate, you lose its natural-ness. So for us, we've never changed anything. That's been the recipe for 42 years. When he got ill, I could not allow him to go thinking that this went with him. So I needed him to leave here knowing that we'd be okay, this would continue, and I had his back. A hundred? -120. -120? 120. -[ Speaking indistinctly ] -How you doing? -Good, good. Lots of money going out the door. -Thanks, Ed. -Thanks, Ed. -Absolutely. Second quarter, Tony Clark. -I think, for the most part, people think, "You're open from 6:00 to 11:00." Like you work this short, little day, and you go home. No, you don't. So, we get started here at 3:30. -This, I'm lighting under the caustic tank. That'll heat up the liquid that the pretzels will dip into. As well as the barrel. If this barrel's not hot, the pretzels will stick to the belt. This barrel's got to heat up. It's got to be 140 to 160 degrees. -Anthony is my right hand, my left ear, my right eye, whatever. -I've been here about 10 years. I started doing deliveries. I used to work for Proctor and Gamble as a sales associate. I had from North Jersey to Cape May, was my territory. I would come here and buy pretzels to butter up the store managers. And that's how I became friendly with John, and then he would say, "I need a driver," and I helped him out with that. And the brewery got 40 Friday, I didn't write it anywhere. -40 Friday, 40 Thursday? I come in and I bake. I'm very hands on. I am not somebody who just sits in the office and I catch up at the end of the day. It doesn't stop. When you are running a business, especially, I think, when it's a legacy business, you don't get the option to put it on a shelf and "I'm done for the day." If I see something that comes out of that oven and it doesn't look right to me, it doesn't go out the door to anybody else. It stops by the time it gets to the end of the oven and it goes right in the garbage. Good morning! He's here! Hello, how was your weekend? -Good, good. You know. [ Dog whines ] -Right. You done? I know, I know! -This is Buddy. I've had Buddy -- He just had his fifth birthday and I've been bringing him here since he was born, since he was a baby. But he knows the entire family and him and Erika are like best friends, so even though he's not supposed to have pretzels, he gets a little piece of the pretzel every day. -Our everyday customer, there's no one answer. It's everybody. It's absolutely everybody. We open the doors, and it's normally our vendors. They've all got to get to their carts, or they have to get to their restaurants or shops or whatever. So by 5:45, they're lined up outside. So we handle them first. After that, it's usually a lot of your city workers, your streets department, your PGW. They jump in, they grab stuff. -Thank you. Have a good day. -There are people who they will buy six and they will eat two for breakfast, two for lunch, two for dinner. It's a simple food, so it feeds people quickly. -These are like -- They make for... When they started making pretzels. We got factories and all now that pump them out? This is the place. These are delicious. -20 pretzels and a mustard for 17 bucks. Come on down! It's good stuff. -The oven, we call the Beast. [ Classical piano music playing ] Over a hundred years old, shipped in from Italy panel by panel, a bucket of bolts, put it together. So that's what they did. It's 50 feet long. 500 degrees is the average temperature. It's its own character. People come by, they want to see pretzels coming out of it. We've done stories about it. Kids are enthralled by watching this thing, because it's not something small. If it ever, God forbid, went down, we'd be screwed. Like, that's how we make them. There is no other way. We maintain it on a daily basis. But there's every so often that she wants to test my patience. And when she does, it's an all hands on deck. This is all dependent of that. So weather. In the dead of the summer, it could take -- from front to back, it'll take eight minutes or so. If it's a little bit colder, then we have to adjust burners and belt speeds, it could take 10 to 11 minutes. So it just depends. A Philadelphia pretzel has its own shape. I think some people are just used to ballpark pretzels with the three rings and the frozen nonsense. But a Philadelphia pretzel is a figure eight. It's two loops with a big, old center knot. Apparently it means love because of the continuous shape, and we are the City of Brotherly Love. It's not just cheesesteaks down here. It was never my calling. I was in the process of adopting my daughter. And I was in law. And I was coming home 11:00 at night, 1:00 in the morning, and said, "If I keep up this pace, that child will never know who the hell her mother is." And my father said, "You know what?" He was like, "I'm getting tired, and I really -- I'm considering not retiring, but kind of stepping away, and I need somebody that's going to be in here," he said, "that's going to look out for me and have my back." And he said, "Would you be willing to come on in the office?" And now here I am. He passed away a year ago. And it's me now, with my mother's help, my sister in the background. But I'm hands on, and I don't know that he knew that I paid attention, because I didn't say much about it, but I took in every frigging word he said. -Hey, babe. -Morning. Morning, child. My husband, as needed, he'll come down. He helps out. He also helps me out mentally to keep all my shit together. Because it does get stressful at times, when you're the one that is the most hands on and you're trying to make sure every "I" and every "T" are addressed. From maintenance to ordering, all of it, there's a lot that goes into this simple product that everybody enjoys. There's a lot that goes into it. So, that's my husband's role. My daughter helps out with putting labels on boxes and getting boxes ready for mail order. My mom, she pays the bills, and that is the most helpful part of running this place. My sister helps out as needed. She'll come and she'll cut dough with these guys and she'll be back here. And she'll be my eyes and ears as I was for my father. I have an uncle. My uncle will come down, he'll fix something. So, yes, I mean, from immediate family to the extended family. Everybody has their hand in this place. So I jokingly say I either need to get more chairs or I need to get a booth made for up front that we can just put outside. Anthony -- Now his dad comes in, so he hangs out and he brings breakfast. -I've been coming here -- They've been here 42 years, that's how long I've been coming. I'm 75 years old. I've been coming here for 42 years. And I lost my wife a year ago, so now in the mornings, I'm out of my routine. I used to make breakfast with my wife. So now I come here in the morning, since my son starts at 2:30, and I bring breakfast for him. I can't just bring it for just him, so I bring breakfast for three other people. Frank was Erika's father, and Erika, and, like I said, I've been coming here for 42 years, since they've been here. We're like one big happy family. -We've been here for so long that they're almost mascots at this point that come and hang out. And I wouldn't have it any other way, especially being a female running a business on my own in the city of Philadelphia. I kind of feel a little bit more protected having these people out there looking out for me. But that's who we are. We draw people in, and I'm glad to say that they want to hang out and they don't want to leave. ♪♪ It's people's breakfast. It's what feeds their family, for many people. We have women who go into labor, and this is their first stop before they deliver their children. There's a lot of history here. I think this means a lot to the city, not just to myself. It's a simple, inexpensive food, where you're going to go and get something that's going to fill you from lunch to dinner or from breakfast to maybe dinner for 70 cents. I mean, that's what our price is right now over the counter for one single pretzel. Which everybody keeps saying, "Why is it so cheap?" You're right. Could I probably get more? Yes. Are people going to be willing to pay for it? Yes. But again, we're trying to keep it within reach for everyone. For everyone. -It's part of the neighborhood. It is what it is. Pretzels, you know, from Philly. -I mean, as long as I can continue to do it, those doors will be open, this place will go, pretzels will go out every day. That is my plan. And I'd like to elevate this and take it to whatever the next level should be for it. Philadelphians have always gotten a bum rap. It's a bunch of people from a bunch of different places who are proud of who they are, where they're from, their culture, their ethnicity. -Erika is the best! The pretzel factory, Erika is the best. The best neighbor, the best everything. It's the best, okay? Peace out!
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Channel: Munchies
Views: 308,754
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: how to, cooking, Munchies, food, eating, chef, restaurant, VICE, street food, word of mouth, munchies kitchen, How To
Id: sHlx66Osrlc
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 10min 53sec (653 seconds)
Published: Mon Jun 12 2023
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