Photo by Kat Carney
After being greeted by Zighelboim, I took a seat and sipped one of the establishment’s hearty Venezuelan coffees while waiting for my broth. And then I waited some more. I could feel the grinchiness invading my body to the core, as I wondered what about pouring soup into a bowl could take so long. All was explained soon enough, when Zighelboim appeared carrying a steaming bowl in one hand and a plate of flat bread in the other. Setting them down, he offered, “We make this to order.There’s no vat of chicken soup sitting in the back, so it takes some time.”
As I slurped, he said, “Our cook is from Venezuela, and this is her own recipe, so it’s about as authentic and home-cooked as it gets.” Authenticity, in this case, involves traditional ingredients such as a round of corn on the cob, cilantro and starchy vegetables like yucca and yautia (a close cousin of taro).The root vegetables give the broth a nice depth of flavor as well as a perky sweetness that plays nicely with the zesty brightness of the cilantro. I was so taken with the soup that I was neglecting the seasoned flatbread, which proved to be redolent with herbs and baked in a pizza oven that provided both literal and visual warmth to the dining area.
As I headed back home, I was struck with the realization that the grumpiness and achiness that had pervaded my body to the bone had disappeared, replaced with a coffee buzz and a homey warmth. The city no longer seemed as cold, and the day didn’t seem so dreary.What more can you ask of a bowl of chicken soup?
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Pasita
47 8th Ave. (at W. 4th St.), 212-255-3900, pasitanyc.com
