I was watching
a movie from the early 70s the other day, not especially good, but like so many movies from that era it was shot on location and thus offers a wonderful time capsule of urban blight, of 50s and 60s storefronts falling apart, of period sign typography-- I tell you, I can just watch the backgrounds all day long in a movie like The French Connection.
So in one scene, which the movie says is set on Staten Island (and I have no reason to doubt that), I happen to glimpse a storefront with an arresting title:
The Pork Store
A catchy name. I instantly wish, the next time I needed pork shoulders to smoke, that I could go not to a mere butcher shop, but to The Pork Store.
Of course, I immediately do the next best thing, which is check Google for references to The Pork Store, hey, it could still be around, it's not that long ago, businesses like that are as likely to still be here as not. And
my search reveals:
Local results for pork store near Staten Island, NY
Novelli's Pork Store - 1.6 miles SE - 3161 Amboy Rd - (718) 351-0790
Valentino's Pork Store - 1.7 miles SE - 101 Guyon Ave - (718) 667-4392
Soriano's Pork Store Inc - 2.0 miles S - 150 Greaves LN - (718) 948-1538
And, as you'll see if you look at the whole Google page I link to, those aren't the only ones. Apparently this is an entire category on Staten Island-- either dedicated pig-only shops, or else "Pork Store" is somehow a general term for butcher shop, meat market. Yo, I'm gonna run to the Pork Store and get some hamburga. (
This piece uses "pork store" in the context of providing beef, for instance.)
So. Anybody know? Is this a Staten Island-specific thing, the term "Pork Store," or a New York thing, or an East Coast thing? How did meat markets get tagged specifically as "pork stores"? What is the secret of the Pork Stores of Staten Island?