I am gazing out over the Central Market in Riga, Latvia, a massive
complex stretching nearly 800,000 square feet across five former
zeppelin hangars—repurposed remnants of a nearby WWI German airship
base—on the east bank of the Daugava River. There are separate pavilions
dedicated to fish, meat, produce, dairy, and bread, and they sprawl as
far as the eye can see. I've heard about this market all my life, but
until this moment, I'd never set eyes on it. My maternal grandmother,
Rhoda Gurevich, was born in Riga, in 1926, and she used to shop here as a
young girl with her mother, Anna Volpyansky. In her later years, my
grandmother wrote a memoir in which she described the market's opulence;
now, experiencing it with my parents on my first visit to Latvia, I
feel like I am standing in her shoes.
Outside,
scores of vendors offer all manner of local, foraged berries: red and
black currants, lingonberries, cranberries, blackberries, and sea
buckthorn, tiny, yellow berries that are deliciously sour. A woman
spreads a blanket with chanterelles she harvested from the woods on the
city's outskirts. We enter the fish pavilion, where the riches of
Latvia's lakes, rivers, and ocean waters flop in shallow tubs: herring,
eels, lamprey, hake, pike, and carp, which my great-grandmother used for
gefilte fish. We try smoked smelts that look as though they've been
dipped in gold and that taste of salt and smoke. In the meat pavilion,
there are rows of rosy pink pork loin, used to make schnitzel-like karbon?de; ham hocks that have been smoked over alder wood; and spe?is,
cured and smoked lard, that melts on our tongues. Best of all is the
dairy pavilion, where we find a food that my father has missed for
years—a sweet, baked cheese made from jaunpiens, the milk of a
cow that has just given birth—as well as an amazing array of the fresh
cheeses and milk drinks, both cultured and curdled, that are a staple of
the Latvian table. In another part of the market, we encounter the
country's famed breads: rudzu sal?sk? maize, a wheat-rye mix with
a dark brown crust and a pale, caraway seed—speckled crumb, and the one
I like best for its deep, fermented flavor, a moist and dense loaf
called klona maize. As we shop and taste, I imagine my
great-grandmother walking through this place, her heels clacking on the
cement floor, appraising the foods she would buy and prepare for her
family.
Back
in 1975, my parents, Anna and Edward Gershenson, emigrated from Riga to
the United States with my older sister, Shulamit, then two years old,
seeking to escape the punishing Soviet rule and start a new life.
Returning was an emotional choice. My parents hadn't gone back to
Latvia, a small country of about 2 million people wedged between the
Baltic Sea and Russia, in 35 years, perhaps out of fear of what they
might feel or encounter. For me, the first child in our family to be
born in the States, Riga, Latvia's seaport capital, held an almost
mythical status. I knew the city only through old photos, my parents'
memories, and my grandmother's pride.
Rhoda
Gurevich grew up in Latvia's most prosperous era during its first period
of independence, between the world wars. She followed my parents to the
U.S., where she spent the final two decades of her life. Despite the
horror of the holocaust and its aftermath, in which 90 percent of the
country's Jewish population was annihilated, including the majority of
our family, my grandmother believed in the Riga she knew during earlier
times: a place where café culture thrived, where Jugendstil architecture
proliferated, and where she was educated in a Hebrew gymnasium, which
defined her as a Zionist and a proud Rigan. In fact, the city's
cosmopolitan reputation, about which I'd always heard, goes back
centuries. Since its beginnings, in 1201, Riga was a vital Baltic port.
During Soviet rule, when citizens from far-flung republics visited
Latvia to experience the West, the capital's reputation was for high
culture, nearby white-sand beaches, and delicious food. Over the
centuries, Latvia belonged to many different countries—Germany, the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, Sweden, and Russia—and these influences
are reflected in the robust cuisine, where Eastern European ingredients
like beets and soured dairy share the table with German pork dishes and
Baltic fish.
Though my parents abandoned the
old ways once they settled in Worcester, Massachusetts—they served no
vodka at celebrations, no smoked or pickled fish, no candies from the
Russian store—during the rare moments when they reflected positively on
their former lives, the discussion always revolved around food. In
recent years, I had become increasingly interested in my family's
culinary history: It had dawned on me that the dishes I grew up
eating—the salads of cucumber and tomato with sour cream; the whole,
fried smelts; the cranberry mousse, a frothy concoction of farina,
sugar, and cranberry juice that my grandmother would pour fresh milk
over for added richness—were not Jewish, or Russian, as I had previously
thought, but Latvian. So it seemed it was finally time to go back; time
to get to know the place that had been a phantom influence on our
American lives.
My
mother, a caterer with a passion for baking, took early inspiration
from the pastries that were sold in the city's many cafés and bakeshops,
so when we arrived in Riga, this was one of the first foods we wanted
to explore. She and my father used to frequent Café N?ca, on Lenin
Street—now known by a Latvian name, Br?v?bas Iela—where one of their
favorite desserts was chaynaya bulochka (Russian for tea bun),
briochelike pastry sandwiching butter-enriched cream and crowned with a
crunchy nut topping. In the state-run department store across from their
apartment, my mother cherished the croissantlike rozovaya bulochka, or rose bun, its four corners pinched together to form a flaky pillow, and biezpienmaiz?te, a yeast-dough tart filled with sweet cottage cheese and raisins.
On
one of our first days in Latvia, we retrace the steps my parents once
took through the Old City at Riga's center, with its serpentine
cobblestone streets and mix of Romanesque, Gothic, Baroque, and Art
Nouveau architecture. My parents still know the names of the streets and
how to navigate them, but much has changed. The cafés my parents
cherished have disappeared. In their place are tourist restaurants
selling sushi, pizza, burgers, and Red Bull. My father used to relish
the cremeschnitte, a cream-filled and iced puff pastry, from a
shop called Vecr?ga. Around the corner from the tall, travertine Freedom
Monument, a symbol of Latvia's post—World War I era of independence, we
discover one of two locations of this esteemed bakery; but when we
sample the sweet, it is hard and wan, bearing no resemblance to the
ethereal pastry my parents remember.
We wonder
where Riga's famous café culture has gone. And though we know that the
Central Market is brimming with ingredients, it also isn't obvious to us
where Latvians go to eat. Unlike other capital cities, Riga doesn't
have a tradition of street food, nor does it have a vibrant dining
culture; most people eat at home. My Latvian-American friend Rich
Kalnins, a journalist from Connecticut who moved to Riga in 2002,
suggests we visit what he calls workman's cafeterias, self-service
eateries based in high schools and municipal buildings, where
traditional, simple foods are prepared from scratch. We meet Rich for
lunch at a high school on Rai?a Bulv?ris, a boulevard lined with
embassies, university buildings, and other stately structures. He leads
us to a side entrance, down a flight of stairs, and through a dark hall
into a basement dining room painted an institutional mint green. Here,
in this unlikely place, are the rustic dishes my father remembers eating
as a student at Riga's Aeronautical Institute: sweet pancakes with
homemade strawberry jam, potato pancakes with sour cream, boiled
potatoes with dill, garlicky fried cutlets of pounded pork, earthy
chilled beet soup, the requisite dark bread. Though I grew up with my
parents' rhapsodizing about Riga's café culture, these are the staple
foods that sustained them. And they taste wonderful.
"People grow their own food, not because it's trendy, but because it's a tradition that's been passed down."
A
few days later, Rich invites us to dinner with his family at the summer
cottage of his mother-in-law, Anita R?t?te. We drive 90 minutes
northeast of Riga, stopping along the way to chat with some foragers
picking chanterelles by the roadside. Reaching the village of Launkalne,
where we come upon Anita's cottage, a low, wooden structure surrounded
by the fertile gardens that provide the family with the food they eat
for much of the year. Even urban Latvians live off the land, Rich tells
us as he greets us in the yard. "On August and September nights, you see
people pulling up to their apartment buildings in Riga and unloading
vegetables from their own farms or gardens," he says. "People grow their
own food, not because it's trendy, but because it's a tradition that's
been passed down."
Rich leads us into the
kitchen, where Anita is at the stove, tending to the contents of a
cast-iron pot: pork she bought at a nearby farm, and onions, garlic,
potatoes, cabbage, tomatoes, and zucchini from her garden. With a smile,
Rich's wife, Maija, puts my father, who rarely cooks, to work grating
kohlrabi for a salad made with farmer's cheese and heavy cream. When
he's finished, Maija hands him boiled beets to cube and toss with kidney
beans, pickles, and sour cream. Maija has created most of these recipes
herself, basing them on traditional flavors and the ingredients she has
on hand. "You remind me of myself when I was a young mother," my mom
tells her.
I follow Maija into the garden,
where she plucks gnarled carrots from the earth for our soup, rinsing
them off in a basin of rainwater. She is intimately familiar with every
plant, herb, tree, and root that grows nearby. "Usually we cut quince in
small pieces and put it in a jar with sugar for a beverage," she says.
And then: "Here are milk apples, which are very good for jellies. The
strawberries, we cut them down so they grow again next year. Do you see
the Brussels sprouts? They'll be ready in one month." She pulls back an
elephant-ear leaf to show me the miniature cabbages.
Following
our dinner of stew, salads, and soup, Maija brings out a waffle
iron—purchased "twenty years ago for nine rubles," she says—and plugs it
into the wall to make fresh waffle cones to fill with a mixture of
heavy cream, sugar, vanilla, cottage cheese, raspberries, and currants.
It's a similar dessert, my mother says, to a treat called trubochki
(Russian for cone) that she remembers from Riga's bakeshops. "This is
the taste of the pastries that I loved," she says. "This is the taste I
was looking for."
Days before our departure,
M?r?tš Sirmais, a chef in Riga and a well-known promoter of traditional
Latvian cuisine, invites us to the home of his friend and co-worker
Stanislava Balsa, who lives on the right bank of the Daugava River with
her daughter Renata, in a concrete, Soviet-era apartment building.
Stanislava is originally from Lithuania, but she has been in Riga for
almost 50 years, and M?r?tš calls her one of the best home cooks he's
ever met. Her specialties, he says, are rustic but deeply flavorful
Latvian comfort foods that reflect the country's culinary influences:
spe?a p?r?gi, Latvian bacon turnovers, likely a remnant of the early
German period; selyodka pod shuboy, literally translated as
herring in a fur coat, a showy layered dish of salt-cured herring and
vegetables; and traditional Latvian maizes zupa, or bread soup, a sweet pudding made from dried fruits and rye bread.

Stanislava
is a smiling woman with a high bun of red hair and glittering gold
teeth. She is also a force; she churns out dish after dish in her tiny
kitchen. First she makes the tiny, football-shaped turnovers, pinching
together rounds of dough filled with diced bacon and onion. M?r?tš gets
started on a chanterelle cream sauce for Stanislava's karbon?de,
which she dips in egg wash and flour in order to achieve a substantial
crust. Next, Stanislava prepares the herring salad. On an oblong serving
dish, she arranges the fish, covers it with a sauce of sour cream and
mayonnaise, then atop that builds layers of grated beets, boiled
potatoes, and sour apple. She adorns her salad with alternating stripes
of fresh dill and hard-cooked egg white and egg yolk, the way my
grandmother used to decorate her chopped liver.
Stanislava's
kitchen is too small for all of us to help. My parents retire to her
living room, and I go in to check on them, carrying a tray of tea, rye
bread, and caraway-speckled cheese. I walk in on my mother reading to my
father; she has taken a volume of poetry by Pushkin from Stanislava's
shelf. My father joins along, reciting the words from memory: "An eagle
that has soared from off some distant cliff, / Lawless as I, sweeps
through the radiant air! / Here I see streams at their sources
up-welling, / The grim avalanches unrolling and swelling! / The soft
cloudy convoys are stretched forth below…"
He
is fighting back tears. My parents came to Riga after 35 years, linking
their pasts to their present. It's not what any of us expected, but it
feels like home.
See where to stay, what to eat, and what to see while in Riga in our guide »
See 9 quintessentially Latvian recipes in our gallery »
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