Carnegie Deli Owner Milton Parker Dies


Carnegie Deli Owner Milton Parker Dies

Owner of the famed New York delicatessen dead at age 90
by Sara Bonisteel
Photo by IanPhilipMiller/flickr


The owner of New York's iconic Carnegie Deli has died at the age of 90.
Milton Parker, who learned the deli business at an age when many men were retiring, died Friday from a respiratory condition, his son-in-law tells AOL Food.

"He took a little local restaurant and built it into a national [one]," Sandy Levine said Wednesday.

Parker joined the Carnegie Deli at the age of 58, transforming the 1937 delicatessen into a tourist favorite with his business partner, Leo Steiner.

"At the age of 58, he took the night shift -- we call it the graveyard shift -- so he could learn every facet of business," Levine said.


The deli found the limelight; Woody Allen used it as a setting in part of "Broadway Danny Rose."

Today diners flock to the deli to nosh on open-faced sandwiches named Hamalot (Virginia ham with gravy and candied sweets) and Li'l Abner (beef brisket with gravy and fries) as well as traditional favorites with even more fanciful names: Fifty Ways to Love Your Liver (chopped liver, hard-boiled egg, onion, lettuce, tomato), Carnegie Haul (pastrami, tongue and salami with relish) and Bacon Whoopee (chicken salad with bacon, lettuce and tomato).

And no one loved the menu more than Parker.

"His favorite part was eating; his passion was eating," Levine said. "He would start off eating a foot-long frankfurter before he had his meal."

Steiner died in the late 1980s, but Parker pressed on with the deli. Carnegie produces its own meats at a facility in New Jersey. "We eliminated the middleman so we could get a perfect product," Levine said.

Fans of the deli's My Fair Latkes needn't worry. Closing the deli would have been the last thing Parker wanted, his family said.

"His life was the Carnegie Deli," Levine said.


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    Recent Comments

    1 - 10 of 44
    44 comments

    srlaperla 05:52:27 AM Feb 05 2009

    I have dreams of this place (not literally) and have visited and eaten there MANY times with my family when we visited NYC. The food is OUTSTANDING and the pickles are even better. The reviewer that even dares to compare Katz's with Carnegie is out of their mind. Katz's is more like the "McDonalds" of deli food. Gimme a break. Eating at the Carnegie is comparable to a religious experience. 'Nuf said.

    tccajb 03:11:11 AM Feb 05 2009

    My favorite haunt when back in NYC....a native New Yorker, the Carnegie Deli and its great Reuben is always on my list of things to do....especially the "new" pickles. Too bad it did not translate well down here in Tysons Corner Virginia. Glad you deliver to the East side! Keep up the good work, family! Your main man will be missed.

    jlmktm 02:03:06 AM Feb 05 2009

    Use to live in NYC midtown manhatten. Did not like many of the deli's because they were not very clean, lots of issue

    michilady22 12:46:25 AM Feb 05 2009

    RIIP, condolences to the entire family. LOVE that place. Hubby and I visited it in NYC, had to eat there more than once it was so good. KInda cool to be in a deli my parents stopped at 50 years ago!

    evwiz52 11:13:23 PM Feb 04 2009

    I SAW A STORY ABOUT THE DELI ON THE HISTORY CHANNEL AND THE FAMOUS PILED HIGH PASTRAMI SANDWICHES IF I'M EVER IN NEW YORK I'LL BE SURE TO GO THERE REST IN PEACE MR.PARKER YOU DONE GOOD. WIZ

    rjo778 11:12:37 PM Feb 04 2009

    My condolences to the family and staff at the Carnegis Deli. I have been saddened to see the demise of the great Jewish delis of NYC such as Ratners, 2nd Ave. Deli, Kaplans and many other small family owned delis in the city. I will make a point to have a corned beef sandwich the next time I am inthe city.

    rixfamous 11:08:51 PM Feb 04 2009

    TY Mr Parker for all you did. I Love NY!

    howwil 10:37:01 PM Feb 04 2009

    Let me echo that sentiment about Katz's. Their pastrami is cooked slightly longer and the sandwich is more modest than the one at Carnegie, but reasonably so because one pound of pastrami and two slices of bread is not quite a balanced meal, even if they do throw in that extra slice of bread if you ask for it politely. Also I like Katz's pickles better, and the place is less crowded because it's not in the middle of everything. This is not to disparage Milton Parker, who was a New York institution. May he rest in peace at a roadside deli in the great beyond..

    mkn84 10:18:18 PM Feb 04 2009

    Oooo, gosh, never heard of the place.

    lisdog1947 09:56:57 PM Feb 04 2009

    I would never go back to New York, even for one of those deli sanwiches. Did you know it is illegal to stop on the sidewalk and look up for more than 30 seconds in NYC? yep, got a fifty dollar fine for looking up

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