A friend was sick, and I offered to bring her some cookies from D'Amato's. She wasn't familiar, and I said, "Last coal-fired bakery oven in Chicago" and sent her this column. Re-reading it, after five years, I thought, "That's a nice column," and decided to lay it out here, as a reserve, in case I ever found myself at midnight with another day looming and nothing to share, or, if you're reading this on Oct. 13, in the Upper Peninsula where I can't access the Internet to write a blog post. That day must have come last night, because here this is, for your reading pleasure. And if your reaction is, "I read that in 2009!" well, I enjoyed reading it a second time, and I wrote the thing.
If you've never seen four tons of coal
dumped in an alley — and my guess is you haven't — it's a surprisingly complex
process.
As the bed of Paul Schoening's blue dump
truck tilts slowly upward, a lone preliminary lump of Harlan County, Ky., coal
tumbles to the ground, as if reconnoitering.
Then,
the whole mass shifts, slightly, almost expectantly, while remaining on the
truck bed.
Then, a scattering of pieces, ranging in
size from eggs to loaves of bread, clatters to the asphalt.
Then, all at once, the coal crashes down
in a roaring cascade, five long seconds of dry, percussive sound, like 10
bowling balls scattering a hundred bowling pins. The 8,000-pound pile is a yard
high, 10 feet across and 6 feet wide.
Five men, employees and owners of
the Coalfire Pizza Company, 1321 W. Grand, set upon the coal with shovels.
Using two green wheelbarrows, it takes half an hour and 40 trips to move the
coal into the restaurant's coal bin.
DOWN TO 2 CUSTOMERS
Coalfire is one of two remaining
customers of the Gruene Coal Company, the last coal hauler in Chicago.
Once, the combustible black rock — the carbonized remains of plant life that dinosaurs failed to munch — heated
most buildings in Chicago
"Calumet High School, it was
unbelievable," recalls Schoening, who in his first and best year — 1968 — sold 10,000 tons of coal.
Now, he sells 100 tons a year. A dozen
tons to Coalfire, the rest to D'Amato's
Bakery two blocks east, at 1124 W. Grand (the one owned by Victor D'Amato, not to be confused with the D'Amato's Bakery at 1332 W. Grand,
owned by his brother, Matteo).
The proximity of Gruene's last two
customers can't be coincidence, and isn't. Coalfire was started three years ago
and intentionally opened near D'Amato's.
"One of the reasons we chose this
location was D'Amato's was right
down the road, using the coal bakery oven," says owner Bill Carroll.
"We figured, if someone objects to our using it, it's [already being used]
right down the road."
Why a coal-fired pizza oven?
"Mostly, it's to get a high
temperature," says Carroll. "You can achieve a similar high
temperature with wood, but the coal fire burns a little more evenly. You don't
have to stoke it as much, and it's a little cheaper."
Co-owner James Spillane suggests a more
nostalgic reason — both men are from Massachusetts, home of coal-fired pizza.
"I wanted to burn coal," he
says. "I really couldn't tell you the difference between wood-fired pizza
and coal-fired pizza. But coal — coal fuels cities; coal was the fuel of the Eastern
cities."
Midwestern cities, too. Chicago was once
defined — and blighted — by coal. "Chicago seemed an unreal city whose
mythical houses were built of slabs of black coal, wreathed in palls of gray
smoke," wrote Richard Wright, of his first visit here in 1927.
IN 1913: 800 COAL DEALERS
Gruene
Coal, founded in 1883, was among 800 coal dealers listed in the city's 1913
directory. It has been Chicago's only coal company for decades. Schoening, a
weathered but jovial mustachioed man in a watch cap, is its owner and only
full-time employee.
Most of his income is from selling fuel
oil — he considers coal "a hobby" and a tribute to his dad, who
owned the Old King Coal Company on the Near South Side.
The next day — and this was coincidence —
Schoening made one of his monthly deliveries to D'Amato's. This was a much easier process, since D'Amato's oven uses crushed coal —
stoker coal — which a rusty hopper shoots into the oven.
The bituminous coal — softer, smokier coal
than the harder, better-burning anthracite — is like coffee, in that it costs
the same ground or whole: about $1,350 for 4 tons, delivered. Here it doesn't
get dumped in the street, but is poured, through a hatch in the back gate of
the truck, onto a black rubber conveyor belt that hurries the coal through a
little metal door in the May Street side of D'Amato's and into the coal bin in the basement.
Above, workers place loaves of dough on
wooden pallets attached to long poles and thrust them into the oven to bake, a
job unchanged for 5,000 years.
Across the street, Vic D'Amato, sitting in his small office
at the wholesale branch of the bakery begun by his father, brothers and himself,
considers the question — why keep the last coal-fired bakery oven in Chicago? —
with a patient grimace, as if a child had asked something naive.
The building, he explains, was constructed
right after the Chicago Fire. It was built around the coal oven — the oven is
part of the building itself and hence part of D'Amato's Bakery. It's still there — he doesn't actually say this,
but I sense it — because anything else would be wrong.
When she heard that I was visiting D'Amato's, my wife had instructed,
"Bring home bread." So I dutifully secured a loaf.
That evening, I brought home the loaf of D'Amato's bread that had been baked
that morning on a large wooden pallet shoved into the century-old coal-burning
oven.
"This is very good bread," my
wife said, more than once, adding further instructions: I was to return
frequently to get more of this very good bread.
I cut myself a thick slice, buttered it
and took a bite. Delicious. Yet. Perhaps it was me. I'm sure it was me — but I
somehow thought I detected a trace of coaliness; not a flavor, but a hint, a
suggestion. A second bite. It must be psychological. But, yes, a whisper of
coal.
I'm not sure if I read this in 2009 -- it does seem familiar -- but the reconnoitering nugget of coal and the subsequent cascade I remember from the 50s when it seemed every other building had a coal chute. By the way, my mother never hung the laundry outside, because it would get dirtier than before it was washed, ostensibly because of the steel mills a mile or so away, but also I think from the contribution of soot from coal burning furnaces.
ReplyDeleteFrom the time I was 2 until I was 5 (1954-1957), I lived in a 2 flat that was owned by a great-uncle. It, and his house, had coal fired furnaces. I remember the sound of the coal tumbling down the coal shoot when it was delivered and going into the basement with my Dad or great-uncle when they added coal to the furnaces. When they would open the furnace door, I thought I was looking through the door to hell. It scared but fascinated me.
ReplyDeletemy father was one of the last people in LaGrange to switch from coal to natural gas heat, sometime in the early 60s, and then only because it had gotten almost impossible to find a supplier.
ReplyDeleteof course, he also enjoyed having a ready supply of coal to put in our Christmas stockings.
Older homes and apartment buildings across Chicago and inner-ring RR suburbs still have many buildings (single family homes and multi-unit buildings both) that have small steel doors set in their alleys at ground level. Inexplicable except for the knowledge that they were once heated with coal delivered through that door into the coal cellar. And of course these appear in Chicago literature, most horrifically in Richard Wright's Native Son. No spoiler in case your readers haven't read it.
ReplyDeleteThe house I lived in as a kid used coal until about 1960. I remember the truck pulling up besides the house, putting a chute through the coal bin window in the basement, and dumping it in. Then my father would go down and, using a sledge hammer, break up the lumps that were too big to fit in the furnace. and shaking down the grate each evening.
ReplyDeleteMy mother grew up in that neighborhood, right on Grand Avenue. I try to get to D'Amato's at least a couple times a year; the cookies, bread and cannoli are worth standing in line for.
ReplyDeleteI remember coal deliveries by chain driven trucks. The JW Peterson Coal Co. was just a couple of blocks away, so we saw their trucks all the time.
ReplyDeleteThere were coal companies next to Wrigley Field, [that's the parking lot they're going to build on] & another one at Berwyn & Broadway, where the CTA delivered the coal at night via the L tracks.
But the best memory was when they delivered it to Sullivan HS. A truck just dumped the entire load on the driveway outside the boiler room & then the janitors had to shovel it onto the conveyor to get it into the coal bin. At Lane, there was a grate in the ground & the trucks just dumped through the grate to the bin.
There also used to be coal fired electric generators at the ComEd property at Addison & California, along with 50 foot high piles of coal for those boilers.
Neil: just wanted to add that "reconnoitering," besides being hard to spell, was a charming bit of anthropomorphism.
ReplyDeleteJohn
Thanks John.
DeleteGrandma had a damper dial in the living room for the coal furnace in the basement. We kids would turn up the dial and it would get hotter than hell in the house. We kids never did get it.
ReplyDeleteThank goodness those coal furnace days were mostly over before my time. But I suppose it beat a pot belly stove in each room or a fireplace.
ReplyDelete