
4
BROOKLYN WEEKLY, JUNE 14, 2020
‘There were only good times’
Jay & Lloyd’s Kosher Deli bids farewell to Sheepshead Bay after 28 years
BY JESSICA PARKS
After 28 years of feeding
and entertaining customers
from across the city
and around the world, the
duo behind a beloved Sheepshead
Bay mainstay — Jay &
Lloyd’s Kosher Deli & Family
Restaurant — have closed
their doors as the pair packs
up their wealth of memories
on Avenue U.
“There are probably 100
stories, I can’t say how many
stories there are,” said coowner
Lloyd Lederman.
“I keep looking back and
there were only good times
— it’s what’s helping me get
through this.”
Lederman and his partner
Jay Stern have known
each other since they were
kids growing up in Mill Basin,
but it was their personalities
and passion for food that
led them to become business
partners, Lederman said.
“We’ve known each other
since we were four years
old,” Lederman said. “He’s
funny. We’ve got the same
silly personality — a Jewish
sense of humor. We’re a couple
of mensches.”
They fi rst began their
southern Brooklyn venture
in 1993, when the area was
predominantly Jewish and
devoid of its own Kosher deli
— which, Lederman said,
were quite popular in that
decade.
“People were waiting to
see a Kosher deli open,” he
said. “So I put a big sign out,
‘Kosher Deli,’ because, who
knew Jay and Lloyd?”
But it wasn’t long until
people did.
The restaurant took off
right away and people were
eating up the homemade
recipes passed down to Lederman,
a third-generation
deli man, from his father and
grandfather.
“It was no time before I
was open until 1 to 2 in the
morning. We couldn’t close,
it was just so busy,” Lederman
said. “It was an immediate
start to business.”
His special heart-shaped
pickles and pastrami sandwiches
quickly emerged as
staples in the community
and the restaurant became a
go-to spot on many local food
tours.
“My food is my love, it’s
my heart,” Lederman said.
“And people would say ‘you
know what? We know that.’”
Patrons came from far
and wide to visit Jay &
Lloyd’s on their trips to New
York City. Upon news of their
closing on social media, farewell
wishes poured in from
all around the world.
Not only was their food
unmatched, but the eatery
also doubled as a community
hangout spot, where neighbors
could always stop by to
hear one of Jay or Lloyd’s infamous
jokes.
“New customers, they
just kept coming back, because
we were fun, I’m sorry
to say it,” Lederman said.
“Jay was always telling a
joke, we made people forget
and laugh.”
Lederman and Stern announced
their decision to
close the restaurant in a May
27 Facebook post, and Lederman
told Brooklyn Paper
that the ongoing pandemic
and the decreasing popularity
of kosher delis left them
with little choice.
Since the closure, Lederman
is spending his days enjoying
his backyard oasis in
Rockaway Beach — a space
he had rarely found time for
before.
However, the deli man
suspects he may return to
business in the next couple
of years, though at a smaller
scale.
For now, he bids farewell
to all of his beloved customers
over his nearly threedecade
span in Sheepshead
Bay.
“Happy pickles,” Lederman
said.
Lloyd Lederman, of Jay & Lloyd’s Kosher Deli loved entertaining his
customers. Photo courtesy of Lloyd Lederman