Masbia’s Soup Kitchen Offers Fresh Food For The Homeless & Hungry
More: Masbia’s Soup Kitchen Offers Fresh Food From Chef Ruben Diaz : People.com
This article was originally published by NationSwell, a website dedicated to sharing the stories of innovative Americans who are working to effect social change and move the country forward.
Fresh, locally sourced food? Check. Art on the walls? Check. Helping New York’s hungry? Check.
The phrase “soup kitchen” doesn’t exactly ooze comfort. Getting meals to the homeless or hungry is usually a bare-bones affair, involving the most inexpensive food and all the ambiance of a basement cafeteria.
But walking into a soup kitchen run by Masbia, a group founded in 2005 and now operating three store fronts across Brooklyn and Queens, feels different.
The food is fresh, cooked by chef Ruben Diaz and volunteers, and meals incorporate donations from city farmers’ markets and local CSAs. There’s art on the walls. The chairs don’t fold. It looks like a restaurant, and it is - one where nobody has to pick up the check themselves.
Masbia is on track to serve one million meals this year alone.
The food is kosher - the founders are Hasidic Jews, and the first store front opened in Boro Park, a primarily Orthodox Jewish neighborhood - but people of all creeds are welcome. Many of the volunteers preparing the food are patrons, who work a few hours and then take their meals with employees.