Vivian and Marian Brown |
A Swedish baker and his family owned the coffee shop. (Try
as I might, I cannot find any reference to their name on the web.) While you
sat drinking coffee, you might hear the pounding and rolling of dough on the
balcony above you and smell the sweet and yeasty smells wafting out of the oven. The
baker was grey-haired, older; his wife was behind the counter most of the time.
Once I arrived to find their daughter, dark-haired and vivacious, holding court
over a circle of admirers who filled up the tables in front. Dark-complected
Eastern Europeans, they looked incredibly full of life to me.
I had a hard time choosing between my two favorite pastries,
a cherry or a prune Danish, lightly glazed with sugar icing. The dough for
Danish is similar to puff paste, rolled, folded and interleaved with butter.
Making it is hard, heroic work. I didn’t try to make it myself more than once.
I understand it comes from Austria, though it became wildly popular in
Scandinavia. Wonderful Princess cakes of vanilla sponge, jam, and cream topped
with a pale green marzipan frosting, and other cakes and puffs filled with
pastry cream, as well as cookies were also served at Scandia.
The place was always full of exotic people. European
tourists found it quickly. I loved listening to the many different languages at
every crowded table. But there were also the regulars. I remember a
well-dressed older woman, in hat and gloves, who I often saw there, or the
concierge of a nearby hotel whom I talked to several times. I often saw Marian
and Vivian Brown, the San Francisco twins, dressed to the nines and happily
talking to people around them.
Tame as it sounds, I have a lot of wild associations with
this bakery, partly because it was on Powell Street. The rows of sycamores at
the base of the street cast light and shade on fair and foul alike, making it
look like a European avenue. Those of us who lived in the city were not
deceived, however! The street was just north of the Tenderloin, where many of
the city’s most unfortunate lived. On Powell Street in the 1970’s you might
walk past a derelict person lying face down in the street or see a wasted
person who no longer cared that their rags barely covered them.
Because it is here that the cable car drivers push the cars
onto a turntable, then turn them around and catch the cable under the street
north, long lines of tourists waiting to go to Fishermans’ Wharf attract street
musicians and entertainers. An indelible image for me was a thin, long-legged
girl wearing woodsy material dancing in the center of a ruffian gypsy band.
Tall dark men with long unkempt hair, brown faces and sinewy limbs, wearing
ragged accretions of leather and cloth surrounded her. Wild, enchanted, gypsy
fiddles made the music. The girl whirled as though possessed with a joy unequaled
in the civilized city. They looked as though they had wandered out of a fairy
tale.
Beside the bakery was a bookstore, a deep room infinitely
filled with shelves and tables graced with books and stationery. I spent long
hours there, sifting through the art books, hunting down new writers and
decrying the fact that my favorites weren’t in print. The city changes
constantly, but for my first years there a few blocks surrounding the Scandia
Bakery was its cultural center.
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