West Side Rag
  • TOP NEWS
  • OPEN/CLOSED
  • FOOD
  • SCHOOLS
  • OUTDOORS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • ART & CULTURE
  • POLITICS
  • COLUMNS
  • CRIME
  • HISTORY
  • ABSURDITY
  • ABOUT US
    • OUR STORY
    • CONTRIBUTORS
    • CONTACT
    • GET WSR FREE IN YOUR INBOX
    • SEND US TIPS AND IDEAS
West Side Rag
No Result
View All Result
SUPPORT THE RAG
No Result
View All Result

Favorite WSR Stories

  • UPDATE: The Disco Ball Causing Problems on West 86th Street: ‘Extremely Disruptive’
  • This Giving Tuesday Help Sustain West Side Rag
  • STAMPED OUT! Have Notaries Vanished from the Upper West Side?
Get WSR FREE in your inbox
SUPPORT THE RAG

Morningside Heights Hungarian Pastry Shop Line Attempts To Change Direction

May 9, 2024 | 11:02 AM
in ABSURDITY, FOOD, NEWS
11
The Hungarian Pastry Shop line formulating on the south side of the store, as opposed to the usual north. Photo Credit: Sean Curran.

By Gus Saltonstall

Change is attempting to come to the ever-present weekend line outside of the popular Hungarian Pastry Shop bakery in Morningside Heights.

“The line on Saturday in front of the Hungarian Pastry shop was coming from the south, normally it is from the north,” Sean Curran, a reader, emailed West Side Rag over the weekend. “Was this influenced by what happened at Absolute Bagels? Is it a sign of a reversal of all line directions on the UWS?”

Curran’s mention of Absolute Bagels, near West 107th Street, referred to the Rag’s April 16 story about the line-direction change at the popular bagel spot over the last month, following the closure of the Garden of Eden market next door.

The question of why the Hungarian Pastry Shop’s line also changed direction this past weekend on Amsterdam Avenue near the corner of West 111th Street had no immediate answer. One wondered if there was some sort of outside force influencing local lines? Was it a strange call and response to the nearby Absolute Bagels line shift? Or was another factor at play?

One thing is certain: Curran was correct in his statement that the Hungarian Pastry Shop’s line generally forms on the north side of the store.

The Hungarian Pastry Shop line in 2021 forming on the north side of the store. Google Maps.

Here is an Instagram post from the bakery in November of 2022 that also shows the line formulating on the uptown side of the shop.

It turns out, management at the Hungarian Pastry Shop has actually been trying to change the direction of its line — and it is all in the name of being a good neighbor.

“I’m very surprised people paid attention to this and noticed the line change,” a woman who works at the counter of the Morningside Heights bakery said, laughing. She declined to give her name.

“The boss recently said we need to put more of an effort into telling customers to line up on the left side of the shop,” she said. “When you stand on the left side of the store, it is mostly [in front of] our place. If people line up there, they are not blocking somebody else’s [storefront]. We don’t want to stop customers of the other business from being able to go through because of our line,” she explained. “So, it is just being a good neighbor and trying to manage it in a better way.”

The “other business” is the Italian restaurant Tartina, which sits just north of the Hungarian Pastry Shop, and does get its entrance blocked when the bakery’s line forms on its uptown side.

The Hungarian Pastry Shop has served customers at its Morningside Heights storefront since 1961, but it was not until the COVID-19 pandemic that the business began getting a consistent weekend line. Employees have tried to tell customers to line up on the south side, but with the constant rush of people and not wanting to yell from inside the shop, it can be challenging to direct patrons to the other side once they have already lined up.

“Somehow, since the pandemic, people started lining up on the right side, so it’s just the way it happened,” the counterwoman told the Rag. “But, nobody knew at the time that we were going to have a line all the time.”

“The boss has tried to come up with different ideas,” she added, “like putting a little banner on the sidewalk to tell [people] the direction of the line. This has actually been in discussion for a while, to make sure we don’t block the neighbor’s restaurant, and, again, to make sure we’re being a good neighbor.”

Subscribe to West Side Rag’s FREE email newsletter here.

Share this article:
SUPPORT THE RAG
Leave a comment

Please limit comments to 150 words and keep them civil and relevant to the article at hand. Comments are closed after six days. Our primary goal is to create a safe and respectful space where a broad spectrum of voices can be heard. We welcome diverse viewpoints and encourage readers to engage critically with one another’s ideas, but never at the expense of civility. Disagreement is expected—even encouraged—but it must be expressed with care and consideration. Comments that take cheap shots, escalate conflict, or veer into ideological warfare detract from the constructive spirit we aim to cultivate. A detailed statement on comments and WSR policy can be read here.

guest

guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

11 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Lisa
Lisa
1 year ago

I love this. How about a velvet rope to indicate where the line should go?

8
Reply
Peter
Peter
1 year ago

Finally, it was high time for a change in political winds at the UWS.

9
Reply
Bill Williams
Bill Williams
1 year ago

Hungarian is worth lining up for!

13
Reply
Carol
Carol
1 year ago

Too funny!

2
Reply
Rebecka Labson
Rebecka Labson
1 year ago

I finally realized that the line at Absolute probably changed so as to not block the shop next door. Now that Garden of Eden is closed, lining up in that direction doesn’t block a neighboring shop.

How thoughtful.

6
Reply
Uptown
Uptown
1 year ago
Reply to  Rebecka Labson

My bet is that it changed because there is an awning on the Garden of Eden side, shade+rain protection. Pure self-interest, not altruism

0
Reply
Sarah
Sarah
1 year ago

Important news in these troubled times!

2
Reply
Emma
Emma
1 year ago

I love that the Hungarian Pastry Shop is being thoughtful. Tartina is a great neighborhood restaurant!

4
Reply
Joe Han
Joe Han
1 year ago

Customers will form a line where they usually want, but also will move it when asked. It’s good of the Bakery to try and be a “good” neighbor.

Last edited 1 year ago by Gus Saltonstall
2
Reply
Fara
Fara
1 year ago

Love this pastery place. One of the best in the city. I and my sister visit it every few months. As I live far in kips Bay.
Last time I was here it was in March and the line was formed opposite to the photo you shared.

0
Reply
Sean Curran
Sean Curran
1 year ago

Like a geomagnetic reversal I have to report that on Saturday May 11 around 1pm the very long line in front of Absolute Bagels was once again coming from the north.

1
Reply

YOU MIGHT LIKE...

Could the Closure of the Northbound 125th Street Exit off the Henry Hudson Parkway Have a Silver Lining?
NEWS

Could the Closure of the Northbound 125th Street Exit off the Henry Hudson Parkway Have a Silver Lining?

December 14, 2025 | 12:40 PM
After She Dances in Sunday’s ‘Nutcracker,’ Where Will NYC Ballet Soloist Naomi Corti Go to Unwind on the UWS? Read On
ART

After She Dances in Sunday’s ‘Nutcracker,’ Where Will NYC Ballet Soloist Naomi Corti Go to Unwind on the UWS? Read On

December 12, 2025 | 5:41 PM
Previous Post

History: A New View of Teddy Roosevelt: ‘Leaders Are Not Made of Marble but of Heart and Flesh’

Next Post

Central Park Birding Report: The American Robin — Most Overlooked Bird?

this week's events image
Next Post
Central Park Birding Report: The American Robin — Most Overlooked Bird?

Central Park Birding Report: The American Robin -- Most Overlooked Bird?

WSR Checks Out ‘Ice Cold: An Exhibition of Hip-Hop Jewelry’ at the American Museum of Natural History

WSR Checks Out ‘Ice Cold: An Exhibition of Hip-Hop Jewelry' at the American Museum of Natural History

Why Religious School Is More Important Than Ever

Why Religious School Is More Important Than Ever

  • ABOUT US
  • CONTACT US
  • NEWSLETTER
  • WSR MERCH!
  • ADVERTISE
  • EVENTS
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • TERMS OF USE
  • SITE MAP
Site design by RLDGROUP

© 2025 West Side Rag | All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • TOP NEWS
  • THIS WEEK’S EVENTS
  • OPEN/CLOSED
  • FOOD
  • SCHOOLS
  • OUTDOORS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • ART & CULTURE
  • POLITICS
  • COLUMNS
  • CRIME
  • HISTORY
  • ABSURDITY
  • ABOUT
    • OUR STORY
    • CONTRIBUTORS
    • CONTACT US
    • GET WSR FREE IN YOUR INBOX
    • SEND US TIPS AND IDEAS
  • WSR SHOP

© 2025 West Side Rag | All rights reserved.