100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

March 30, 1990 - Image 43

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-03-30

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

A A
11 1 411111 ,— • *****
••10.e• ■■ •••••4111
•••••rso.•••••••• ■ •••

Wall Street can wait a year.
Law School can wait a year.
The Rat Race can wait a year.
BUT ISRAEL CAN'T WAIT!

OTZMA

(Now in its fifth year)

•It's a 10-month fellowship program in Israel for only $1,000.*
•It's travel, study, work and exploration.
•It's hard. It's fun. It's the best adventure you'll ever have.
•It's for outstanding young men and women, age 19-24.
•It's easy to find out more.

For information, call one of these Otzma graduates:

Kuchersky dines with his wife, Maya.

former waffle franchise of-
fered food similar to Sunrise
Cafe's breakfast and lunch
fare, Kuchersky took a gam-
ble, confident that his food,
service and management
would provide the winning
combination for their
restaurant.
Seven years later, Sunrise
Cafe is surrounded by new
hotels, highways and other
shops and restaurants. While
restaurant competition in the
area has stiffened, business at
Sunrise Cafe is booming. It
has many regular customers.
Business people are frequent
patrons at Sunrise Cafe. In
fact, General Motors Presi-
dent Roger Smith has eaten
at the restaurant with his
grandson many times.
Kuchersky estimates 80 perc-
ent of the patrons at the West
Bloomfield restaurant are
women.
Kuchersky and his wife
named the restaurant after
the Fiddler in the Roof classic,
Sunrise, Sunset.
Johnetta Moss, a waitress
at Sunrise Cafe in Southfield,
has worked with Kuchersky
for nine years. She left the
Howard Johnson restaurant
he had managed when he ,set
out to open Sunrise Cafe.
Moss says although Kucher-
sky has always been a quiet
boss, now he laughs more.
Sunrise Cafe serves only
fresh foods and the open kit-
chen attests to the attention
paid toward cleanliness.
Kuchersky believes the open
ktichen offers entertainment
value, with omelets being flip-
ped and food lively prepared
in full view. There are seven
soups homemade daily by a
cook who does nothing else.

One of the few truly Soviet
touches he says, is noticeable
in the soup choices, with offer-
ings such as cabbage or
mushroom barley.
Sunrise Cafe is well-known
for its omelets and waffles
and these specialties scream
out from the restaurants'
green awning. "Everybody
loves our omelets," Kuchersky
says. "We do omelets in a pan,
nobody makes them like us."
The egg white omelet has
been on the menu since the
restaurant opened, long
before the cholesterol craze
took off, and has been recom-
mended by area Weight Wat-
chers groups.
The waffles are a Sunrise
Cafe exclusive — concocted by
chance. Kuchersky opened
Sunrise Cafe on the location
of a defunct waffle house and
their supplier refused to sell
the waffle mix to any other
establishment. "We tried dif-
ferent ingredients until we
came up with these waffles.
They have a real sweetness.
Now the batter is supplied to
us exclusively," he says. The
special recipe, which adds
malt to the rich batter, is
served up in either regular or
Belgian style.
Kuchersky's only sibling is
his sister, Galena Pavlov, 41,
who left the Soviet Union a
year after her brother's
departure. She has been help-
ing Kuchersky manage the
restaurants for the past two
years.
Although Kuchersky and
Pavlov hope to keep the
business in the family,
Pavlov's two daughers have
different aspirations. Her
17-year old daughter, Regina,
is aiming to become a model

Alysa Goldberg
EMU, 485-2495

Wendy Littky
MSU, (517) 332-2765

Lisa Kruman
U-M, 994-3979

or call

Yefet Ozery, Israel Program Center
6600 W. Maple Road • West Bloomfield, MI 48322 • (313) 661-5440
Deadline for registration, April 30, 1990

*In Michigan, a project of the Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit. Funded by United Jewish Charities
in partnership with the Jewish Welfare Federation and the Jewish Agency for Israel.

.J

MERCEDES-BENZ

FOR LESS MUCH LESS THAN YOU THINK

MERCEDES-BENZ Special Lease Programs

ESTATE MOTORS

Mercedes-Benz

Call RICK GOULD

Bright
Lights

The newest lighting
showroom featuring:
• lamps
• fixtures
• bulbs
inside Colony Interiors

West Bloomfield

851-1881

464 S. Woodward • Birmingham • 644-8400

MARGUERITE'S

FULLER FIGURE FASHIONS

SALE

40% - 50% OFF

Everything In-Store

(Previous Sales & Layaways Excluded)

a Mirage Mall

355-0139

Northwestern Hwy.

Advertising in The Jewish News
Gets Results

Place Your Ad Today.
Call 354-6060

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

43

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan