CREVE COEUR — St. Louis’ last old-school kosher deli may soon face its last days.
Brother and sister Lenny and Rosemary Kohn have worked six days a week, at least 10 hours a day, for four decades at Kohn’s Kosher Meat & Deli Restaurant, and they are ready to retire. But they haven’t yet found someone to take over for them. Their children have long since left for other careers out of state. And attempts to sell the business quietly in recent years have gone nowhere.
Now they’re going public, listing the store and its land in hopes of a different result. They hope to find someone interested — the deli is still growing and making money. But the Kohns aren’t going to wait forever.
“I’ve set and missed a lot of deadlines on this,” Lenny Kohn said. “But I’m not going to miss another one.”
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Customers are still coming to terms with the idea. As the lunch hour came and went on Tuesday, more than one person pulled Lenny or Rosemary aside and told them they couldn’t leave. It’s more than matzos, kugel and meat drained of blood, they said: It’s a Jewish institution, a community gathering place. And honestly, where else are they going to get a killer pastrami sandwich for under $10 and count the cashier as a friend?
“You can’t replace this,” said Howard Danzig, who comes in from his office down the street.

Lyle Weisman, left, and Yossi Malka enjoy their “Killer Pastrami” sandwiches in the dining area of Kohn’s Kosher in Creve Coeur on Wednesday, May 4, 2022. Malka lives in L.A. but travels to St. Louis frequently for business, eating at Kohn’s whenever he is in town. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com
Growing the business
Simon Kohn and his wife, Bobbie, came to St. Louis in 1949 after surviving the Holocaust. Simon spent the next decade learning the kosher deli business, first as a delivery driver, then as a butcher.
He started his own place in University City in 1963. The Jewish population was growing, and the supermarkets had yet to take advantage.
It quickly became a bona fide family affair. Simon’s name was on the door, but Bobbie made the blintzes, knishes and small kreplach dumplings. Rosemary started checking out customers and helping make deliveries at 13. When Lenny got out of school, the bus would drop him off at the shop, which moved to Creve Coeur in the 1970s.
And eventually those kids became the bosses. Rosemary took over the catering business from her mother. Then Lenny got put in charge of growing the mail-order business.

A photo of the original Simon Kohn’s Kosher Deli hangs in the entrance at the current Kohn’s Kosher in Creve Coeur on Wednesday, May 4, 2022. Kohn’s has been open for nearly 60 years, they were originally located in University City before moving to Creve Coeur. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com
It wasn’t always easy. Lenny and his dad would regularly clash over this or that detail or decision.
But they always agreed that the business had to keep growing. “If you’re not looking for your next business, you’ll lose the business you have,” Lenny said Tuesday.
That would prove prophetic for others in the industry, as traditional grocers began to introduce their own kosher offerings.
But Kohn’s kept one step ahead: In the 1990s, it added more ready-to-eat foods just like the supermarkets then. In the early 2000s, it got online. A decade ago, it added a bakery as competitors fell. Then it opened stands at Blues and Cardinals games to get its name out to more Gentiles.
And it’s worked, Lenny said. “Every day I have 20 new people in here for lunch.”
A successor in the wings?
Tuesday’s lunch line appeared to prove the point. Men wearing yarmulkes bought lunch. Some in line spoke Hebrew.
But there was also Nicholas Confalone, 61, a Catholic who lives across the street and likes the pastrami. And Joe Saccaro, 68, who drives over from Staunton, Illinois, for the poppy seed-filled hamantaschen pastries. And Wayne Graham, 66, in for the salmon sandwich he can’t believe is $8.99.
“The food is good,” Graham said, “and the prices are really good.”
Between calls to settle up Passover bills, turns at the cash registers and questions from a reporter, it seemed like Lenny greeted them all, sometimes with a little pastry, gratis. He doesn’t look like he’s ready to leave.
“This is my stage,” he said. “I’m very comfortable here.”

Lyle Weisman, left, chats with David Denlow while waiting to order during the lunch rush at Kohn’s Kosher in Creve Coeur on Wednesday, May 4, 2022. The pair had never met before, but the community feel of the deli encourages conversation. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com
But at 64, he’s a tired player. After four decades in the same spot, he’s ready to do something else. He’s not saying exactly what — “Don’t want to piss anyone off,” he said — but it’ll probably have fewer days that begin at 6:30 a.m. and fewer weeks that run 60 hours.
Rosemary, eight years Lenny’s senior, is ready to leave that behind. She wants to travel and volunteer her time to give back to the Jewish community that has supported her family for so long. And she wants her days back: coffee with girlfriends and going out to lunch. “There’s a lot of other things I want to do,” she said.
And while all of their kids took shifts at the deli at one time or another, they all moved on to different careers, and Lenny and Rosemary didn’t stop them. “I wanted them to have it easier,” Lenny said.
There may yet be a successor in the wings. David Wright of Lawyers Realty Co., who’s marketing the property for Kohn’s, said there’s interest in buying out the Kohns and keeping the business going. And the Kohns have said they’ll help with any transition.
But for now, the Kohn’s faithful can only wait and hope.
“Don’t leave,” said Faye Cohen, a doctor at a nearby hospital, as she greeted Rosemary with a hug. “No one else knows how to do it like you.”
Photos: Kohn’s kosher deli, home of “Killer Pastrami”

Lyle Weisman, left, and Yossi Malka enjoy their “Killer Pastrami” sandwiches in the dining area of Kohn’s Kosher in Creve Coeur on Wednesday, May 4, 2022. Malka lives in L.A. but travels to St. Louis frequently for business, eating at Kohn’s whenever he is in town. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

James Cruise, left, and his son James Carter Cruise, 5, discuss what to order from the deli during the lunch rush at Kohn’s Kosher in Creve Coeur on Wednesday, May 4, 2022. Kohn’s has been open for nearly 60 years, they were originally located in University City before moving to Creve Coeur. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

Osama Rimawi cuts a “Killer Pastrami” sandwich in half before giving it to a customer during the lunch rush at Kohn’s Kosher in Creve Coeur on Wednesday, May 4, 2022. Kohn’s has been open for nearly 60 years, they were originally located in University City before moving to Creve Coeur. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

Lyle Weisman, left, chats with David Denlow while waiting to order during the lunch rush at Kohn’s Kosher in Creve Coeur on Wednesday, May 4, 2022. The pair had never met before, but the community feel of the deli encourages conversation. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

Kieth Smith covers portioned Challah while working in the bakery at Kohn’s Kosher in Creve Coeur on Wednesday, May 4, 2022. Kohn’s has been open for nearly 60 years, they were originally located in University City before moving to Creve Coeur. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

Co-owner Lenny Kohn rings up a customer that didn’t want to be identified during the lunch rush at Kohn’s Kosher in Creve Coeur on Wednesday, May 4, 2022. A photo of the extended Kohn family is seen in the background. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

An employee dishes up food from the deli counter during the lunch rush at Kohn’s Kosher in Creve Coeur on Wednesday, May 4, 2022. Kohn’s has been open for nearly 60 years, they were originally located in University City before moving to Creve Coeur. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

A photo of the original Simon Kohn’s Kosher Deli hangs in the entrance at the current Kohn’s Kosher in Creve Coeur on Wednesday, May 4, 2022. Kohn’s has been open for nearly 60 years, they were originally located in University City before moving to Creve Coeur. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

17 JANUARY 2007 – Butcher Menashe Gibli bones turkey breasts at Kohn’s Kosher Meat and Deli, 10405 Old Olive Street Road, Wednesday afternoon in Creve Coeur. The restaurant is one of the few kosher establishments in the St. Louis area. Robert Cohen | Post-Dispatch

17 JANUARY 2007 – Friends Ari Axelbaum, left, Zachary Deutsch, and Itai Straus (back to camera) grab a late lunch Wednesday at Kohn’s Kosher Meat and Deli, 10405 Old Olive Street Road, Wednesday afternoon in Creve Coeur. The restaurant is one of the few kosher establishments in the St. Louis area. Robert Cohen | Post-Dispatch

Kohn’s Kosher Meat Market employees, Regina Pittman, and her son, Richard Pittman, fill an order for Passover, Monday, April 6, 2020, in the kitchen of the restaurant. Regina works on individual Seder plates, which contain the ceremonial items, and Richard fills dinner plates for residents at Crown Center. Because of the coronavirus, trays of food normally served in the dining room have now been switched to individual plates to be delivered to the residents who are quarantining in their rooms. Photo by Hillary Levin, hlevin@post-dispatch.com

Naseer Uddin pulls out boxes of kosher meats from the walk-in freezer to prepare for shipping, Monday, April 6, 2020, at Kohn’s Kosher Meat Market in Creve Coeur. Lenny Kohn says his online orders of kosher meats have skyrocketed since the onset of the coronavirus. Most of the orders come from New York, Philadelphia and other parts of the east coast, where there is a shortage of kosher meats. Photo by Hillary Levin, hlevin@post-dispatch.com

Kohn’s Kosher Meat Market employees fill an order for Passover, Monday, April 6, 2020, in the kitchen of the restaurant. Individual Seder plates, which contain the ceremonial items, are prepared for a catering client. Photo by Hillary Levin, hlevin@post-dispatch.com

THURSDAY, MAY 22, 2008 — ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI Butchers Yuza Kiknadze (cq, left) and Mario Smith prepare beef as part of the Koshering process at Kohn’s Kosher Market in St. Louis on Thursday morning. The Koshering process is a daily activity when meat arrives fresh at the deli. Photo by Erik M. Lunsford | Post-Dispatch

THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2008 – Barbara Mollner (cq,right) works behind the counter at Pratzel’s Bakery in Creve Coeur. The owner of the bakery ceremoniously sells the business at the start of Passover every year and then buys it back afterward to avoid the complication of cleaning every crumb in the bakery. The bakery is located in the same building as Kohn’s Kosher Meat & Deli. Photo by John L. White | Post-Dispatch

THURSDAY, MAY 22, 2008 — ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI Butcher Mario Smith prepares beef as part of the Koshering process at Kohn’s Kosher Market in St. Louis on Thursday morning. The Koshering process is a daily activity when meat arrives fresh at the deli. Photo by Erik M. Lunsford | Post-Dispatch

March 8, 2007–Ross Shapiro (left), 23, of New Jersey, Robert Friedman (center), 24, and Kate Friedman (right), 22, of St. Louis try samples of new Kosher wines at Kohn’s Deli, in Creve Coeur located on Old Olive Road. The high quality Kosher wines are from all over the world. Shapiro said “he was really excited to see the new choices, especially since for the last fifty years we’ve drank Manischewitz.” Photo by Dawn Majors | Post-Dispatch

JANUARY 28, 2011 – Pratzel’s Bakery driver Peter Bommarito delivers one of the last trays of upside down chocolate cupcakes Friday afternoon in Creve Coeur. The bakery, which is housed in Kohn’s Kosher Meat & Deli, is shutting down on January 30th after 98 years of being in business. Photo by Johnny Andrews | jandrews@post-dispatch.com

Friday March 8, 2007–Earl Newman,64, of St. Louis tries samples of new Kosher wines at Kohn’s Deli, in Creve Couer located on Old Olive Road. The high quality Kosher wines are from all over the world. Photo by Dawn Majors | Post-Dispatch

APRIL 17, 2008 – Akram Hassan (left) prepares meals at Kohn’s Kosher Meat & Deli in Creve Coeur Thursday afternoon as Leonard Flaks (right in background) exits the kitchen. Flaks is the “maschgiah,” or the kosher supervisor of the deli. Hassan, who is in charge of the kosher kitchen, is Muslim and came to this country from the West Bank in 1975. Photo by John L. White | Post-Dispatch