Belly dancer Jenna shakes things up for Eric Doizer.
Although on weekend nights on nearby Orchard and Ludlow Sts. the sidewalks outside bars are mobbed with smokers because of the new anti-smoking law, at Café Cairo on E. Houston St. people are smoking indoors but not cigarettes, hookahs.
On each table in the small, six-month-old Middle Eastern restaurant sits a shiny golden water pipe for smoking the aromatic tobaccos that the café sells, 35 types in flavors like apple, rose, mint, jasmine, apricot, mango and strawberry.
Egyptian-born owner Mohamed Ouda said they have not applied for a waiver of the anti-smoking law to allow smoking indoors, as a few cigar bars have done. The waiver is for bars whose businesses are primarily based on sale of tobacco products. Cairo Café makes 75 percent of its profit on tobacco sales, 25 percent drinks and food, according to Ouda.
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Villager photos by Ramin Talaie
Waiter Muhamad, hookah in hand, moves around the restaurant.
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Still, Ouda thinks a special clause may need to be written in the citys new smoking law specifically for hookah cafes. They may look into it.
The hookah café has not been issued any violations at this point and no inspectors have even come around.
In fact, Ouda, puffing on a Marlboro outside the café, claimed hookahs are safer than cigarettes because of the water that filters the smoke and cuts the nicotine by two percent, as well as cooling the smoke.
Im not selling drugs, he said. Theres no nicotine in it. Not like this crap I know its a killer, he said, glancing down at his cigarette.
The hookah is a fundamental Middle Eastern custom, often used to smooth the way for dialogue, like Native Americans tobacco peace pipe.
My brother smoke it, my father smoke it, my grandfather smoke it, said Ouda. And my grandfather lived till 85. He smoked hookah five times a day.
Even with hookah smoking going on at most tables, the smell in the restaurant is a mix of sweet and musky, nothing like a bar in pre-Bloomberg laws.
The food is good but its not the main attraction. The menu is basic with Middle Eastern finger foods. However, the authentic brewed tea is as a real as you can get. Tea is served in substantial-sized metal pots in a variety of flavors.
On weekends, the café features belly dancing by Jenna.
Ouda immigrated to America 24 years ago in search of a better life. He has always been in the restaurant business. Much as with other Middle Easterners, its not hard to get him into a political conversation. For the record, he was fully behind the war in Iraq.
Around the corner from the café down Orchard St., the sidewalk was filled with smokers forced outside because of the new smoking law.
Like one oclock [a.m.], its crazy, Ouda said of the crowds highpoint, glancing down the block from the corner of E. Houston St.
But smoking in front is simply not an option for the hookah place, since it would involve lugging a 10-pound hookah pipe back and forth.