Los Angeles Times

The big cheese at his family’s deli

The son of Langer’s founder has guided the eatery through changing tastes.

- By Samantha Masunaga samantha.masunaga@latimes.com

The gig: Norm Langer, 73, is president and chief executive of Langer’s Delicatess­en-Restaurant near MacArthur Park in Los Angeles.

His father, Albert J. Langer, founded the business in 1947 and expanded it from the 12-seat deli he initially purchased. Known for its iconic No. 19 pastrami sandwich, Langer’s employs 40 people and has won critical acclaim, including a James Beard Foundation award in 2001. Starting from the bottom: Langer is the older of two children and grew up in the Pico-Robertson neighborho­od. As a teenager, he went to work at one of the hot dog stands owned by his father and his father’s business partner, Joe Berlatsky. His job: cleaning the restrooms.

“My dad’s partner felt that it was important that if you were going to learn, you learn from the bottom,” Langer said. “Nepotism here did not apply.” All in the family: After graduating in 1962 from Hamilton High School, Langer enlisted in the U.S. Army as a cook and went up to Ft. Ord on Monterey Bay for basic training. He served two months and 18 days before he was granted a medical discharge for acute asthma.

When he returned to Los Angeles, Langer asked his father for a job. Al Langer said no, steering him instead to a meatpackin­g plant in Vernon so he could learn “the other side of the business.”

But Norm Langer had been a sickly kid, and the cold in the refrigerat­ors and freezers didn’t agree with him. So in 1963 the teenager came to work at Langer’s and was immediatel­y set up to, again, clean the restrooms. Father and son: Norm Langer said he gradually took over the role of Langer’s president and CEO from the day he started working at his father’s restaurant.

His father, along with a Langer’s manager, took the younger Langer under their wing and taught him the business. Norm Langer supplement­ed their lessons by frequently asking questions.

Langer said his relationsh­ip with his father was so strong that Al shared with his son early on what was in his and his wife’s will. Al Langer died in 2007.

“That was communicat­ion,” he said. “Our ability to communicat­e with each other was something that most families don’t have.”

Menu updates: Over the years, Langer began to make changes to the original menu his father had set.

As the neighborho­od changed around the restaurant, Langer’s stopped selling items such as baloney and liverwurst. About 15 years ago, per his wife’s suggestion, he started selling salads. More recently, Langer’s began selling pastrami chili cheese fries after a customer request — a new item Langer said is the biggest change he has made.

Although he’s modernized his offerings, he said he has tried to hold on to the “old Jewish tradition and the old customs.” Promise of the Red Line: Langer’s saw a major decline in business in the late 1980s and early 1990s, partly because of gang, prostituti­on and drug problems in the neighborho­od. Langer said he wrote checks back to the business to try to keep the doors open when daily revenue decreased. He had serious thoughts about closing.

The opening of the Red Line subway in 1993 was “my light,” Langer said, as it drove more business to the restaurant.

“The big benefit to it now is people don’t have to take their car out of a parking lot,” he said. “They can jump on public transporta­tion.” Getting the word out: Over its more than 70 years in existence, Langer’s has made a name for itself as a foodie destinatio­n. Since the restaurant has been in business, Langer said, he has sold “over 10 million pounds of pastrami.”

Although Langer has embarked on several advertisin­g campaigns, he said his “claim to fame is word of mouth.”

“You can do all the advertisin­g in the world and sometimes it brings people in,” Langer said. “But when your friend … says to you, ‘I went to Langer’s and I had a corned beef sandwich’… that’s the credential you want. It’s personal.” The customer is always right: At least 21 years ago, Langer saw an employee bagging a sandwich and taking it outside. He asked the employee what he was doing, and the employee responded that a customer had asked for the order to be taken outside because they were running late.

Langer’s initial response was that the employee had opened a “can of worms that we cannot close.” But the employee told him he had given the customer his word.

That was the beginning of Langer’s curb service, which was a big win for customers in parking-limited Westlake.

Now, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Langer said, the business delivers 35 to 70 orders to customers’ cars. Personal life: Langer lives in Woodland Hills with his wife, Jeannette. He has a daughter, 40, and a son, 43.

Langer spends a lot of time at the restaurant and is there five or six days a week. He’ll come in around 9:30 or 10 a.m. and sometimes stay until 5 or 6 p.m. He said he considers the employees as family.

 ?? Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times ?? NORM LANGER is president and CEO of Langer’s Delicatess­en-Restaurant, which his father, Albert, opened in 1947. He’s modernized the menu but tries to maintain the “old Jewish tradition and the old customs.”
Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times NORM LANGER is president and CEO of Langer’s Delicatess­en-Restaurant, which his father, Albert, opened in 1947. He’s modernized the menu but tries to maintain the “old Jewish tradition and the old customs.”

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