For Porcini Cheddar popcorn, you want the East Side. For Three
Cheese popcorn, you want the West Side. Then again, for Pumpkin Spice popcorn,
you want the West Side, whereas for Bacon Apple Bourbon Caramel popcorn, you
want the East Side.
Each is a little place run by a woman inspired by corn. Both
popped up at practically the same time, though apparently by coincidence. Each
offers popcorn in flavors that you don’t get in cellophane bags. Both sell
popcorn with a conviction that it will make you happy and healthy.
So take your pick. Or don’t, for if you love popcorn, you’ll
want to try both. They’ve made themselves just different enough so that you have no choice.
Populence, in the West Village, is run by Maggie Paulus,
whose very life was essentially launched by popcorn. “My dad proposed to my mom
with a ring in a Cracker Jack box,” she told me. “So growing up, popcorn was
always associated with something fun.”
Pop Karma, on the Lower East Side, is run by Jean Tsai, who
wants to inspire you in much the same way that popcorn inspired her. On the
chalkboard outside her store, she puts inspiring quotes like Herbert Spencer’s
“The great aim of education is not knowledge but action.”
Populence carries six flavors at a time — usually three sweet
and three savory. The top sellers have been Salted Caramel, Sun-dried Tomato,
and Jalapeño Cheddar. There’s also Kettle Corn, Ginger Caramel, Garlic Rosemary,
Real Raspberry, and Sweet Cinnamon. Salted Caramel could count as sweet and savory.
Pop Karma carries six flavors at a time — usually three
“classic” and three seasonal. The classic are Caramel, Mediterranean, and Zen
Cheddar. The seasonal have included Barbecue, Margarita, and White Truffle
Cheddar, and now include Za’atar, which is described as “a visit to a Middle
Eastern souk.”
The Populence Web site says: “Our artisanal method of
creating cornfections involves small batches of heirloom popcorn combined with
the finest whole ingredients.”
The Pop Karma Web site says: “Our ingredients lists are
minimal since we source the best food possible from responsible, sustainable
producers.”
It’s close, but I have to give that round to Populence, because
of “cornfections,” and in spite of “heirloom.”
Maggie and Jean, of course, are not the first to have
popcorn stores in New York, regardless of which one of them thought of having
one first. Awhile ago, Times Square had a store called Popcorn, Indiana. In the
eighties, the Upper East Side had Jack’s Corn Crib. The Jack was Jack Klugman.
Those are gone, of course. But they were chains. Pop Karma
and Populence aren’t. Yet. And their owners both seem devoted to their products
and their neighborhoods.
As the Pop Karma Web site puts it: “Kind words and kind actions inspire a beautiful day. A lifetime of beautiful days is a work of art. Live it.”
As the Pop Karma Web site puts it: “Kind words and kind actions inspire a beautiful day. A lifetime of beautiful days is a work of art. Live it.”