
Name: Aissatou Minthe
Clinton Hill Resident For: 10 years
(Thanks to the Polish Bar of Brooklyn for providing their space for the interview, as well as a paraffin manicure and a chocolate pedicure, and to the Greene Grape for providing a bottle of Burgans Albarino 2005)
Aissatou Minthe and I sat down over wine and took pleasure in some pampering on April 10 at the Polish Bar of Brooklyn. While she slipped on some heated mitts for a paraffin manicure, I sat back and enjoyed the indulgent chocolate pedicure.

Aissatou Minthe is the fashionable Frenchwoman who owns Tessan Boutique, the tiny clothing and accessories shop on the ground floor of a brownstone on Clinton at DeKalb. She lives and works in the building.
I’ve often wondered about the French population in the area, since there seems to be a very high concentration. It was, in a way, what brought Minthe to the neighborhood. She first arrived from Paris, where she was born, to go to college and moved in with her boyfriend at the time in Fort Greene. She’s lived here ever since.
Minthe believes that the first French restaurant to open, Chez Ozkar, brought the French expats living in the neighborhood together for socializing and sharing. A Table and Café Lafayette followed, making the area a place in which the French felt comfortable. She laughs, saying that there are perhaps, “too many French people,” here, and how the French community often referred to Fort Greene as “French Greene.” (Moments earlier, she had recognized a friend in one of the pedicure chairs and the two spoke at length in French.)

Though born in Paris, Minthe feels a deep connection to Tessan, the village in Senegal where her mother was born. As a child, she and her siblings traveled to the village each summer with their parents to stay on her grandfather’s farm where he grew peanuts, corn and other vegetables. It was a peaceful experience for her, as Tessan was and still is very much a traditional African village – residents gathered water from a well and no one had electricity.
Minthe named her boutique after the village and as a tribute to her parents and family for being open-minded despite coming from a traditional background. While she hopes to eventually move to a bigger space, she plans on keeping the original location open as well. “My people remember what they come from,” she said, explaining her attachment to the storefront. The small space also creates an intimacy. On the weekends, the shop becomes crowded and shoppers often engage one another with personal stories or ask for advice.

Minthe spent a few years as a social worker, and had originally hoped to go back to school to design shoes, handbags and jewelry. Now, she sells them. “There was no time in my schedule to go to school while I was working, so I did it the other way around,” she says. “The store is small, and it used to be a storage space! My landlord knew I was looking for a space, and offered it to me. I decided to use the space to try this out.”
I asked how she chooses what she sells, given her limited square footage. “I choose clothing and accessories that go with everything, things that are very simple,” she explains. “Clothing to hang out in. Whatever a woman needs to feel beautiful.” Minthe also makes a point of selling items handmade by Clinton Hill residents, including hats and scarves by Nicole Tavares, twilight hats by a neighbor named Michael and jewelry from women named Masani and Karrie who live in Clinton Hill. Often, the local designers are people she’s met before in the area after admiring their personal styles and projects.
Minthe’s favorite aspect of Clinton Hill is its diversity. “It’s a small community,” she says. “Everyone knows one another. There is so much to do, but yet not a lot to do. You can just relax in the park doing nothing if you want, just like a small village!”
Minthe also waxes poetic about the local business community. “I’ve had a good experience opening the store here. I’ve received lots of help and encouragement from other entrepreneurs. It’s also very cool that so many women in the area own their own businesses. It creates a real solidarity. There are so many unique stores in the area, each with a different style!”
I asked her about some of her other favorites, of course. “For lentil soup, my favorite comes from Black Iris. Chez Oscar has the best Nicoise Salad. Cafe Lafayette has an amazing chocolate volcano. For quality cuisine, iCi. Djollof, on Fulton and St. James, has the best Senegali food! It’s like eating at home. And the best-kept secret in the neighborhood? A Bistro.”
Finally, I asked her what flavor of ice cream she would be and why. Minthe had her answer right away. “Chocolate! Because it’s sweet. Sweet and strong.”








19 Comments
Great interview! Can’t wait to see more of these.
. . .yawn. . .
Aissatou has been a great support and help to me, and her shop is lovely.
Perhaps, JD, you could trade in your bad attitude and be a little kinder to the people working to make your neighborhood a nice place.
I liked my neighborhood just fine 4 years ago. This is gentrification. Next we’ll have a Starbucks on Myrtle.
JD, Change is inevitable. Some of it is actually good. One Starbucks wouldnt kill you anyway, lol!
keepn starbucks away!
I don’t want Starbucks either, but I do want our local business owners to be treated well, no matter what kind of business they have. It takes constant, consistent, and often thankless work to simply maintain a nice neighborhood, too – not just to gentrify it.
And if a little boutique of wonderful things that make women feel beautiful is too much for you, then I’m sorry. We’ll work on getting more 99 cent stores and empty storefronts to make you happy.
who are you, the mayor of Brooklyn? I thought the article was boring. big deal. you decided to turn this into your own personal crusade on the benefits of gentrification. In the past 4 years I have watched my rent increase over 50%. You are in favor of starbucks. You are completely missing the point of living in Ft. Greene/Clinton Hill. We are the last nabe without franchises. That is why (most) people enjoy living in areas w/out franchises b/c it is charming and still having soul. All the new businesses are doing are encouraging ppl who are priced out of Park Slope / Willyburg/ Manhattan to move here. There are enough strollers here. Keep them in Park Slope.
JD! Your attitude is so completely opposite of what living in FG/CH is about. We all need to get over this Starbucks fear. Don’t get me wrong, I love smooch and Pillow and so do many other people, they aren’t going anywhere. A Starbucks on the right block would not be the worse thing to happen and neither would more strollers. If you can’t handle the heat get out of the kitchen. NYC is an organic creature that changes every day; the only way to avoid it is to move to a self-sustainable farm upstate. Good luck with the move!
opinions are like assholes, everyone has one
You should go to Pillow and tell Robin & Biola that you think Starbucks is what our neighborhood needs. Good luck with that.
joe, you stole my line about moving upstate! and said pretty much everything else i was going to say (and much more succinctly than i would have). so i’ll just throw in a few other thoughts:
i am so bored with the anti-kid nonsense, like small children are the first sign of the neighborhood apocolypse. it’s ridiculous.
jd, you may not think that the kind of small businesses that are opening are the “right” kind, but wouldn’t you rather see a locally owned, independent clothing store than a gap? i know, you’re saying that that the small clothing boutique will beget the gap. but that blimpie’s in the old video basket location didn’t last long, did it? just shows that if we all continue to shop at the non-chains, they do sometimes go away.
of course, it is very, very sad to see older neighborhood businesses being priced out. i saw the corcoran sign on the 7 corners hardware store for the first time today and had to stop and take a breath. but then i just thought about how i was going to make even more of an effort to shop at sister’s hardware, or the hardware shop on my corner, or the true value on myrtle, and leave home depot as a last resort.
jd – read what people write. not one of the other commentors, joe or anybody else, has said or implied that “starbucks is what our neighborhood needs.”
1) One Starbucks wouldnt kill you anyway, lol!
2)A Starbucks on the right block would not be the worse thing to happen and neither would more strollers.
3)We all need to get over this Starbucks fear
Your right “Hey Mama” – I should of not taken their words out of context. But anybody with half a brain can get out of the three comments I posted their support for the coffee franchise.
“It is better to keep your mouth shut and appear stupid than to open it and remove all doubt.” -Mark Twain
How do you stop businesses targeting new demographics? You call it gentrification, but you’re really talking about the businesses that follow gentrification. If Starbucks/Barnes&Nobles/Any business thinks the FG/CH demographic will support their product, I’d bet that they’d probably be right. Why? Because they would have done the research and noticed certain changes in the area. Nabes change all the time, even while a few people stand up and say they dont like it. Still, I think you wont have to worry about Starbucks for a while. With all the empty store fronts still on Myrtle, if they wanted to be here they couldve opened 12 stores by now!
tomayto, tomahto, i guess, “jd”. you see support for starbucks, i see a realistic acceptance of the fact that starbucks might come here and it won’t spell the end of life in clinton hill as we know it.
(also, apparently, i see a difference in interpretation, you see the need to call me stupid. grow up.)
Hey lesterhead, Good job on a nice interview evin if it wasn’t ny cup of tea. It helped me to get to know the hood a bit more. Thanks!
And wow what a great response, I love the sparks flying. I want to mention to hey mama…I’ve been in the hood for 25 years now and a Starbucks sure would change it ! I wonder where all the .75 cent coffee went. I go to the Pratt coffee shop for mine.(Mikes is great but always too darn crowded as too short on hours.) And JD, I guess your not aware there has been a “Subway” sandwitch shop on Myrtle for a couple of years now. At least it’s not Starbucks!
Shaun, just wait a year or so, those chains probably will come the way the hood is changing. Joe is right on saying NYC is an organic creature always changing. My .2 cents. I love it ALL !
Quiznos anyone? Ginormous Bank of America?
Starbucks, in my opinion, is coming. It staying will be up to the people of this community. If they refuse to buy coffee at Starbucks and continue to go to the local coffee houses then Starbucks will not be able to remain open.
Now if people start going to Starbucks rather than the local coffee shops that says something about their coffee, service, etc. …cough…cough…*tillie’s*…cough…cough… and might be a good wake up call.
hi brien –
25 years, wow. you should be the next interview, i’m sure you could tell some stories….
i’m less worried about the 75¢ coffee places being run out of town by starbucks than the places like smooch, pillow cafe, etc that are selling the same kind of coffee drinks (at the same prices) as starbucks. there will always be a market for 75¢ coffee! there’s a starbucks on court street in cobble hill, and there are still coffee shops and bodegas where you can get a cheap cup of coffee there too…. if places like smooch, etc haven’t put pratt coffee shop, etc out of business by now, hopefully a starbucks wouldn’t either.
Hello
My name is Same Minthe and I am interest in getting to know Miss Minthe that is on this blog I am from Mali here is my contact information sminthe@yahoo.com
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