Showing posts with label Mario Batali. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mario Batali. Show all posts

Thursday, May 22, 2014

MAKE The FEAST of THE 7 FISH This CHRISTMAS








La Vigila "THE FEAST of The 7 FISH" The Southern Italian Ritual Christmas Eve Meal of Seven Fish, Representing The 7 Sacraments of 
The Roman Catholic Church .. This Meal is a Sacred Ritual of The South 
of Italy and Italian-American's in New York, New Jersey, and other Italian American enclaves across the country. And You'd be Surprised to know that is Mostly of The South of Italy and Italian-America and that Many Italians from Central Italy to The North have never heard of This Great Traditional Feast as it is Mainly of The South. Have You ever wanted to Make or Eat one, but Don't Know Where to Start? The Know-How is Mostly Passed Down in Families from One Generation to the Next and 
Not Much Has Been Written on This Great Subject. Not Until Now anyway with The Publication of This Book by Daniel Bellino Zwicke. You Will Find Everything You Need to Know to Partake, Make, and Eat this Most Important Meal of The Italian Calender Year , with The FEAST of 7 FISH.. 

The Book Contains Stories, Recipes and Instructions on How to Make This Great Feast, Your Very Own "FEAST of SEVEN FISHES" so Cook, Make, and Partake, Mangia Bene e "Buon Natale"







Sunday, April 20, 2014

ROCCO CARBONE



ROCCO'S IS CARBONE ?



ROCCO'S IS CARBONE !
The former Greenwich Village Old-Schhol Red-Sauce Italian Joint, Rocco's a beloved little neighborhood trattoria closed two years ago as most people know. Squeezed out by a greedy lanlord and the so-called Torrisi Boys; Mario Carbone, Rich Torrisi, and Jeff Zalaznick ... Some hard-core old-school Italians were really miffed and the final straw some said was when the ne-owners superimposed the name "Carbone" right over the Old Rocco Neon Sign .. They said the Torrisi Boys add "Insult to Injury" with that one, not to mention prices like $52 Veal Parmigiano and sky-high prices across the board on; cocktails, food, and wine ...






FRANK & AVA
"MANGIA BENE" !!!

Frank Sinatra & Ava Gardner
"Looks Like Minestrone"







Thursday, April 10, 2014

New York Italian





PATSY'S
"FRANK SINATRA 'S FAVORITE"
West 56th Street
NEW YORK, NY





Frank Sinatra & Ava Gardner

"MANGIA BENE"





RAO'S
East Harlem, New York

New York's Toughest Table

Cause "Frankie No" Says "NO" !!!!






JOHN'S PIZZERIA
Bleecker Street
Greenwich Village
NEW YORK







FAICCO'S
Manhattan's Best Pork Store
Bleecker Street, Greenwich Village




GABAGOOL !!!!


PIZZA

NEW YORK & AMERICA'S
BEST PIZZA
DiFar Pizza
Avenue J , Brooklyn, NY




The MAESTRO of PIZZA
Mr. Dom DeMarco




BAR PITTI
The # 1 Best Italian Trattoria
in NEW YORK
Greenwich Village
and
"CELEBRITY CENTRAL"





CARBONE
Formely Rocco's Restorante
For More Than 70 Years
In Greewnich Village
Now New York's Hottest New Restaurant





NEW YORK'S BEST SUNDAY SAUCE
"GRAVY"
Recipes & Stories In SUNDAY SAUCE
by Daniel Bellino-Zwicke



Ingredients
For
SUNDAY SAUCE alla BELLINO



THE BELLINO FAMILY
1939
Philipo, Lucia, Tony, Josephina
Philipo & Josephina Bellino Were Both Born
In "Lecarra Freddi" SICILY
The Same Town as The SINATRA FAMILY
and CHARLES "LUCKY" LUCCIANO




BAR PITTI
NEW YORK'S # 1 BEST TRATTORIA
and
"CELEBRITY CENTRAL"

Greenwich Village, New York




A MEATBALL PARM SANDWICH

Read About Meatball Parm Mondays
in
Daniel Bellino-Zwicke 's
SUNDAY SAUCE
"When Italian-Americans Cook"


 GINO'S

In Memeory of GINO'S
One of NY'S GREATEST
ITALIAN RESTAURANTS
EVER !!!!




CLEMENZA (Richard Castellano)
SHOWS MICHAEL (Al Pacino)
HOW To MAKE
SUNDAY SAUCE alla CLEMENZA








VESUVIO
Prince Street
Soho, New York

photo Daniel Bellino-Zwicke


NEWPORT STEAKS

Chianti, Barolo, Brunello
and
Newport Steaks
in
Greewnich Village
New York



La TAVOLA
Is
NEW YORK ITALIAN




CAFFE DANTE

NEW YORK'S BEST ESPRESSO

Greenwich Village New York


photo Daniel Bellino-Zwicke




Ingredients
The NEGRONI
Cocktail

at
Daniel Bellino's House



photo Daniel Bellino-Zwicke




FLORENCE ITALIAN MEAT MARKET

Creators of The NEWPORT STEAK

GREENWICH VILLAGE, NEW YORK





Newport Steaks
From Florence Prime Meat Market
Greenwich Village





SPAGHETTI & MEATBALLS

Recipe In SUNDAY SAUCE





CAFFE REGGIO

GREENWICH VILLAGE
NEW YORK


photo Daniel Bellino-Zwicke





NEW YORK ITALIAN
GREENWICH VILLAGE RESIDENT
MARIO BATALI


For The WORLD'S BEST ITALIAN
SUNDAY SAUCE GRAVY
Click Above !!!


For SUNDAY SAUCE
"GRAVY"




Italian Cookbook Author
Greenwich Village Native
Daniel Bellino-Zwicke
Making SAUCE 
In Greenwich Village



Sirio Maccioni
Founder of Le Cirrque
and
Creator of "PASTA PRIMAVERA"
Recipe in SUNDAY SAUCE






SINATRA

"JUST BECAUSE"




MULBERRY STREET
LITTLE ITALY
New York

























Tuesday, March 25, 2014

NEW YORK BEST SUNDAY SAUCE Gravy




SUNDAY SAUCE



alla CLEMENZA

CORLEONE STYLE

From
THE GODFATHER









NEW YORK 'S BEST SUNDAY SAUCE on YELP





LEARN HOW TO MAKE SUNDAY SAUCE



CLEMENZA  (Richard Castellano)
SHOWS MICHAEL  (AL PAcino)
How To Make
SUNDAY SAUCE
ITALIAN MEAT GRAVY

alla CLEMENZA

"YOU CAN LEARN TOO" !!!

RECIPE
In
SUNDAY SAUCE

by Daniel Bellino-Zwicke




























Sunday, February 23, 2014

ALFREDO & PRIMAVERA ? PASTA !





FETTUCCINE ALFREDO 

 Excerpted from Daniel Bellino-Zwicke's "SUNDAY SAUCE"  When Italian-Americans Cook


   In the 60’s and 1970’s Fettuccine Alfredo was one of  the great favorite dishes on Italian restaurant menus throughout the country. It was in the late 80’s that the popularity of the dish started to wane for a couple of  reasons,  one being  the Genesis of the health movement in  The United States and two being the start towards more authentic Italian dishes and  the almost  total  disdain of the so-called cliché dishes, Fettuccine Alfredo being one of them.
    Being in the restaurant business, I have people request this dish to me several times a week. Let me tell  you, “this is the sign of a great dish, regardless of  what  anyone thinks otherwise.” Fettuccine is quick and easy to make. Once you know how to make the sauce,  you  will be able to make  a number of  other  dishes simply by changing or adding different ingredients.
    You can make Tortellini Panna by substituting tortellini for the fettuccine, add a few cooked veget-ables like mushrooms, peas, carrots, and broccoli florets and you have another hugely famous dish of the 70’s and  80’s,  “Pasta  Primavera”,  supposedly invented at Le Cirque by Sirio Maccione and still a popular dish there.
    It’s not on the menu and you have to be an insider to  order it. When I was a Sous Chef at Caio Bella Restaurant, one of the hot trendy restaurants of the late  80’s,  I used to make a dish called “Fettuccine Lemone” that only the regulars knew about. It was not on  the menu,  but if you were in-the-know  you could get it. I used to make this dish for a rich Oil Baron’s daughter from Kuwait and you can make it too simply by adding the zest from a couple lemons to the basic Fettuccine Alfredo recipe, and a few leaves of Fresh Basil is nice addition as well. Buon Appetito!



Daniel Bellino-Zwicke



 RECIPE for FETTUCCINE ALFREDO

1 lb. fresh Fettuccine
1 pt. heavy cream, ½ stick butter
1 cup grated Parmigianno
2 egg yolks, salt & pepper

1. Put the cream in a large frying pan. Bring to the boil,  lower the flame and let  the cream cook. Season the cream with salt  and pepper to taste.  Reduce volume by One-Third, this will thicken the sauce.

2. Cook the fettuccine and drain it. Put the fettuccine in to the pan with the cream. Add butter and stir.

3. Turn the flame off. Add egg yolks and Parnigianno and stir. Serve and pass around extra Parmigiano.


Note: You can make Fettuccine Lemone by adding the zest of two lemons to this recipe. Fresh basil is also another nice addition for the Lemone Sauce.










LE CIRQUE'S ORIGINAL SPAGHETTI PRIMAVERA 


1/2 cup freshly shelled peas (about 1 pound in the pod)
3/4 cup heavy cream
3 tablespoons mascarpone cheese or more heavy cream
3 tablespoons butter
1/4 cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
2 tablespoons pine nuts
1 cup white mushrooms, caps only, sliced 1/8 inch thick
1 cup zucchini, split lengthwise then sliced 1/8 inch thick
1 cup very small broccoli florets
12 pencil-thin asparagus, green part only, cut in 1-inch segments
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon garlic, peeled and finely chopped
10 to 12 leaves basil, chopped or shredded
1 cup canned, peeled plum tomatoes in 1/2-inch dice
1/4 teaspoon salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1/2 pound spaghetti
2 tablespoons chopped chives

Bring a small pot of water to a rolling boil over high heat. Add a teaspoon of salt. Add the peas and boil for 3 minutes. Drain in a strainer. Run under cold water. Set aside.
In a small pot over low heat, combine the heavy cream, mascarpone, butter, Parmigiano-Reggiano, 1/4 teaspoon salt, and 1/4 teaspoon pepper. Stir well and let the sauce bubble gently until it thickens slightly, about 5 minutes. Set aside.
In an 8 to 10-inch skillet, heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil over medium heat. Add the pine nuts, toss them in the oil, and toast until very light brown. Be careful not to burn them.
Add the sliced mushrooms, zucchini, broccoli, and asparagus and toss for 5 to 7 minutes, until the vegetables are tender. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Set aside.
Bring 3 quarts of water to a rolling boil and add a heaping tablespoon of salt.
While the water is coming to a boil, in a small skillet, heat 2 more tablespoons of olive. Add the garlic and basil and cook over medium heat for 2 minutes. Do not let the garlic brown. Add the diced tomatoes, 1/4 teaspoon salt, and a few grinding of black pepper. Stir, then cook gently for 3 to 4 minutes.
Put the spaghetti into the boiling water. Stir and cook at a full boil until slightly underdone. Drain in a colander, then return the spaghetti to the pot it cooked in or to the pan you will be tossing it in at table. Place over low heat.
Add all of the cheese sauce, all of the chives, and half the peas, half the sautéed vegetables, and half the tomato sauce. Toss well for 2 minutes over low heat. Add a little more Parmesan if the sauce needs thickening (or more to taste), or a few tablespoons of hot water if the mixture gets too thick. There should not a lot of sauce, just a coating.
To present the dish, pour the dressed spaghetti into a warm serving bowl, or divide it between individual pasta bowls. Top with the remaining peas, sautéed vegetables, and tomato sauce. Garnish with basil leaves. Serve with more grated Parmigiano-Reggiano on the side.






Pasta Primavera alla Le Cirque