Daniel Bellino Zwicke is Italian American New York

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There lives in New York City’s Greenwich Village Italian neighborhood an author named Daniel Bellino Zwicke .. Daniel is the Best Selling author of much loved Italian Cookbooks as Sunday Sauce, Grandma Bellino’z Italian Coobook, La Tavola, and The Feast of The Seven Fish / Italian Christmas  … There is no other Italian Cookbook author quite like Daniel. For one Daniel was a real restaurant chef helming the kitchens of some of New York’s finest restaurants as well as creating America’s FIRST Ever Venetian Wine Bar / Restaurant (known as a Bacaro).

In writing such beloved Italian Cookbooks as Segreto Italiano, Sunday Sauce, and The Feast of The Seven Fish, Daniel is famous for 3 main aspects in writings of Italian Food and Wine. The three great aspects of Daniel’s unique writing style is the great love and passion Daniel has for his subject matter, his unique storytelling style and the ease, authenticity, and accuracy of his recipes. Daniel Bellino Zwicke has carved out his own special niche in his food and cultural writings and that is that he has now established himself as the undisputed pre-eminent writer of Italian-American Food Cooking and Culture. And Daniel Bellino Zwicke is without question the world’s number one proponent of Italian-American Food and Cuisine as a true and legitimate world cuisine.

Daniel’s fans and followers are enamored with Daniel’s Italian Cookbooks which combine wonderful Italian Food Recipes that are coupled with delightful stories and facts of the food, the recipes, history, and people’s of Italian-America. So we salute this Greenwich Village based food, wine, & travel writer and recorder of the Italian-American lifestyle one Daniel Bellino-Zwicke.

Bravo!

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Anthony Roma

 

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SUNDAY SAUCE

# 1 BEST SELLER Amazon.com 

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Look for Daniel’s soon to be Released MANGIA ITALIANO

BOOKS by Daniel Bellino Zwicke are Available on AMAZON

How to Make Frittata

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Zucchini Frittata
 
 
 

   Frittata, they’re quite a wonder. Italian Flat Omelets that are tasty, versatile and easy to make. I’ve been making them for years. They’re one of my favorites. Frittata are quite versatile. You can fill them with a endless variety of ingredients, both fresh made or leftover, and this is one of the great uses and attributes of this Italian wonder, The Frittata. Americans are just recently learning about them. Italian Americans have known of, made, and have been eating Frittata in many forms for years. In the past several years you see them popping up in cafes, delis, and restaurants as the rest of American is now catching on to what Italian-Americans have known for years.

   There are several different ways to eat and use Frittata. You can make a small one with two or three eggs and what ever filling you choose like Spinach and Parmigiano or Mushrooms and eat the whole Frittata for one person for lunch or dinner, with or without a green salad on the side.

   The best and most useful use of Frittata is to make a large one using 8 to 12 eggs and whatever filling you choose. My favorites are Sausage & Pepper, Broccoli with Goat Cheese or Fontina, and the Spaghetti Frittata

that has a cute little story behind it with me and my Aunt Fran. Anyway, when you make one of these large Frittata, the great thing is that you let it cool down, serve it at room temperature, cutting the frittata into wedges and eating it this way. A wedge of frittata can be a antipasto item on its own, part of a mixed antipasti misti, or my favorite, pulling a already made frittata out of the refrigerator and just cutting off a wedged shape piece and eating a piece any time day or night when you are hungry and need a little snack.

   Frittata are great items to include in a picnic, at a barbecue, and are especially goo if you’re on a long road trip in the car, in a bus, train, or plane, a piece or two of frittata is great to bring along. If you’re on a plane, get hungry, and you have a wedge or two of frittata with you, you’ll be happy as heck that you brought it along. Yes they make great travel food, The Frittata. They’re also great as part of a buffet or to pass around little pieces as Hors D’Oeuvres at a cocktail party.  

 

 

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Caffe Reggio Greenwich

 

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CAFFE REGGIO

GREENWICH VILLAGE 
 
Caffe Reggio is a New York City coffeehouse first opened in 1927 at 119 Macdougal Street in the heart of Manhattan’s Greenwich Village.

Italian cappuccino was introduced in America by the founder of Caffe Reggio, Domenico Parisi, in the early 1920s.[1] Inside the cafe, against the back wall, there is still the original espresso machine, made in 1902, that Domenico Parisi bought with his savings when he opened the cafe in 1927.

The Caffe Reggio has been featured in many movies, including The Godfather Part II, Next Stop, Greenwich Village, The Kremlin Letter, Shaft, Serpico, The Next Man, In Good Company, Inside Llewyn Davis and others. Many celebrities have been spotted or photographed in this location. In 1959, presidential hopeful John F. Kennedy made a speech outside the coffee shop. In 2010, the cafe was honored with a Village Award[2] by the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation for its status as a beloved and essential part of the neighborhood.

Caffe Reggio has a bench from a palazzo of the Florentine Medici family of Renaissance fame. The bench is not roped-off and guests can sit on it and admire a painting

 from an artist of the school of Caravaggio.
 

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All photos by Daniel Bellino Zwicke

CAFFE REGGIO

NEW YORK

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BACCHUS  by CARAVAGGIO

Not in Caffe Reggio

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SUNDAY SAUCE

is GREENWICH VILLAGE ITALIAN

SUNDAY SAUCE is AVAILABLE in Paperback on AMAZON.com .. Click

CAFFE REGGIO

Interview with the Owner Fabrizzio Cavalacci




CAFFE REGGIO

GREENWICH VILLAGE



Christopher Walken (3rd from left)

NEXT STOP GREENWICH VILLAGE



The Cavalacci’s

Fabrizio (current owner) with his Father

A RENAISSANCE BENCH

From a MEDICI PALAZZO

CAFFE REGGIO during The BEAT ERA of GREENWICH VILLAGE
From the movie NEXT STOP GREENWICH VILLAGE


THERE’S EVEN a SONG WRITTEN For IT



CAFE REGGIO
by Zachary Breaux
INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS

CAFFE REGGIO Scene

COEN BROTHERS


GREENWICH VILLAGE ITALIAN

Video Tour

CAFFE REGGIO, BAR PITTI, JOHN’S PIZZA

CARBONE, RAFFETTO PASTA / RAVIOLI

PORTO RICO COFFEE,  FAICCO’S PORK STORE

TRATTORIA MONTE’S





Bar Pitti and Rosso di Montalcino Good Times

 
 
If a good or great Rosso di Montalcino is any indication of how good the Brunello of the same Vintage to be released 3 years later will be, and it usually is, then we are in store for some great Brunello 2009 when they are release in January of 2014.
At the recent “Brunello Tasting” for the 2006 Vintage Brunello’s, the 2009 Rosso di Montalcino’s that were on hand, where absolutely wonderful and the big surprise of the tasting held at The New York Hilton. Rosso’s where on hand by some but not all producers of Brunello, and most that I tasted were outstanding. Some were just about close to perfection, with wonderful balance of an abundance of Fruit, against just the right amount of acid content, and tannic backbone. Some of these wines were an absolute Joy to drink as with examples by; Argiano, Fattoria Barbi, Il Poggione, and the
Rosso di Montalcino from the Castel Giacondo Estate of the Noble Florentine Family, The Frescobaldi’s.
      I really loved the Rosso from Argiano which reminded me of the year of 2008 when my friends the Rozner Brothers Dave and Michael found ourselves quite a number of times hanging at the highly popular and one of New York’s best Trattoria’s “Bar Pitti” having some good ole times drinking
Rosso di Montalcino “Argiano” 2006. This was a good year for Rosso from Montalcino and we must of had at least 50 bottles of the stuff that year. One day we were joined by friend Curtis Stone. We had a wonderful 2 1/2 hour lunch that day, eating Tripp, Prosciutto, and Pasta accompanied by 5 bottles of Argiano Rosso which we thoroughly enjoyed. And this is all of what wines should be along with the food that goes with them and the restaurants or homes we share our meals in; good Friends, tasty Food, and great wine. That’s the good life or as we Italians would say La Dolce Vital, “The Sweet Life.”
Enjoy!
 
 
 
 
by Daniel Bellino Zwicke
 
 
 
 
 
A bottle of ARGIAN ROSSO di MONTALCINO
 
 
“Yes we had many great times drinking this wine at BAR PITTI
 
GREENWICH VILLAGE,  NEW YORK
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
SUNDAY SAUCE
 
 

New York Marathon Pasta Night 2016

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SPAGHETTI & MEATBALLS For PASTA NIGHT

Try TRATTORIA MONTE’S, GREENWICH VILLAGE  .. NEW YORK

or get a Great RECIPE in SUNDAY SAUCE

SPAGHETTI MEATBALLS For MARATHON SATURDAY

New York’s Biggest Pasta Night of The Year is Here! Tomorrow, Sunday November 3 is Marathon Day in New York 2013 … There was “No New York City Marathon” Last Year a result of Hurricane Sandy .. After much discussion the New York Marathon 2012 was cancelled. A couple “No Good Bastard Brothers” Bombed The Boston Marathon this past April 15, killing 5 and injuring more than 280 .. This years New York Marathon will Salute the victims of The Boston Marathon Bombing and pay tribute to survivors and victims of Hurricane Sandy.

    Enough of the sad News, tonight is Pasta Night in New York. It is a annual tradition for people running th marathon to have a nice Italian Pasta Dinner the night before the Marathon, on Saturday evening in order to “Carb Up” for energy to run the grueling 26 mile race. Yes the Pasta and Maccheroni wil be flowing at Italian Restaurants all over New York this evening. Little Italy on Mulberry Street will be all a-buzz with activiy, “Runners Eating Pasta.” Some of New York’s best Italian Restaurants with great plates of pasta are; Bar Pitti in Greewnich Village, Monte’s Trattoria Greenwich Village for those runners staying at Mid-Town Hotels, Elio’s on the Upper East Side, and Emilio Balato on East Houston Street .. Marathon Runners we “Salute” and wish “Bon Appetito” ! Mangi Bene! Mangia la Pasta!

LOOKING For GREAT PASTA

RECIPES ???

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GET SUNDAY SAUCE !!!

ITALIAN-AMERICA’S Best PASTA SAUCE recipes

AVAILABLE on AMAZON.com

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Popular ITALIAN PASTA JOINTS Like BAR PITTI & MONTE’S TRATTORIA

pack them in, Downtown in GREENWICH VILLAGE

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Monte’s … 97 Macdougal Street, Greenwich Village NEW YORK

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Chef PIETRO MOSCONI of MONTE’S TRATTORIA

with just Two of His MANY FANS

“MANGIA BENE” !!!

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RIGATONI “SATURDAY MARATHON PASTA NIGHT”

SUNDAY SAUCE “When Italian-Americans Eat” by Daniel Bellino Zwicke, Set For November 25, 2013 Release, Will Be Available on AMAZON.com  See “La TAVOLA” For Great Italian-American Stories and Favorite Dishes (Recipes)

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GREAT PASTA RECIPES “La TAVOLA”   by Daniel Bellino Zwicke .. On AMAZON.com

SOPRANO’S At La TAVOLA

Frank Sinatra ‘s Favorite Italian Foods

 

 

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FRANCIS ALBERT SINATRA
 
 
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FRANK
 
and Daughters NANCY & TINA
 
with FRIENDS
 
at JILLY’S
 
NEW YORK
 

Frank Sinatra, both the greatest singer and greatest entertainer of the 20th Century. No question. Sinatra was a legendary icon whose star still shines bright. He was a musical icon, celebrity, international personality, and to millions of Italian-Americans he was our own, a paisan. Frank was an Italian-American whose ancestry is from Genoa on his mother’s side of the family and Sicilian on his father’s side. And being Italian, Frank loved the food he grew up with, Dolly made a mean Marianara Sauce as well as Meatballs and the all-time Italian-American favorite Sunday Sauce (aka Gravy). Frank loved the food of his childhood; the Spaghetti & Meatballs, Stuffed Artichokes, Pasta Fazool, Frittata, Eggplant Parmigiana and all the usual suspects of the Italian-American table.

It’s a well known fact that Frank’s favorite restaurant was Patsy’s on 56th Street in New York … When Frank went to Patsy’s his favorite dishes were Calms Posillipo and Veal Milanese with a nice plate of Spaghetti Pomodoro in-between, and maybe a slice of Cheesecake to finish if Frank was in the mood.

 

 

 

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FRANK’S FAVORITE RESTAURANT




Patsy’s 56th Street, NEW YORK, NY
 
 

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VEAL MILANESE 



and CALMS POSILLIPO .. Two of FRANK’S Favorites


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Frank tosses the Spaghetti
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Dean Martin with Frank as Sammy Davis Jr pours Frank a Jack Daniels

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Frank Sinatra dines with Marylyn Monroe
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Frank Sinatra with Lauren Bacall at 21 Club 

NEW YORK

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Gnocchi Pomodoro
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Frank Sinatra ‘s Egg Sandwiches
JILLY’S
 
Frank at Jilly’s with friends and daughters Nancy and Tina ..
One of Frank’s favorite spots when in New York was owned by one of his closest friends (and Bodyguard) Jilly Rizzo .. Jilly’s served Chinese Food and Franks’s favorite was their Chicken Chowmein .. Frank threw many parties there, eating, drinking, telling stories and what-not.
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Frank Eats a Donut
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GINO’S on Lexington Avenue was a Sinatra favorite ..
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A waiter and the famed Zebra Wallpaper of Gino’s ..

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PJ CLARKE’S

One of Frank’s favorite Bars ..
ONE FOR MY BABY
(And One More for The Road)
The CLASSIC BAR SONG
written by Johnny Mercer
Frank’s most famous song of drinking song that tells his story 

of Lost Love and “The Girl That Got Away” takes place

at PJ CLARKE’S in Frank’s heart.

 
 
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Learn How to Make SUNDAY SAUCE alla SINATRA
and SPAGHETTI MEATBALLS all SINATRA
 
Recipes in SUNDAY SAUCE by Daniel Bellino
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How to Make Pasta Fazool Italian Soup

Learn How to Make PASTA FAZOOL
 
aka  PASTA FAGIOLI
 
 
 
 
 
PASTA FAZOOL RECIPE
 
in
 
SEGRETO ITALIANO
 
by Daniel Bellino Z
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Tony Sopranos Gabagool Sandwich

Gabagools
TONY SOPRANOS GABAGOOL SANDWICH
 
 
 
1. Gabagool

Definition : “Gabagool” is slang for “capicola.” It is not a mispronunciation, but is instead in Napolitan dialect, which is what the Sopranos and many Italian-Americans use. 
The rule in this dialect is to chop off ending vowels and to voice unvoiced consonants.
Ricotta-“rigot”

2. Manicotti-“manigot …  gabagool= Capicola Ham.

 “My wife sends me here to shop because they got good gabagool.” 

3. Gabagool


The Sicilian pronunciation for the spicy deli ham “Capicola”. 

“Do you want provologne on your gobagool sandwich?”

4. Gabagool – The americanized version of the Italian word “Capicola” made popular by Tony Soprano and other ignorant 2nd & 3rd generation Italo-Americans who have forgotten how to speak italian properly. Capicola is a spicy deli meat similar to ham or salami.










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Learn How to Make
a GABAGOOL SANDWICH
SUNDAY SAUCE / ITALIAN GRAVY
PASTA FAZOOL
and More ….
READ ABOUT TONY SOPRANOS GABAGOOL SANDWICH
in DANIEL BELLINO’S
SUNDAY SAUCE
WHEN-TALIAN-AMERICANS COOK
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Italian Wedding Soup Recipe

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ITALIAN WEDDING SOUP

 

Recipe Italian Wedding Soup:

¾ lb. ground beef and ¾ lb. ground pork

1 cup grated Parmigiano

1 clove garlic, minced

¼ fresh parsley, finely chopped

1 bay leaf

1-3 lb. broiler chicken

6 whole cloves garlic, peeled

10 cups water

1 large onion, chopped. 2 carrots diced

1 head escarole, finely chopped

4 ounces Ditalini or other short past

PREPARATION:

Combine ground meat, eggs, parsley, minced garlic, and Parmigiano, season with salt & pepper. Shape into Meatballs, about the size of a large Marble. Set aside.

Place whole chicken, whole garlic, bay leaf, and water in a large pot and bring to the boil. Lower heat and simmer for 1 hour and 15 minutes.

Cook the Ditalini according to directions on package. Drain and set aside until later.

Place meatballs in a lightly oil baking pan and cook in a 350 Degree oven for 8 minutes.

Remove chicken from pot and set aside to cool. Add Carrots and onions to broth, cook for 12 minutes.

Add escarole and cook 10 minutes at medium heat.

Remove chicken meat from bones and dice.

Add Meatballs, diced chicken, and pasta to the broth and simmer at the lowest flame for 12 minutes.

Ladle soup into bowls, giving everyone at least 5 little meatballs. Pass the Parmigiano and Mangia Bene.

Note: You can substitute Sausage for the Meatballs, which is how some people make this soup. It’s just as tasty and cuts down on some of the work. If doing so, substitute 1 /2 pounds of Italian Sweet Sausages for the meatballs. Lightly brown the links of sausage over low heat for 6 minutes. Remove from pan and cut each link into 6 equal size pieces, then add to soup in the same point (step 6) and cook over low heat in soup for 12 minutes.

 

Excerpted from MANGIA ITALIANO by Daniel Bellino Z .. October 2016 Publication

 

 

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Gino’s & John’s Red Sauce Joints

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Gino’s of Lexington Avenue? This restaurant was one of the most special restaurants that ever was. Ask any of the few hundred regulars who ate there so many times a year. How many you ask? Well, there are regulars who ate there 2 to 3 times a week, some once a week, some one or two times a month, and some maybe four to six times a year, but all regulars. That’s how it goes with regulars in restaurants, and this is a solid foundation that all good restaurants need to succeed in New York. Gino’s had a pretty long history for its regulars to enjoy for any number of years. The restaurant opened in 1945 by Gino Circiello and two partners, was in operations for 65 until it closed in 2010 after losing their lease. Needless to say this was a sad day for all its devoted regulars which included the likes of; Gay Talese, David Suskind, Frank Sinatra, many luminaries along with numerous businessmen and women, and people in the fashion business, publishing, law, and all sorts of businesses. Gino’s customers loved and revered the place, a wonderful Italian Red Sauce Joint where you could get a great meal of solid Italian classic dishes, at reasonable prices, with good service and a perfect ambiance that included one of New York’s last remaining telephone booths and the famed Zebra wallpaper. And it was the clientele that really made the perfect ambiance that was Gino’s, which was par excellence.

Gino’s was filled to capacity each day and night for lunch and dinner, jammed with people doing business, or just simply having a great time eating Baked Clams Oreganta followed by Linguine w/ Clam Sauce, Chicken or Veal Parmigiano or perhaps a daily special like Veal Ossobuco or braised Lamb Shanks, the food was always good at Gino’s, everything was. The people just loved it there. The vibe was always great, lively and full of life, that was Gino’s.

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There was Gino and later on Michael Miele (a former employee who became the owner), there was of course the Zebra Wallpaper, the old-school waiters, the tasty food, and the clientele themselves that filled the air of Gino’s dining room with good natured chatter and that special feeling that a room full of happy people makes. And you were always more than happy when you were in Gino’s.

Yes, Gino’s was a restaurant that’s now known as an Old School Red Sauce Joint. This being a restaurant that had pretty much the same standard dishes that so many people love, millions in fact. The menu had items like; Caprese Salad, Baked Clams, both Casino and Oreganata, Seafood Salad, Spaghetti w/ Tomato Sauce, or Bolognese, Manicotti, Ravioli, and Gino’s famous Pasta Segreto with their famed Secret Sauce. You had all the most popular chicken, fish, and veal dishes, dishes like; Chicken Parmigiano, Veal Saltimbocca, Veal Piccata, Veal Milanese (Sinatra’s favorite), Shrimp Scampi, Clams Posillipo another Sinatra favorite, Lobster Fra Diavolo and the sort of solid Italian food that Italian-Americans and the rest of their American brethren all loved and still love, regardless of what snobbish food critics may say or think. For Gino’s clientele knew what was real, and Gino’s was as real as it got. If you asked Frank (Sinatra) he’d set you straight, “Gino’s is the Real Deal Baby.”

Well, so sadly, Gino’s closed in 2010. It was a sad day indeed, and for regulars an actual tragedy, we lost our favorite clubhouse of all. A place that was so special and uniquely wonderful you just can’t replace. Yes a sad day indeed. Gino’s was irreplaceable, it’s a sin that it died, never-the-less it did. This was a crime, a crime against New York, Italian-America and Gino’s many devoted fans. If you knew Gino’s you’d surely agree.

Yes, even Gino’s a historical Old School Italian joint came to an end and died, a fate happening all over the country. We’re losing our wonderful beloved Red Sauce Joints. Places that are a part of American history, the history of Italian-America and even of Italy, as it was the citizens of our motherland who came here and created Italian-American Cuisine and Red Sauce Joints like our beloved Gino’s and other restaurants just like it all over America. Farewell to Gino’s and places like Rocco’s in Greenwich Village and all of our famous red sauce joints of years gone by.

Now hold on a minute. Yes we’ve lost many a great red sauce joints in the past years, and even still. But guess what? With places like Frankie’s Spuntino and Carbone in Greenwich Village, Red Sauce are now hip and as beloved as ever. They’re among one of the hot new restaurant and food-trends of most recent years. Unfortunately, Carbone is very expensive. Frankie’s on the other hand is not, it’s quite reasonable and in the true spirit of Old School Italian-American restaurants. Let’s hope this trend continues and instead of so many flashy restaurant that are not in the spirit of old school Italian-America, we need to get more restaurants like Frankie’s and Rubirosa. And if we’re lucky some day, maybe someone will open another Gino’s complete with all the old dishes like Pasta Segreto and the Scalamandre Zebra Wallpaper of course, of which Gino’s would not be Gino’s. Gino’s we miss you so.

So now it’s a sad state of affairs when we talk of these wonderful old Red Sauce Joints of our lives. We’ve had many good time there; family dinners, meals with friends, and courting and such. These places provide the perfect ambiance with great food, wine, and the animated waiter or two. But sadly not many are left. As you know, we lost Gino’s a few years ago and numerous good old restaurants before that. In Manhattan where I live it doesn’t even take the fingers of one had to count how many old Italian Red Sauce Joints are left. There’s Rao’s up in East Harlem, one of the all-time great new York City old-school Italian Restaurants with just the right ambiance and wonderful old-school Italian food, but guess what, you can’t get in. The place is sort of an exclusive club where people have a table reserved once a week and there’s never any opening, unless you know one of these elite in the know people, just Fuggetabout-it!

So there’s Rao’s up in East Harlem, Patsy’s in mid-town, and John’s of East 12th Street down in the East Village. John’s opened in 1908 and is still in business. Not only is it still in business, but the place has been wonderfully preserved and retains its original décor from 1908, the old tile floor, murals of Italian Cities and places like Venice, Rome, The Bay of Naples, and more. They still have the original bar and autographed pictures of movie stars and other celebrities from a large part of the 2oth Century.

The menu at John’s has most of the expected Red Sauce dishes like; Spaghetti with White or Red Clams Sauce, Veal Saltimbocca, Chicken Scarpara, Veal Piccata, Speedino of Mozzarella alla Romano, Baked Clams Oreganata, Spaghetti & Meatballs, Lasagna, and Canneloni. The kitchen churns out real solid food with standouts being there Baked Clams and their Speedino alla Romano which is without question the best in the city.

John’s has quite a history with Lucky Lucciano being a regular once upon a time, along with numerous mobsters back in the day, and John’s has seen the likes of The Ramones, Cindy Lauper, John Lennon and other luminaries walk through its doors.

There’s one other old Red Sauce Joint around the corner from John’s, and that’s Lanza’s on 1st Avenue and 11th Street. Lanza’s is actually a few years older than John’s opening in 1904. Lanza’s is pretty nice and a good part of it has been preserved, although a few years ago they made some changes to the décor which sort of ruined it a bit. Lanza’s has that great classic red sauce joint menu with items like Spaghetti Marinara, Pasta Fagioli, Manicotti, Braciole, Cannoli, and the like.

Now we come to Patsy’s on West 56th Street in mid-town Manhattan. Guess what? This was Frank Sinatra’s all-time favorite restaurant, he ate there hundreds of times over the years and just loved it. It’s a great restaurant and if you go there, why not get some of Frank’s favorite dishes? Frank’s favorites were; Clams Posillipo, Spaghetti Marinara, and Veal Milanese. And yes, Sinatra went to Gino’s now and then, but it’s a well know fact that Patsy’s was his favorite.

Well, that’s about it on red sauce joints, they’re a dying breed I’m sorry to say. If you’ve never been to John’s, you must check it out. This place is like a museum. Truly. The owners have preserved its décor in an admirable manner, and what you see now is pretty much what Lucky Lucciano would have seen a 100 years ago. You’ll get a wonderful experience here of days gone by. An experience you’ll not find at too many places, so grab it while you still can.

Excerpted from Daniel Bellino Zwicke’s new forthcoming book, MANGIA ITALIANO, my Memories of Italian Food …. Due October 2016

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GINO’S SECRET SAUCE – Salsa Segreto

This, and more in MANGIA ITALIANO – Memories of Italian Food

COMING October 2016