Archive for the ‘FRIENDS’ Category

Nicola Marzovilla is 50!

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

I Trulli owner chalks up a half-century

It’s a long road from Rutigliano, Puglia, 1959 to New York City, 2009, but Nicola Marzovilla has made the journey, and he’s got the jersey to prove it! Last Saturday, family, friends and colleagues threw a surprise party to celebrate the I Trulli owner’s healthy arrival at this greatest of milestones.

For this secret occasion, I Trulli chef Patti Jackson (above with Nicola and his mother, Dora) created a coffee-and-chocolate cake (Nicola’s favorite) scale replica of Massoferrato, Nicola’s first wine from his own estate, which he launched on Monday. For once, Nicola was left speechless. Well, almost…

Auguri Nicola!

Photographs by James Taylor, Dave Frankland and Sam Greenfield. Check out Sam’s full report at his blog!

Vino tasting at Devon Shops

Friday, June 12th, 2009

Join us on Thursday for a hand-crafted wine tasting at the stunning showroom of our neighboring store

living room blog

Vino is delighted to announce a very special tasting event at Devon Shops, one of New York’s most unique furniture stores, as well as one of Vino’s closest neighbors on East 27th Street. Enter Devon Shops and discover a spacious atmosphere filled with elegant hand-carved French and English furniture in the classic design of its period, as well as a new Transitional Line with modern elements.

dining table blog

The attention to detail is unparalleled: since 1929 Devon has staffed its on-premise workshop with master “ébénistes” creating and manufacturing furniture of the highest quality. All of Devon Shops’ pieces are made in New York, by hand, one piece at a time. What better setting to enjoy some of your favorite wines? Please join us at Devon Shops’ showroom on Thursday, June 18, from 5:30 to 7:30pm for a rare tasting at one of New York’s oldest and finest interior design showrooms.

devon shop drawing blog copy

VINO TASTING AT DEVON SHOPS
Thursday, June 18
5:30-7:30pm

Devon Shops
111 East 27th Street
New York, NY 10016
212-686-1760

For more information call 212-725-6516 or email contact@vinosite.com.

If you've got the room, we've got the Vino

Friday, March 6th, 2009

Roomorama selects wines from Vino wines for exclusive party

Roomorama_logo_web

Last night I was on hand to pour wines from Vino at a party for friends and clients of Roomorama.com, held at the internet start-up’s lofty East Village HQ. Launched last year by young social entrepreneurs Federico Folcia and Jia En Teo, Roomorama is a peer-to-peer short-term rental marketplace based on the concept of online social networking. Following its initial success in New York, this unique facility is now in eight other major North American cities — Boston, Chicago, Toronto, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Washington D.C., Miami and Vancouver. Check out Roomorama’s brand new website here!

dumplings-blog

Guests tucked into fresh spicy Asian dumplings which paired surprisingly well with the selection of wines from Vino.

The event featured three wines from Vino: Gavignano, the Chardonnay-Sauvignon Blanc blend by Chianti Rufina producer Travignoli, Enrico Coser’s 100% Merlot, Clic Rosso, and the ICEA-certified Nero d’Avola by ERA. All the wines proved extremely popular with the crowd of young social networkers and media professionals in attendance. Once the last of the remaining guests had departed we assessed the damage and counted the empty bottles, after which Fede and I even found room to discuss the plight of his beloved Milan

Roomorama co-founders Jia En Teo and Federico Folcia.

Roomorama co-founders Jia En Teo and Federico Folcia celebrate their success.

You only live once

Monday, February 16th, 2009

In which I celebrate the big 3-0 with food, friends, music and a once-in-a-lifetime wine

the Empire State Building as glimpsed from the roof of my new building in the East Village.

The Empire State Building as glimpsed from the roof of my new building in the East Village.

A couple of Fridays ago I celebrated my 30th birthday, an event which probably varies in significance depending how old you are! Over the last year, several of my friends had reached this undeniable milestone, and had described to me their sense of panic at having to kiss goodbye their roaring twenties. I personally felt happy to embrace a new decade: I’ve had thirty years to prepare for it, and after all, doesn’t life begin at 30? I certainly feel more content these days than in 1999, the year I first visited these shores as a wide-eyed 20 year-old. Exactly ten years later I find myself living in New York City, signing the lease to a new apartment on my 30th birthday. Blame it on a simple twist of fate…

Look at those bubbles! Giacosa's Brut is double-fermented in bottle to achieve that extra sparkle.

Look at those bubbles! Giacosa's Brut is double-fermented in bottle to achieve that extra sparkle.

After getting the keys to our new place we went home to crack open a bottle of Extra Brut 2001 by Bruno Giacosa which Jim Hutchinson had gifted me on New Year’s Eve. It had been sitting in my fridge ever since, just waiting for an appropriate moment — I suppose this was it. Renowned in Italy for his Barolos and Barbarescos, Giacosa’s “spumante brut” is made from Pinot Nero grapes grown in what is known as the Oltrepò Pavese, an area south of the river Pò which covers the province of Pavia. My first year living in Italy was spent in this foggy university town, so I couldn’t think of a better wine to pop open on this special night. It certainly got the evening off to a bubbly start as I opened my cards and unwrapped my presents. Thanks everyone!

Bruno Giacosa's Extra Brut Spumante is a study in stylish Italian opulence both inside and out.

Bruno Giacosa's Extra Brut Spumante is a study in stylish Italian opulence both inside and out.

I’d made no plans for the evening but it turned out Hillary had, and I was soon being bundled onto the uptown-bound 6 train, final destination unknown. Exiting the subway at 86th and Lexington, we walked up to the corner of 92nd Street, where the warmth and coziness of Sfoglia awaited us. Owned by Ron Suhanosky and Colleen Marnell-Suhanosky, the restaurant is the Manhattan outpost of their original in Nantucket, and the ambiance is definitely more New England kitchen than Upper East Side hotspot.

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A generous helping of pappardelle alla bolognese (left) at Sfoglia. We were seated beneath a poster for the Spoleto Festival, an arts event held every summer in Spoleto, Umbria, and Charleston, NC.

The portions are equally homely: I ordered the exquisitely-textured pappardelle alla bolognese (my personal idea of comfort food), a sizeable bowl of which took me roughly an hour to finish along with a decidedly rustic Chianti Riserva by Poggio della Torre. Perhaps foolishly, I had pre-ordered the bread pudding which could have easily fed four. As luck would have it, it was all delicious, and we lingered over cookies and Moscato until the wee hours.

after the pappardelle it was a lot of dessert but hey, it's my birthday! Complimentary Moscato and biscotti!

My bread pudding had to be pre-ordered: after the pappardelle it was a lot of dessert but hey, it was my birthday! Grazie Sfoglia for the complimentary Moscato and biscotti!

The birthday weekend was put on hold as I spent the next two days carrying boxes and lugging furniture (thankfully only a few blocks) between homes. The prospect of moving house had forced me to postpone my party until the following Saturday, by which time the new pad was at least taking on the semblance of a home. Hillary had surprised me with a new stereo and turntable, and so we spent most of Saturday scouring the West Village in search of used vinyl. After stopping for an old school pizza experience at John’s of Bleecker, we picked up a bunch of classic LPs (many for as little as a dollar), which we spun that night at the party. (As a result my meticulously compiled ‘79-’09 iTunes playlist was thrown out the window at the last minute.)

Just some of the classic albums I picked up for less last Saturday. (Special thanks to Bleecker Street Records and Academy Records.)

Just some of the bargain-priced classic albums I picked up last Saturday, including "JT" naturally! (Special thanks to Bleecker Street Records and Academy Records.)

The tunes taken care of, party guests made some important contributions to an excellent spread: Jess (who also made a mean Joe Greene spinach dip the night of the Super Bowl) brought a homemade cheesecake which went well with Hillary’s mysterious sangria-punch (the effects of which I certainly felt the next morning!). My roommate from Pavia and another recent addition to the thirtysomething club, Federico (co-founder of Roomorama), brought a cream and chocolate cake from The Black Hound, which we washed down with Metodo Classico 2003 by Lini which Michele, my colleague from Domenico Valentino, had kindly brought with her. Grazie mille ragazzi!

My birthday party wouldn't have felt complete without a bottle of Lini. I guess we couldn't quite muster up thirty candles...

My birthday party wouldn't have felt complete without a bottle of Lini. I guess we couldn't quite muster up thirty candles...

My birthday present to myself was an original 1974 New York City subway map, designed by Massimo Vignelli. Famed for its clean, simplistic beauty but infamous for its odd irregularities, the popular design ran from 1972 to 1979 before being replaced with something akin to today’s map, although Vignelli’s visual identity for the subway is still in use. It is now considered something of a modern design classic: the map is on the walls of MoMA and was updated in 2008 for Men’s Vogue.

The '74 Vignelli map is as beautiful as it is baffling. Why is Central Park square? Why is the Second Avenue stop east of First Avenue?

Massimo Vignelli's '74 subway map is as beautiful as it is baffling. Why is the Second Avenue stop east of First Avenue? Why is Central Park square?

Hardly in-keeping with these recession-filled times, I also splashed out on a bottle of Barbaresco Asili 1979 Riserva Produttori del Barbaresco from Vino. Our man in Austin, Jeremy Parzen aka Do Bianchi, had recently written about enjoying a bottle of Borgogno Barolo from his birth year, which more or less convinced me to do the same. It was an extravagant purchase but hey, you only live once. And what fun to drink a great wine that’s the same age as you!

French toast with pear and raspberry for Valentine's Day brunch at the Little Owl (TV sitcom fans may recognize this West Village building).

I had French toast with pear and raspberry for Valentine's Day brunch at the Little Owl (left). TV sitcom fans may recognize this West Village building (right).

Hillary and I finally got the chance to savor it on Saturday night, which also happened to be Valentine’s Day. After what had been a busy two weeks it was the first occasion we’d had to cook a serious meal in our new place. A pizza-and-Menabrea combo on Friday night at Luzzo’s (the best pizza in the city, secondo me) followed by a tasty brunch at The Little Owl the next morning held us over until Saturday evening.

This Cava by Dominio de la Vega made a great aperitivo. Thanks Hillary!

This Cava by Dominio de la Vega made an ideal aperitivo. Thanks Hillary!

I prepared a simple-but-already-legendary spaghetti all’amatriciana (bucatini sometimes splatters too much) with pancetta, and let the sauce sit simmering for a couple of hours while we drank a tasty Cava by Dominio de la Vega, probably the only non-Italian wine mentioned on this blog!

"The best pasta I've ever tasted" was how Hillary described my spaghetti all'amatriciana, which was followed by grilled filet mignon. Thank you Fresh Direct!

"The best pasta I've ever tasted" was Hillary's impressive description of my spaghetti all'amatriciana (left), which was followed by grilled filet mignon (right). Thank you Fresh Direct!

Then, with a sense of enormous anticipation, we tried the Barbaresco. The first sip (without food) tasted as expected, and left an “apple juice effect” which lingered on the gums but all but disappeared once we began the first course. Hillary certainly enjoyed my amatriciana, describing it as the best pasta she had ever tasted. High praise perhaps, but I have to admit it was pretty darn good. For secondo we cooked up some patate alla besciamella (potatoes sliced and baked with béchamel, also known as aux dauphinoises), sides of spinach and two huge hunks of filet mignon which we grilled on a very hot stove.

The cork was a little stubborn but I did it in the end! We'd been dying for several weeks to open "the Barb" as it became known... it was worth the wait.

The cork was a little stubborn but I did it in the end! We'd been dying for several weeks to open "the Barb" as it became known... it was worth the wait.

A great meal calls for a great wine, and the Barbaresco drank beautifully, only improving as the evening progressed. Produttori has been making wine from the south-western facing Asili vineyard since 1970, and it’s considered by some to be the quintessential Barbaresco. It was actually kind of awe-inspiring: I’d tasted some very old wines in Italy but couldn’t believe that something that had been sitting around for most of my life could taste so good and still be so drinkable after all these years.

Only 6790 bottles of Asili single-vineyard 1979 Riserva were bottled. Number 4153 was certainly a good one.

Only 6,790 bottles of Asili single-vineyard 1979 Riserva were bottled. Number 4153 was certainly a good one.

Having both come close to passing out at the table we wisely agreed to skip dessert, but our epic feast was still the perfect end to a fun, hectic couple of weeks, and a crazy, life-altering couple of years. And when I think about how I found myself in another part of the world, in a beautiful house, with a beautiful wife, I do sometimes indeed ask myself: Well, how did I get here?

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All photographs and photomontages by James Taylor, 2009.

Je suis un rock star

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Faux-French popsters’ transatlantic “tourette” arrives in la grande pomme! Photographed by James Taylor

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Nous Non Plus on-stage at the Mercury Lounge, New York City, February 9, 2009.

At Vino we love our music almost as much as we love our wine, so when there’s a hot gig in town we don’t require much encouragement to don tight jeans and leather and join the Brooklyn Lager-sipping hipsters’ sweaty ranks. Last night was the turn of our friend Jeremy Parzen, whose band Nous Non Plus was appearing downtown at the Mercury Lounge. The pseudo-French new wave rockers had just returned from a successful mini tour of France, which included the official launch in Paris of their brand new record, Ménagerie.

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Everyone's favorite Telecaster-wielding wine blogger Jeremy Parzen (who goes by the rock star alias Cal d'Hommage) pours a hidden bottle of Bollinger for thirsty fans.

Led by willowy Parisian native Céline Dijon and faux-Frenchman Jean-Luc Rétard (real name Dan Crane), the band tore through a string of ’60s-inspired sing-along punk-pop tracks plucked from their latest release and eponymously-titled debut album. The sexy show included the single “Loli”, the video to which (directed by Greg Harrison), has been on heavy rotation in this office all week:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3PH3uo4aAvQ]

Afterwards we shared a beer and caught up with Jeremy, whose charmed life of wine, food, music and travel is documented with an impressive dedication through his action-packed blog, Do Bianchi. (Jeremy reviews the NYC show plus a pre-gig bite at Centovini here.) Since leaving New York for La Jolla, California, Jeremy recently followed his heart to Austin, Texas, to indulge his passions in the Lone Star state’s most rock’n'roll town. Keep it weird, JP.

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The stylish trio of Jeremy, keyboard player Maurice Chevrolet (Ryan Williams), and Jean-Luc captured shortly before a post-gig visit to Ray's Pizza.

Nous Non Plus’ brand new album Ménagerie is available now on Aeronaut Records. Acheter tout de suite!

Native Italians

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

Explore Italy’s indigenous grape varieties with Charles Scicolone

Campania's Falanghina enjoys saoking up some Mediterranean sunshine.

Campania's Falanghina enjoys soaking up some Mediterranean sunshine.

Italy, perhaps more than any other wine-producing country in the world, has an abundance of indigenous grape varieties. The list of literally hundreds of native grapes allows for endless possibilities in winemaking. On October 22, let Italian wine expert and author Charles Scicolone guide you through a unique tasting of some of Vino’s favorite wines made from popular varieties indigenous to Italy. Participants will taste ten wines, while Charles will explain how Italian winemakers cultivate, cherish and blend their unique plantings.

Charles Scicolone

Charles Scicolone

Native Grape Varieties
with Charles Scicolone
Wednesday, October 22
6:30-8:30pm
$75

Check out Vino’s full Fall Class Schedule.

Vino
121 East 27th Street
New York, NY 10016

For more information call 212-725-6516 or email register@vinosite.com.

San Diego Serenade for Lini

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

Lambrusco hits big on the West Coast thanks to our man in Cali, Jeremy Parzen

Jeremy

Jeremy Parzen, Ph.D, pours Lini's Lambrusco Rosé at the wedding of Jon and Jayne, Presidio Park, San Diego, CA.

The popularity of Lini continues to grow further afield, and nowhere more spectacularly than in southern California, where our good friend Jeremy Parzen has certainly played his part in enhancing the Lambrusco producer’s success. Jeremy was instrumental in introducing Lini’s range of Lambrusco wines to these shores in 2007, where they proved an instant hit in New York City. A food and wine historian, author, Italian translator and rock musician, Jeremy now documents his experiences in wine, food, travel and music through his excellent blog, Do Bianchi.

When not writing, tasting, or touring with his pseudo-gallic band Nous Non Plus, Jeremy may be found adding to his myriad skills in decidedly unexpected ways. Dr. Parzen was recently ordained as a Rock Doctor in the Universal Life Church, and last month officiated at his first wedding — that of friends in San Diego — at which he was pleased to report Lini’s Lambrusco Rosé continued to flow liberally.

Jeremy on stage

The Rock Doctor wields his Telecaster on stage in the German town of Frankfurt an der Oder during Nous Non Plus' recent European Tour.

Nous Non Plus have just completed their second album, Menagerie, to be released in the new year. The song “Fille Atomique”, taken from the band’s eponymously-titled 2006 debut CD, was featured in last week’s episode of the CW11’s hit series Gossip Girl.

Grazie Jeremy for championing some of our favorite wines out west. Keep on rockin’…

On the A16: Naples to Bari

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Fortunately, at Vino you can travel through Italy's southern wine country without having to ride in a 1972 model Fiat Cinquecento.

On June 11, Vinoteca takes you on a virtual road trip through Italy’s south, from the bay of Naples to the Adriatic coast, up and over the spine of the Appenines on the A16 autostrada. This highway cuts deep through wine country, roughly following the ancient Via Traiana across highlands of limestone and volcanic ash. A traveller passes through the heart of the Aglianico vineyard with stops along the way to sample Coda di Volpe, Piedirosso, Falanghina, Fiano, Greco, and Nero di Troia among others.

Join wine expert Charles Scicolone for a unique wine-tasting journey, sampling some of Italy’s finest southern wines along the way.

On the A16: Naples to Bari
with Charles Scicolone
Wednesday, June 11, 6:30pm
$75

Vinoteca
121 East 27th Street
New York, NY 10016

For more information on these and upcoming classes, call (212) 725-6516 or visit our website.

Thanksgiving Picks

Monday, November 19th, 2007

Frank Bruni’s New York Times Thanksgiving Pick 2006

“Among the reds,” wrote Eric Asimov in last year’s New York Times Thanksgiving wine recommendations, “Frank, naturally, brought the most arcane wine of the meal, a 2004 Verduno Basadone from Castello di Verduno, made from the pelaverga piccolo grape, which is obscure even in its home territory in the Piedmont region of Italy. Nonetheless, this lithe, peppery wine hit the spot…”

The tiny Verduno or Verduno Pelaverga appellation is perhaps Italy’s smallest: the wine is made from the rare Pelaverga grape exclusively in the hamlet of Verduno. Spicy and aromatic, locals believe that this excellent food-pairing wine possesses aphrodisiacal properties, hence the name Basadone or baciadonne in Italian, the “lady kisser.”

Valpolicella 2003 Capitel Sant’Eugenio

For the Valpolicella, the Galli family employs the “ripasso” method for a limited number of barrels. This method (ripasso means a “re-passing” or “second passage” in Italian) consists of fermenting some of the grapes in barrels containing the lees (dead yeast cells) and skins left over from the fermentation of Amarone (a dried-grape wine). This practice gives their Valpolicella added depth and structure — something you won’t find in commercially produced Valpolicella.

This light-bodied wine shows nice berry fruit on the nose and in the mouth and will pair well with all the Thanksgiving trimmings.

Amarone 2001 Capitel Sant’Eugenio

Wine Director Emeritus Charles Scicolone’s Thanksgiving Pick

The Galli’s Amarone is made from a “field blend”: while Corvina, Rondinella, and Molinara are the three primary grapes used for this wine, the family allows other varieties — Sangiovese and Pinot Nero among them, depending on the vintage — to grow in their vineyards. They believe that this represents the true tradition of Amarone, where the vintage and Mother Nature herself determine which grapes will be used for the wines.

This rich, traditional-style Amarone is deep and complex. With earthy notes on the nose and red fruit on the palate, the opulent mouthfeel of this wine is classic Amarone. A great pairing for roast turkey and a perfect “meditative” wine to match with ripened cheeses after the holiday meal.

Nicola's Travel Recommendations in Black Ink

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007

For those of us who don’t have an American Express “Black Card” and who don’t receive the card-members’ magazine Black Ink, here’s an excerpt from its recent “Wine Issue,” where owner of I Trulli, Vino, and Centovini, Nicola Marzovilla is featured. Nicola travels to Italy four or five times a year and below you will find some of his favorite places to stay and eat.

“The List”: Wine experts from around the world give their favorite restaurant cellars.

Nicola Marzovilla

In 1994 Marzovilla opened I Trulli in New York, with a 400-plus-label, all-Italian wine list. His new SoHo restaurant, Centovini, offers a list of around 100 wines, each of which he has personally chosen.

Antica Bottega del Vino

At this truly classic Italian wine bar and restaurant, the thing to do is order the simplest dishes and enjoy them with the 1968 Taurasi by Mastroberardino.

3 Via Scudo di Francia, Verona, Italy
39-045/8004535
bottegavini.it

Albergo Ristorante Giardino ‘da Felicin’

For lovers of old Barolo, this restaurant in Piedmont, Italy, is a paradise: The menu is all classic Langhe dishes and the wine list features the best vintages of Barolo from the last three decades. Order any bottles of the Barolo Villero or Barolo Rocche by Vietti.

18 Via Vallada, Monforte d’Alba, Italy
39-0173/78225
felicin.it

Castello di Verduno

A great wine experience doesn’t need to be high-end. When the owner’s daughter here, who’s also the chef, poured me a glass of an estate-grown Pelaverga, the pairing with her dishes was unbeatable. They like to serve Pelaverga at the table, which has a nice acidity and a peppery note.

9 Via Umberto I, Verduno, Italy
39-0172/470125
castellodiverduno.com

Featured Class: Charles’s Greatest Hits (Weds., Oct. 10)

CHARLES SCICOLONE’S GREATEST HITS
Wednesday, October 10, 2007, $85

Wine industry veteran Charles Scicolone (Wine Director Emeritus, I Trulli and Vino) pours and discusses 10 of his all-time favorite wines.

Space is filling up fast. To register, send an email to register@vinosite.com or call 212-725-6516.

For those of you who already belong to Charles’s fan club, you know that Charles likes to drink old wine made from indigenous Italian grape varieties, aged in botti (traditional, large, old oak barrels). But whether or not you’ve had a chance to taste wine with him, this seminar represents a golden opportunity: because he began tasting and collecting Italian wine in the 1970s, before the Italian wine renaissance of recent memory, he has a unique perspective and can offer singular insight into the world of collecting and aging Italian wines. Charles is often overheard saying that there are four great Italian grapes: Nebbiolo, Sangiovese, Aglianico, and Sagrantino (and every once in a while, he’ll even drink a Cabernet Sauvignon from Lazio). Highlights are sure to include: Grato Grati 1988 Villa di Vetrice and Barbera d’Asti Il Dragone 1990 Dezzani.

For the last six years, Charles and I Trulli have been nominated for Outstanding Wine Service by the James Beard Foundation. Charles is also a member of the Wine Media Guild. His wife Michele Scicolone is the author of countless Italian cookbooks, many of which are now considered classics, including 1,000 Italian Recipes and Pizza Any Way You Slice It, co-authored by Charles.

This Week’s Tasting (Friday and Saturday): Sicilia

This week, the Vino staff will be pouring four wines from producers in Campania. These wines will be 15% off in-store and 20% off online.You can browse all of our current web offers by clicking here.

Weekly tastings at Vino are FREE.

To register for the free tastings, please send an email to events@vinosite.com.

This Friday (5:30-7:30 p.m.) and Saturday (4:00-6:00 p.m.) Vino staff will be pouring the following wines:*

*Wines subject to change depending on availability.