Archive for the ‘art and literature’ Category

Going down to Cuba: Daiquirì cocktail hour

Sunday, January 22nd, 2012

We’ll be Havana good time again at Vino this Thursday as when we’ll be using El Dorado Rum and Luxardo Maraschino to mix the classic Cuban cocktail: Daiquirì! Traditionally made from rum, lime juice and sugar, this quintessential Cuban cocktail is said to have been invented around 1800 by a group of American mining engineers working at the Daiquirì iron mine near Santiago. It was Jennings Cox, General Manager of the Spanish American Iron Co., who is credited with creating the drink at the Venus bar, not far from Daiquirì beach. Some believe Cox accidentally came up with the Daiquirì after he ran out of gin.


The daiquirì remained a local favorite until the early twentieth century, when Admiral Lucius W. Johnson, a U.S. Navy medical officer, introduced the drink to the Army and Navy Club in Washington, D.C. By the 1940s, as Latin America’s cultural appeal increased, the cocktail began to obtain international status thanks to those served at Havana’s El Floridita bar (above), seeping its way into popular culture thanks to famous daiquirì drinkers such as Ernest Hemingway, JFK and, er, Fredo Corleone.


Today the El Floridita is content to mine its past as a hangout for Cuban exiles such as Hemingway, whose statue props up the bar, while his hand-written message of affection rests appended to the wall: “My mojito in La Bodeguita, my daiquirì in El Floridita.”

Cocktail Hour: DAIQUIRÌ
Thursday, January 26
5:30-7:30pm

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Tu vuò fà l’americano!

Saturday, January 14th, 2012

Not to be confused with the coffee that goes by the same name, an after breakfast “Americano” refers to a cocktail composed of Campari, sweet vermouth and club soda. The drink was first served at Milan’s Caffè Campari in the 1860s, where it was originally known as the “Milano-Torino” because of its ingredients: Campari, the bitter herbaceous liqueur, is from Milan while the red vermouth, be it Cinzano or Martini, comes from Turin. It was renamed “Americano” after the war, when Italians noticed the drink was enjoyed particularly by Americans. Today it remains one of the simplest, most popular choices come aperitivo hour — for Americans or Italians.

AMERICANO TASTING
Thursday, January 19
5:30-7:30pm

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Artwork by James C. Taylor (ommaggio a Mimmo Rotella).

Toscana Tasting: this Saturday

Tuesday, August 2nd, 2011


Ah! The rolling hills! The sunflowers! The cypresses! The rustic farmhouses! The artistic wonder! From E.M. Forster to, er, Michael “The Situation” Sorrentino, for centuries visitors to Italy have been enchanted by Tuscany’s spectacular landscape and stunning towns and cities. Turns out they make some pretty great wines there too. Come taste four of our favorites this Saturday afternoon:

Dalle Nostre Mani Trebbiano “Gagio” 2010
$12

Travignoli Toscano Bianco “Gavignano” 2009 (1 liter)
$16

Massoferrato Impruneta Toscano Rosato 2010
$12

Podere Casanova Rosso di Montepulciano “Il Sentiero” 2007
$24

TOSCANA TASTING
Saturday, August 6
3:00-6:00pm

Campari: Is America finally ready for Italy’s favorite aperitivo?

Tuesday, May 24th, 2011

In 1979 The New Yorker ran an advertisement claiming that “9 out of every 10,000 Americans prefer Campari” — an amusing jibe alluding to the popular Italian liqueur’s relative obscurity in this country. Today Campari remains something of an acquired taste, but signs are that that “statistic” could finally be changing. No longer just the tipple of choice for European cognoscenti and dolce vita-seeking italophiles, Campari has recently enjoyed a surge in U.S. consumption, thanks in part to its growing presence in popular culture. In the last few years the drink has made numerous appearances in movies and music videos, while memorable ads, savvy cross-marketing and some of the sexiest stars of the screen have helped repropose Campari as a fun, sophisticated product for a new generation.

Vintage Campari posters by Marcello Durovich (1920), Fortunato Depero (1933) and Aldo Catti (1951).

Of course, Campari is nothing new. In Italy, where it remains perhaps the most iconic and best-loved drink, it has never been out of style, and in 2010 celebrated its 150th anniversary. This bitter and aromatic liqueur — obtained from the infusion of herbs, plants and fruit in alcohol and water — was invented in 1860 by Gaspare Campari in the Piedmontese town of Novara. However, the drink became closely associated with Milan, where Gaspare and family moved soon afterwards to open the Caffe Campari (now Bar Zucca) in the city’s elegant Galleria Vittorio Emmaneule II. The rapid success of Campari — both the drink and the caffè — launched numerous imitators and helped establish the now time-worn custom of the aperitivo. In 1904, the first production plant was opened in Sesto San Giovanni, where under the direction of Gaspare’s son, Davide (whose name still appears on the bottle), the company began to export the brand. Today Campari epitomizes Italian style in over 190 countries.

“Campari”, Bruno Munari, 1965. The Museum of Modern Art, New York.

Yet despite its worldwide fame, mystery continues to surround Campari. Though certainly containing quinine and other bitter herbs, rhubarb, spices, ginseng, bergamot oil, and orange peel, estimates as to the number of ingredients can vary wildly from 20 to 60. Campari’s distinctive crimson color comes from cochineal dye, which is derived from the dactylopius coccus insect, although in some countries this ingredient has been replaced by artificial colorant. The chairman of Gruppo Campari, Luca Garavoglia, is believed to be the only person in the world who knows the precise and closely-guarded formula for the original family recipe.

Campari ads from the ’80s, ’90s and ’00s.

An essential ingredient in many classic cocktails, Campari is often mixed with red vermouth and soda to make Americano, one of Italy’s favorite aperitivi which we’ll be making at Vino this Thursday. Campari is also produced  pre-mixed with soda water as a single-serve product called Camparisoda. Introduced in 1932 as the first pre-bottled cocktail, its distinctive embossed glass bottle was designed by the Futurist artist Fortunato Depero, and remains unchanged to this day. Italians order Camparisoda at the bar or buy it in 10-packs at the supermarket. Sadly, these are extremely hard to come by in the U.S., but if you are interested in the bottle design, check out Raffaele Celentano’s lamps for Ingo Maurer above the bar at I Trulli.

To mark its 150 years, Campari enlisted three contemporary international artists to design commemorative labels for the Campari Art Label Project, a collaborative initiative highlighting the long-standing relationship between the brand and the world of art and design. These bottles are available now in limited quantities at Vino: get yours today and become the tenth proud American in every 10,000 who prefers Campari.

Campari (750ml)
$26

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

Make a bigger splash

Monday, April 11th, 2011


Enjoy these wines, all with an alcohol by volume under 13%. We’ll be pouring a diverse range of vibrant whites and lighter reds-super sipping for the warmer weather. Make a bigger splash, this Saturday.

LOW ALCOHOL TASTING
Saturday, April 16
3-6pm

Jack Rose rises again

Monday, September 27th, 2010

Join us for another intriguing cocktail hour this Thursday, when we’ll be mixing Jack Rose, the classic cocktail featured in Ernest Hemingway’s 1926 novel, The Sun Also Rises.

Cocktail Hour: JACK ROSE
Thursday, September 30
5:30-7:30pm
FREE

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

Calling all Gibson Girls

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Back by popular demand, Vino will be pouring Gibsons next Thursday. A variation on the classic Martini, this American favorite was named after the illustrator Charles Dana Gibson. According to popular legend, Gibson — a teetotaller — would ask barmen to place a pickled onion in cold water so he could pick his drink out from other gin-based martinis. Another story recalls how Gibson challenged the bartender at the Player’s Club in New York to improve upon the original Martini; the bartender simply replaced the existing olive with an onion.

Gibson married Irene Langhorne, whose sister Nancy Astor was the first woman to serve as a member of parliament in the British House of Commons. The elegant Langhorne sisters, born to a once-wealthy Virginia family devastated by the Civil War, are said to have been Gibson’s inspiration for the Gibson Girls. These images of an American feminine ideal, as portrayed in Gibson’s satirical pen and ink stories, became a new national standard for female beauty and independence in the early twentieth-century.

If you’re a latter-day Gibson Girl (or if you know one you can bring along) join us next Thursday!

GIBSON COCKTAIL HOUR
Thursday, September 9
5:30-7:30pm
FREE

Tasting is free; no reservation required. For more information please contact 212-725-6516 or info@vinosite.com.

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