Archive for the ‘Television’ Category

Spice up your life! The ’90s are back with our Spiced Pear Cosmo

Saturday, September 10th, 2011


This week’s cocktail tasting has got us waxing our legs and splurging on Manolos… That’s right folks: we’re bringing back the Cosmopolitan! Every New York girl’s favorite drink — well, in 1998 — is due for a comeback. But who wants to remember the nineties? Not us, which is why we’re making our 2011 Cosmo with Hangar One Spiced Pear Vodka, Canton ginger and white cranberry juice. If sounds cool it’s because it is. Proof that some things are always in style.

COCKTAIL HOUR: SPICED PEAR COSMO
Thursday, September 15
5:30-7:30pm

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Hurricane season: blowing into town this Thursday

Sunday, August 21st, 2011


Forget Irene, the real hurricane is blowing into town this Thursday at Vino, where we’ll be mixing up this classic rum-based libation. Board up your windows and come on down!

Hurricane Cocktail Hour
Thursday, August 25
5:30-7:30pm

And now for some practical information from NY1:

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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.

Lambrusco by LINI 910 on CBS’ The Early Show

Friday, December 31st, 2010

Labrusca Rosso by LINI 910 was featured on CBS’s The Early Show yesterday morning. It’s the classic Lambrusco’s second national television appearance in eighteen months, having featured on NBC’s Today Show in 2009.

Food & Wine Executive Wine Editor Ray Isle came on-air to present and taste some of his favorite sparkling wines for New Year’s with departing Early Show anchor Harry Smith.

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“This scares me,” confessed Smith as he raised a glass of the deep red Emilian sparkler, calling it “a leap of faith,” perhaps reflecting many Americans’ continued reservations about Lambrusco.

“Be not afraid,” Isle reassured, suggesting he think of it as “a red wine that happens to have bubbles.” Isle went on to praise Lambrusco’s versatility, calling it a “celebratory wine… that goes great with an entire meal.”

Check out our complete range of Lini’s sparkling wines today, and make your New Year’s really sparkle!

We know what you’re thinking…

Sunday, September 5th, 2010

For more information please contact 212-725-6516 or email info@vinosite.com. Vino is in no way affiliated with HBO or the show Bored to Death.

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Drink like a Mad Man: Old Overholt Rye Whiskey

Friday, August 20th, 2010

Television has long ignored the fact that people like to drink, which is one reason why Mad Men is so popular at Vino. What other show comes replete with its own cocktail guide? It’s fair to say that when it comes to the culture and history of drinking, this weekly ode to a bygone era gets it right. Don Draper knows his way around a bar, and this is the reason he drinks Old Overholt Rye (below).


Originally, distilled in Broad Ford, Pennsylvania, 35 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, Old Overholt was established in 1810 by Abraham Overholt. His whiskey was named Old Farm, but in 1859, his son built a new distillery and the production of a new spirit named for the Overholt family began. Old Overholt has had its share of ups-and-downs; one thing that kept the brand afloat during hard times is that it was one of only a few brands allowed to be sold as a medicinal whiskey during Prohibition.


While Old Overholt is now owned by Beam Global Spirits and distilled in Clermont, Kentucky, it still continues to shine and make one hell of a cocktail. Aged for four years, it’s one of the best values in American whiskey. It tends to work wonderfully in classic cocktails like Manhattans and Sazeracs. Or, do like Mr. Draper and substitute it for bourbon in an Old Fashioned.

Old Overholt Rye Whiskey
$18

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