Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Emilia-Romagna: Italy's gastronomic heartland

Friday, April 24th, 2009

Discover the rich flavors and lively wines of a remarkable region with Jim Hutchinson, DWS

Vino is excited to present a brand new addition to its class schedule, in which our very own Jim Hutchinson invites you to explore the hearty foods and delicious wines of Emilia-Romagna.

Comprising two historic regions, Emilia and Romagna, the unified Emilia-Romagna benefits from a unique geographical position, acting as a sort of keystone state between Central and Northern Italy, and stretching the peninsula from the Adriatic coast to Liguria. The region’s most famous towns lie centrally: Parma, Reggio-Emilia, Modena and Bologna, each of which is synonymous with some of Italy’s favorite and most heavily exported food products.

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Lambrusco, Parmigiano Reggiano and prosciutto crudo... just some of the flavors we'll be sampling on Wednesday, April 29.

In an exclusive tasting, class participants will sample some of the cuisine which defines the region, such as prosciutto, parmigiano-reggiano, egg pasta and aceto balsamico. These will be paired with expertly selected wines including the sparkling Lambrusco, plus Sangiovese di Romagna and wines from the Colli Piacentini.

EMILIA-ROMAGNA: Italy’s
Gastronomic Heartland

with Jim Hutchinson, DWS
Wednesday, April 29
6:30-8:30pm
$65

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

Vino’s full Spring 2009 Class Schedule is available on our website, vinosite.com.

Absolut Lini

Friday, February 20th, 2009

This just in from the “Friday afternoon” department…

absolut-lini-blog

It wasn't my idea. Honest.

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?

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1K8ZRQQNxi8]

All photographs and photomontages by James Taylor, 2009.

Guido Gualandi now 20% off!

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

Big savings on unique wines by our favorite Tuscan winemaker
Taste all four at Vino this Friday afternoon

Tuscan winemaker Guido Gualandi is not afraid of getting his hands dirty.

Not afraid to get his hands dirty, Tuscan winemaker Guido Gualandi attends to his vines.

Regular readers of this blog will no doubt be familiar with Tuscan winemaker Guido Gualandi. The Montespertoli-based producer is often celebrated at Vino for his many talents in addition to winemaking: archaeologist, painter, musician, technology consultant… it’s an impressive list. But what exactly makes Guido’s wines so special? For starters, each wine Gualandi produces is the result of his own toil and hard labor, and he conducts every step of the winemaking process with his own hand. Grapes are hand-picked (using a traditional type of basket known as a “bigonce“) then hand- (and foot-) pressed. The wines are typically left to age in barriques, at which point Guido, a great believer in batonnage, regularly performs the act of stirring the lees himself. The entire production process from harvest to bottle is represented by diagrams on his wines’ labels.

A devoted non-interventionist winemaker, Gualandi insists on keeping his product free of all herbicides or pesticides. “I especially avoid correcting the taste of the wine in the cellar,” he says. This philosophy is part of Guido’s commitment to maintaining the same production techniques traditionally employed by winemakers in Tuscany. “Modern technology is practically banned from inside the winery,” he explained to us. “The materials I use are the same as those of fifty or even a hundred years ago.” For a man of such creative output, it’s perhaps no surprise Gualandi refers to his methods as “the art of making wine.”

Take home these Tuscan masterpieces at an astonishing 20% off!

4-guido-winesVino Rosato 2007 Guido Gualandi
was $19, now $ 15.20

Cavalleresco 2005 Guido Gualandi
was $38, now $30.40

Gualandus 2005 Guido Gualandi
was $50, now $40

Vinum 2007 Guido Gualandi
was $40, now $32

All four of these wines by Guido Gualandi will be available to try at
our FREE tasting this Friday, January 23rd, from 5:30-7:30pm.

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

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.

Try I Trulli's Recession Remedy

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

Fight your financial fears at our fall harvest garden wine party!

Times may be tough on Wall Street

Times may be tough downtown right now, but on 27th Street good food and wine are just the thing to beat your Wall Street woes.

It was Bob Dylan who once sang about hard times in New York town, but not even he could have predicted the tough economic downturn the city finds itself in today. As a consequence of the collapse on Wall Street, many of us are tightening our purse strings, especially when it comes to dining out. Which is why I Trulli is doing what it can to lift spirits, helping to ensure less whining and more wining.

This man may have just witnessed his assets crumble, but he can still afford a great evening out at I Trulli.

On Thursday, October 16, join us at I Trulli’s lush back garden for Italian wine and delicious antipasti: the perfect antidote to some of the bleak news of the last few weeks. Enjoy great wines from I Trulli’s award-winning cellar, taste chef Patti Jackson’s seasonal delicacies and meet like-minded fans of Italian food and wines, and all for a remarkable, recession-busting $45!

Read more about I Trulli’s garden parties on Metromix New York!

Fall Harvest Garden Party
Thursday, October 16
6:00-8:00pm
Only $45
(all you can eat and drink!)

For more information call 212-481-7372 or email info@itrulli.com.

Chef Patti Jackson at Macy's

Friday, September 19th, 2008
Macy's

Since 1902, Macy's has claimed to be "The World's Largest Store."

Patti Jackson will be making her latest public appearance at Macy’s on Thursday, October 2! The I Trulli and Centovini chef will be helming the stove from 1pm at Macy’s Herald Square flagship store in New York City. Don’t miss this great chance to see one of the country’s finest culinary talents in action!

Macy’s Herald Square
151 West 34th Street
New York, NY 10001

Tartufo and Tajarin

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

Join us for a taste of Piemonte at Centovini

Hand-made fresh taglierini, known as "tajarin" in the local dialect.

Revered the world over for its Barolo and Barbaresco wines, Piemonte’s Langhe hills are also famed for their delicate white truffles. The flavors of Piemonte reach their peak in Autumn when the harvest is in and truffle season recommences in the Langhe.

To celebrate this occasion, Centovini is hosting an evening devoted to the culinary specialties and unique wines of Piemonte. Chef Patti Jackson has prepared a menu featuring typically Piemontese dishes, each of which will be paired with wines by some of the region’s top producers.

A Taste of Piemonte Menu

Tonno di Coniglio
Slow-cooked Rabbit Terrine
Barbera d’Asti Rulejà 2003 Castello di Montegrosso

Tajarin al Tartufo Bianco
Taglierini Pasta with White Truffles
Barolo 2004 Oddero

Brasato al Barolo e Gnocchi alla Bava
Beef Cheek Braised in Barolo, Gnocchi with Brussels Sprouts and Fontina
Barolo Massara 2001 Castello di Verduno

Formaggi Piemontesi
Selection of Cheeses from Piedmont
Barolo Riserva 1996 Borgogno

The spectacular hills of the Langhe at dusk.

The spectacular hills of the Langhe at dusk.

A Taste of Piemonte
Monday, October 6, 7:30pm
$175 (plus tax and gratuity)

25 W Houston St
New York, NY 10012
(212) 219-2113
www.CentoviniNYC.com

For further information and reservations please call (212) 219-2113 or email events@centovininyc.com.

Happy July 4th!

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

Vino, I Trulli and Centovini will be closed this Friday, July 4. We’d like to wish all our friends and customers a happy Independence Day, and we look forward to seeing you again very soon!

Deltetto Arneis Roero in Wall Street Journal

Friday, June 13th, 2008

roero-arneis

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Deltetto’s Roero Arneis S. Michele is featured in the online version of the Wall Street Journal, wsj.com, today. In an article entitled “Wine Like Grandma Used To Be“, Dorothy J. Gaiter and John Brecher discuss the piedmontese grape Arneis, and partake in a blind tasting, in which the aforementioned Deltetto wine is listed as a favorite: “Great with food, Arneis brings your nonna to mid, even if you’re not Italian.”

Roero Arneis S.Michele 2006 Deltetto is currently available at Vino.