Luigi: Never Stop Moving
Transcription
Luigi: Never Stop Moving
TM The magazine of Italian lifestyle, traditions, and restaurants. Ornella Fado Celebrates 25 Years in Show Business! Luigi: Never Stop Moving Italian Jazz at Lincoln Center with Antonio Ciacca DISCOVER NEW YORK’S " MASSERIA AND LUZZO RESTAURANTS AND ITALY’S DON ALFONSO Delicious Recipes and More THE PHILOSOPHER ENTR EPR ENEUR Thirty years ago, a successful industrialist decided to devote himself to his great passion: wine-making. And so began a fascinating and complex story of three very important estates in Tuscany. UÊ The purchase and restoration of an historic monastery (dating from 1000) at Castelnuovo Berardenga, in the heart of the Siena Chianti Classico area, the present day Castello di Monastero. UÊ Montalcino, the homeland of one of the most famous wines in the world, saw the acquisition and renovation of the Coldisole estate. UÊ Lastly, the foundation of Poggio alle Sughere in the Tuscan Maremma area. *NQPSUFECZ8+%FVUTDI4POT-UE)BSSJTPO/:XKEFVUTDIDPN “I wanted to create a TV show about Italians outside of Italy to talk about our successes, our culture, and our traditions in a contemporary way, but I also wanted to intrigue and indulge all cultural groups. Brindiamo! is a delectable culinary trip to major cities to discover great and authentic Italian restaurants and chefs, and a virtual encyclopedia about the progress of Italians outside of Italy. This magazine is the paper version of my great adventure.” Hello and welcome to the first edition of Brindiamo! Magazine CONTENTS 5 Happy Birthday, Brindiamo! 7 La Masseria 8 Italian Wines 9 Il Punto 11 A Toast to Jazz 13 The Accidental Jazzman 14 Luzzo 16 Don Alfonso I am the creator, author, and TV hostess of Brindiamo! since day one, and thanks to my Brindiamo! – “A Toast to the Finest Italian restaurateurs and chefs who opened the doors of Restaurants,” a weekly half hour television program their restaurants and their hearts to me. But the on NYCTV channel 25. The Italian word brindiamo fact that I am here celebrating Brindiamo!’s fourth means “Let’s toast.” anniversary ultimately is because of its loyal audience, which has been supporting me with The Brindiamo! television program celebrates wonderful feedback every day and asking for more Italian culture, traditions, great food, fashion, and Brindiamo! episodes from all over the world. The lifestyles, particularly in a country (the United idea of Brindiamo! magazine was born naturally, States) I have learned to love as my own. To thanks to the great behind-the-scene photographs me, Brindiamo! has been a great journey, and an taken by my fantastic photographer and friend, unforgettable growing experience as a person, Stephen Shadrach. businesswoman, and artist. Brindiamo! is my everyday challenge; after all, I am in one of the Please join me as I continue my journey to bring to most competitive cities in the world, and thus need you the very best of Italy right into the comfort of to constantly grow and search for the latest Italian your living room through the Brindiamo! show and trends, in addition to dreaming big! My journey started on October 6, 2005, thanks Brindiamo! magazine. Ciao Ciao, to NYCTV, the station that has believed in Ornella Fado 18 Fabulous Favorites www.brindiamochannel.com Brindiamo! • 2009 3 My daughter is the most important person in my life 4 2009 • Brindiamo! special celebration Happy Birthday, Brindiamo! Brindiamo! – “A Toast to the Finest Italian Restaurants” This year Brindiamo! celebrates four years on air at NYCTV 25. It is such a pleasure to be recognized by an American channel—and a New York one at that! I thought a magazine would be a great way to honor the occasion, so let’s look back at what has happened since our start. Brindiamo! was created to showcase the finest cover the entire United States, with the goal of going and most authentic Italian restaurants in the United national on a PBS channels in 2010! States and Italy, as well as to offer a look at all things Italian. In every episode, I give my viewers a behind- This is actually my 25th year in show business, and the-dining-room look at what’s happening inside I couldn’t be prouder of where I am. I got my start in successful restaurants, and hopefully inspire them Italy as a ballet dancer, and later studied jazz dance to visit these places for themselves. We’ve checked and was featured in several television programs out everything from traditional to trendy places, and and many musical theater productions. I worked sampled something for every budget. We’ve tried on television in various roles and later hosted and authentic Italian flavors and new Italian fusion. produced my own shows. I moved to New York 13 We always film at the restaurant itself, and have years ago with my beautiful daughter, Carolina, and welcomed numerous guests, including television and have worked to promote Italian culture. I created a film stars, politicians, authors, and musicians, which series called Danza e Musica to help kids to learn makes Brindiamo! the only regularly aired show to dance and learn the Italian language in a fun way. featuring such a broad variety of Italian culture. Brindiamo! is everything I love in 27 minutes. I’ve We’ve visited over 40 restaurants in New York and managed to combine my love for the entertainment Italy so far, and are expanding our repertoire to industry with my love of Italian food and culture. ON THE HORIZON FOR ORNEL" “Brindiamo! Goes Green,” a 30-minute TV show about everything “green” in New York, featuring green restaurants, delicious organic recipes, and much more. ?d(&&/Brindiamo! launched the first cooking demo dinner night on Valentine’s Day, and it was a great success. We plan to organize one every Friday night, so stay tuned! www.brindiamochannel.com ?iik_d]co[nY_j_d]d[mXeea"Brindiamo! – A Toast to Italian Lifestyle, Traditions, and Cuisine in New York, featuring 100 restaurants, colorful behind-the-scenes photographs of Brindiamo! episodes, recipes, and interviews with the most distinguished restaurants owners and chefs. J^[Brindiamo! Club Card, a VIP card that enables Brindiamo!’sWkZ_[dY[je[nfWdZ_ji h[ijWkhWdj[nf[h_[dY[$ J^[Brindiamo! Shop, an online shop where fans can purchase their favorite Brindiamo! DVDs, cookbooks from some of the finest Brindiamo! chefs, cooking classes, Italian products, and more. Brindiamo! Tours, providing memorable trips to the beautiful Amalfi Coast to visit wineries and \Whci"[d`eo]h[WjYkb_dWho[nf[h_[dY[iWjÓl[# star restaurants such as Don Alfonso (featured in a Brindiamo! episode), and take cooking classes with local chefs. Brindiamo! • 2009 5 Cialledda Fredda Bread Salad Serves 4-6 Ingredients Procedure 1 lb two-day-old bread Start by cutting the bread into cubes. 1 lb sweet cherry tomatoes 2 2c a few seconds, and squeeze them fresh cucumbers, peeled delicately to remove excess water. baby arugula Dice the tomato and the peeled extra-virgin olive oil salt and pepper oregano 6 Run the cubes under cold water for 2009 • Brindiamo! cucumber, and chop the arugula. Combine all ingredients with the bread and a lot of olive oil. Add salt, pepper, and oregano to taste. featured restaurant LA MASSERIA The three owners of La Masseria, Peppe Iuele, Enzo Ruggiero, and Pino Coladonato (who also heads up the kitchen), have been serving authentic Italian food with an emphasis on the traditions of the Apulia region for the last five years. We spoke to Pino Coladonato, a native of Bari, who gave us some insight into his kitchen and the way La Masseria is bringing Italy to New York. Brindiamo!: How has the menu stayed true B!: What do you like about cooking in to Italian style? the United States? Pino Coladonato: We do everything 100 PC: Being able to bring you our culinary percent Italian style. Although we use some culture, and feeling rewarded and appreciated local products, we stay true to our Italian for doing so. Being in a big city also gives you roots. the flexibility to have anything at any time. B!: What has changed with American B!: So we have one meal and we’re hungry. ingredients and American tastes? PC: Local products and ingredients are What do you suggest from the menu for a well-rounded idea of the La Masseria flavor? very good when in season. Otherwise, we PC: You should try the very old-world style import them. I think American tastes have pasta, granotto frutti di mare e fagioli, made changed and keep on changing. Knowledge with a special grain called grano cappella. I and sophistication are part of that. We try also recommend the spaghetti bottarga (dried to choose ingredients that will appeal to fish roe), salt-baked sea bass, beef tagliata the general market, as well as work with with arugula, terra mare (sepia and octopus ingredients that are available year-round. with puréed fava been and broccoli rabe), With all the different ethnicities and cultures Ischia-style rabbit, the Milanese cutlet, and, here, the taste of Italian cooking is much for dessert, chocolate and almond torta caprese liked and appreciated. and the vanilla ricotta tort. A graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design, Nicole Romano has never taken a jewelry-design class, which makes her intricate pieces even more fascinating. A protégé of Nicole Miller, Romano was discovered by the celebrated I[nWdZj^[9_jo stylist, Patricia Field. Her jewelry, accent accessories, and one-of-a-kind dresses have been featured in such publications as Vogue, InStyle, Elle, Harper’s Bazaar, Cosmopolitan, Paper, Marie Claire, and the New York Times. Known for her bold and instantly remarkable designs, Romano is popular with Hollywood stars that want to get noticed. Jennifer Aniston, Tilda Swinton, Jessica Alba, Mischa Barton, Drew Barrymore, Rihanna, and, perhaps the most daring of the fashion set, Icelandic pop princess Bjork, have all been seen sporting her shimmery, ruffled minidresses and eye-popping jewelry. Romano works out of a studio in historic East Harlem, and recently joined the Fashion Group USA showroom and opened her Pop-Up-Shop within the Plaza Retail Collection, which features local and handmade designers. Romano also designed the aprons for La Masseria. www.nicoleromano.com " MASSERIA ()+M[ij*.j^Ijh[[j New York, NY 10036 j$('(+.((''' www.lamasserianyc.com NEW! " MASSERIA ())CW_dIjh[[j ;Wij=h[[dm_Y^"H?&(&'. www.lamasserianyc.com Brindiamo! • 2009 77 featured vineyard Lionello Marchesi Entrepreneur, Philosopher, and Winemaker Lionello Marchesi’s journey into the wine world is an impressive modern tale. Marchesi did not inherit a family estate, but instead is an entrepreneur motivated by an incredible passion for wines. Thirty years ago, after a successful career inventing and manufacturing car accessories for Italian and American automobile giants, Lionello, based in Milan at the time, began his search for properties in Tuscany. He quickly assembled ownership of estates from three of the most prestigious appellations of Tuscany—Chianti Classico, Brunello di Montalcino, and Montepulciano— and became the very first winemaker to unite these three DOCG under one name. After a brief hiatus from winemaking, Lionello continued following his passion and embarked on his second adventure as a winemaker by purchasing three Tuscan estates: Castello di Monastero in the Chianti Classico area, Coldisole in the famous Montalcino area, and Poggio alle Sughere in the Maremma region on the coast, an area new to wine producing. Lionello’s winemaking philosophy focuses on quality, and his standards often surpass stringent DOCG requirements. His Castello di Monastero Chianti Superiore is made with 85 percent sangiovese grapes and aged for seven months in French oak barrels, although the law Lionello Marchesi has proved to be an innovator and a man of simplicity all in one, balancing the values of authenticity and modernity in his wines. ASTI This tiny town in the Piedmont region of vibrant effervescence. Moscato d’Asti is the still version. technique in place. Thirty years later, they galvanized to northern Italy is best known throughout the world for Both are popular dessert wines, and immediately push through the first D.O.C. recognition for the region, the bubbly dessert wine produced in the surrounding distinguishable for fruit and floral aromas including and today they proudly and deservedly hold the highest area. Generally considered to be Italy’s first famous apricot, lemon and rose petals, sage notes, and traces label in Italy, the D.O.C.G., which demands strict quality sparkling wine, Asti Spumante D.O.C.G., or simply Asti of acacia honey. The Consorzio dell’Asti D.O.C.G. was standards, regional delimitation, and limited grape yields D.O.C.G., is made from the intensely fragrant moscato \ekdZ[Z_d'/)(m_j^j^[]eWbe\fheZkY_d]m_d[kdZ[h to ensure a superior product. bianco grape, and undergoes a vinification process a clearly defined Asti denomination, and to preserve intended to preserve the vast bouquet while producing and promote the distinctive flavor and protect the 8 requires only 75 percent sangiovese and no oak aging at all. As a result, the Monastero’s mouth is deliciously round with a medium body and delicate notes of toasted oak. And his Coldisole Rosso di Montalcino also demonstrates the careful attention given to every wine, spending eight months in small oak barrels and another eight months in the bottle, again exceeding the DOCG standards. The Rosso is a very approachable wine, showing violet and raspberry flavors and very good structure. 2009 • Brindiamo! www.astidocg.it featured restaurant Ricetta: Michele Orsino dal Ristorante Il Punto Dentice al Cartoccio Fillet of Red Snapper in Parchment Paper Serves 1 Ingredients 10 oz red snapper (washed and boneless) 1 sheet of parchment paper 1/2 oz snow peas 1/2 oz zucchini cut in half and sliced 1/2 oz cherry tomatoes cut in half 1/2 oz mushrooms (variety of mushroom) 1 oz white wine 2 thyme sprigs salt and pepper to taste 1 baking pan www.brindiamochannel.com Procedure Preheat oven to 325˚. Place the parchment paper on a baking pan and form the paper into the shape of a small bag, leaving one side open. Fill the parchment bag with all the ingredients, including the snapper. Fold the open side of the bag, and make sure it is properly sealed. Place the baking pan in the oven for 20 minutes. When ready, remove and place on a plate, nicely open the bag, and keep the parchment paper for the table presentation. Buon appetito! IL PUNTO RISTORANTE +&-#+&/D_dj^7l[dk[ D[mOeha"DO'&&'. j$('((**&&.. www.ilpuntoristorante.com Brindiamo! • 2009 9 10 2009 • Brindiamo! featured talent Brindiamo! A Toast to Jazz IecWdodkcX[hi_dj^_i_iik[?dWZZ_j_edjeY[b[XhWj_d]\ekho[WhiedDO9JL"j^_i_iWbieco(+j^o[Wh_di^emXki_d[ii?Wc so lucky to be doing what I love. I have a very particular attachment to jazz, because I spent much of my life studying jazz dance with a very special man named Luigi. to have career paths planned out for them, and all that was missing was a dancer. So Luigi’s dad and brother Tony started him stretching and studying. He began in talent shows and wowed the crowds with his singing, dancing, and acrobatics. By his late teens, he was a local star, and was soon touring the Midwest vaudeville circuit. After a stint in the Marines during WWII, Luigi moved to Los Angeles to pursue a promising career in movie musicals, but after just two weeks he suffered a tragic car accident. Doctors said that he would never dance again and would be lucky to even walk. While in a deep coma, Luigi heard a voice telling him to never stop moving, that it was the only way to stay alive. I met Luigi for the first time when I was just 14 years old, almost 30 years ago. I was taking dance lessons in Amalfi, where Renato Greco was holding a dance workshop with such international dancers and choreographers as Matt Mattox and Victor Litvinov. When I was 17 years old, I left my small town—Paola, in Calabria—to move to Rome and pursue my dreams of show business. I had a lot of opportunities to take dance classes with Luigi in Rome, given that I was training to be a professional dancer and was studying many different dance genres with Renato Greco at his international dance school in Rome. Renato Greco is the official “Luigi Technique” choreographer in Italy, and he was the person who suggested that I try a career in television, because in his view, I was very photogenic and shapely—perfect ingredients apparently for a successful career on Italian TV! Thus, I started my professional career on variety shows, and continued with acting, singing, and dancing in theaters as well as on television. I even had my own daily live talk show! I have worked with many Italian stars, such as Massimo Ranieri and Johnny Dorelli, and When Luigi awoke, that’s exactly what he did. He concentrated on his muscles and how they such choreographers and directors as Franco moved, and he created stretching exercises to Miseria, Gino Landi, Garinei, Federico Fellini, regain control over his body. and Franco Zeffirelli. After a long rehabilitation, he managed to At just 21 years old, I debuted as the lead study dance again and, miraculously, while female role “Angelica” in the show Rinaldo still combating paralysis, he was spotted by a di Campo at the Petruzzelli Theatre in Bari. It talent scout and asked to audition for the movie was one of my greatest accomplishments, and version of On the Town. This led to an eightI still watch videos of the show today when I year movie and dance career that included over need a pick-me-up. My role in A Chorus Line 40 films. was another life-changing moment. In addition to some great jazz dancing, I met my husband, Luigi’s dance rehabilitation technique became who brought me to New York and offered the world’s first official jazz-dance technique. me my greatest role ever, as a mother to my Between movie takes, he would do exercises to keep his body limber and coordinated. After beautiful daughter, Carolina. some time, other dancers began to follow him. These days, I do not do much dancing anymore, One day, Gene Kelly told him to teach it, that but when I do need to feel like a dancer again, it was “Good stuff.” In 1951 Luigi started I take my jazz shoes, leotard, and smile to teaching jazz classes in Los Angeles, and 1956 Luigi’s studio. Luigi’s energy, charisma, and he moved to New York City to perform on kind words always make me feel like I am Broadway, where he worked with numerous 14 years old again, and like I have the whole choreographers and eventually opened his own world ahead of me. Luigi’s teachings, jazz studio, Studio Maestro, where in addition to classes, and persona are inimitable. popular jazz courses, he specializes in dancers with injuries, teaching them to work around Luigi: Never Stop Moving their injuries and to listen to their bodies. The eighth of 11 children, Luigi Renato was born to Italian immigrants in the small town of www.studio-maestro.com Steubenville, Ohio. The other children seemed Brindiamo! • 2009 11 featured interview Allies for a New Italy Renato Miracco, director of the Italian Cultural Institute of New York, explains why he’s so excited to be working with Jazz at Lincoln Center. After only two years on the job, he has already taken great steps to achieving his goals. Brindiamo!: And what exactly are your B!: Getting back to the event you’re doing goals? with Lincoln Center, this isn’t the first time you’ve worked together. Renato Miracco: To elevate the image of Italian culture at all levels in America; RM: We at the Institute have a great create a synergy between the Institute and relationship with Antonio Ciacca, and museums and similar organizations. have collaborated several times in the past. This is by far the biggest event we’ve B!: Give us an example of what you’re worked on together. It really highlights doing to accomplish these goals. the “new Italy,” which is another one of RM: We organized the largest exhibition my goals. We want to promote the new of Giorgio Morandi at the Metropolitan modern Italy in every field, from jazz to Museum of Art, the biggest Italian science and math, and especially young exhibition in the last ten years! We also artists. You mustn’t imagine an “old Italy,” held two other exhibits of his watercolors but rather a “new Italy,” with special and drawings here and at New York attention to the younger generation. And University, as a way to spread our efforts one of the greatest aspects of this new throughout the city. generation is music. B!: And what else are you working on? RM: We want to do more with film and video. We did something on young short-film directors, and we’re planning more in the next year. It’s all related to a new Italian image, and America is very curious! B!: And because we asked Antonio about food, we’ve got to hear from you. Any food or wine events at the Institute? RM: What we are doing is connecting food to other areas of culture. For example, in November we’re planning a series called “Food and Fiction” that will focus on novelists who write about food in some capacity, and we’ll open the series with an event on food and the Futurism B!: Other artists you’ve helped to exhibit? B!: What’s it like to work with him? movement. [The great Italian poet and RM: Guido Reni and Guercino, as well as RM: It’s great! It’s teamwork. We share founder of the Futurism movement] a lot of contemporary Italian artists, also the idea of exporting a culture that isn’t Filippo Marinetti actually wrote a book those working in New York City. ancient, but contemporary. We need allies on food and Futurism. to get this message across, and Antonio Ciacca is one of them. 12 2009 • Brindiamo! www.brindiamochannel.com featured interview The Accidental Jazzman: An Hour with Antonio Ciacca Antonio Ciacca got into jazz completely by accident. While studying engineering in Bologna, a friend invited him to hear Wynton Marsalis play. Twenty years later Antonio has cultivated a jazz career of his own, and works side by side with Marsalis, his inspiration, designing the program of Jazz at Lincoln Center (JALC). We caught up with Antonio in his office at Columbus Circle. Black-and-white photographs of his muses adorn what he calls his “wall of fame.” His young son, Nicolas, sits at a desk in the corner watching cartoons on a laptop, lost in his headphones, and hardly stirs when we enter. What first struck you about jazz? It was the first time I saw and heard non-Eurocentric music live. My whole life, I’d been surrounded by a white, European tradition. Everything else was painted as wild and exotic. At that concert, I saw this other culture for what it really was— these people for who they really were. How did it sound to you? Spontaneous, nonEuropean, improvised, a collaborative effort, teamwork. Who were your first influences? I’m a very lucky person, in general. And, of course, I decided to study jazz, and guess what? Probably the greatest tenor saxophone player from New York [Steve Grossman] decided to move, where? To Bologna. So I was lucky enough to live in the same city with one of the greatest saxophone players ever, and he decided I was good enough to take lessons from him. Jazz at Lincoln Center Program Director and Jazzman Antonio Ciacca on Food and Music Now let’s talk about food. Your family is from the conduct the Count Basie Orchestra with Frank south of Italy, and you lived there for a long time. Sinatra and the Oscar Peterson Trio as the We hear you have an affinity for Thelonious Monk. Is that some of the best food in the world? Oh, opening act. He once told me that it can’t get Yeah, yeah. Thelonious attracted me because he was the opposite of what a classical piano player is supposed to be. A classical piano player is supposed to follow certain rules; a classical piano player is supposed to play the piano in a certain way; a classical piano player is supposed to study a certain repertoire— and he didn’t. So he basically created his own universe, and he was the king of it. Tell us about JALC’s collaboration with the Italian Cultural Institute. This is part of JALC’s strategy to incorporate different types of jazz from all around the world. That’s the idea. We like to pair with other institutions, so we’re working with the Italian Cultural Institute to make this happen. yeah. For me there’s no other place like that. any better than that. What do you see as the connection between food So, still on the subject of dreams, if you could play and music? When we make music, it’s just like with any guy, who would it be? Sonny Rollins. preparing a meal. You have ingredients, you What would you play? Anything he wants. have quantities, and you have balances of Anything. flavors. What’s your song? “Stardust” by Hoagy What do a great chef and a great jazz musician Carmichael. have in common? They study structures. The elements are different—we deal with notes, And if you were any dish? What would be your and they deal with tastes, but at the end we’re flavor, and why? That’s a tough one! O.K., spaghetti with olio, aglio, peperoncino (oil, trying to balance elements. garlic, and spicy red pepper.) The explanation So, you’re working with Wynton Marsalis, who goes beyond words. It’s just, that’s what’s up. was your idol, and so you’re sort of living the That is the A to Z of human life. It’s pasta, it’s dream. I’m living the American dream. spicy, it’s got garlic. Everything is there. Let’s say you could have a dream dinner, anybody Hear Antonio perform songs from his album “Rush Life” There are a lot of Italian jazz musicians from the you want, to sit with, eat with, play music with… [l[ho J^khiZWo Wj Hej^i Ij[Wa^eki[ ,.& 9ebkcXki south, like yourself. Why do you think that is? who would you choose? Quincy Jones. First, Avenue), and Friday, October 16th, for Italian Jazz Days They’re closer to Africa. They’re deeply into traditional and folk music, and this music is very connected to the traditional music of North Africa. How are jazz and Mediterranean music related? First of all, they’re both folk traditions. Jazz is the highest, the most sophisticated form of it on Earth. www.brindiamochannel.com because we share the same birthday. March at the Italian Cultural Institute. 14th. He had my dream job, which was to O.K., let’s do some food and music pairing—a musical meal. Give me a song for every course. ANTIPASTO: Blues. Because that’s the beginning of every show. It’s a form that’s very easy to understand. PRIMO: Something from the American songbook. “Night and Day” by Cole Porter, maybe. SECONDO: That’s the main course. It’s got to be a ballad like “Body and Soul.” DOLCE: That’s a Latin song. Dolce’s sweet. Sweet is a taste that everybody likes. Everybody likes Latin music because it has that dancing groove. “My Little Suede Shoes” by Charlie Parker. Brindiamo! • 2009 13 featured restaurant LUZZO’S Get a Slice of Italian Life in the East Village Whether you are a nostalgic Italian homesick for familiar flavors and the bustle of your local pizzeria, or a curious connoisseur of Italian cuisine, Luzzo is a place you ought to know about. Opened years ago by a man I like to call Mr. Charlie, but who is better known as Mr. Luzzo, the restaurant space was originally a bakery (panetteria MAKING A PIZZA WITH MICHELE PIZZA “SLICES” According to Michele, the first ingredient in Italian), and the wood oven, which was built in for a perfect pizza is passion! Obviously. 1905, is one of oldest wood ovens in New York But let’s talk about crust. He uses flour, City. In 2004 Michele Iuliano took over the water, salt, sugar, and extra-virgin olive oil. restaurant with his wife and all-Italian staff, with Then, to make a classic Margherita, he starts the goal of creating an authentic Neapolitan Italian with a sauce made from fresh San Marzano experience in New York. In fact, the restaurant tomatoes. Spread it thinly, and be sure to attracts a largely Italian clientele, which speaks for leave a border. Next, he tops it with cubes of the quality and authenticity of the pizza it offers. mozzarella di bufala. Fresh basil leaves are the final touch, and the pizza goes in the oven for just 80 seconds! For undecided palates, Michele makes a pizza divided in quarters and folded into little Pizza as we know it today may be related to something called schiacciata, a flatbread served _d'-#Y[djkhoDWfb[i"cWZ[m_j^ garlic, salt, and lard and baked in a wood oven. Tomato sauce on pizza came about after Christopher Columbus discovered the New World and the Spaniards imported tomatoes from Peru. LUZZO’S (''<_hij7l[dk[ New York, NY 10003 j$('(*-)-**- www.luzzos.com 14 2009 • Brindiamo! COMING SOON Luzzo’s ''/+9ehfehWj[:h_l[ M[ijXkho"DO''+/& j$+',((('&*( B[][dZiWoij^Wj_d'../"HW¢W[b[ Esposito, a pizza maker, prepared the flatbread for King Umberto I and his wife, Regina Margherita, on a visit to Naples. To honor the royal couple, he made a pizza with the colors of the Italian flag, using tomatoes, basil, and mozzarella for the red, green, and white. rolls, like miniature calzones. Simply cut an x in the center of the dough circle, and use any toppings you like. Roll up, pinch, and bake. Michele serves these mini calzones with a heap of fresh salad in the center. A crowd favorite at Luzzo’s: The Arugula Pizza Brindiamo! • 2009 15 featured restaurant Don Alfonso Ristorante Livia and Alfonso Iaccarino come from a long line of culinary families and are dedicated to preserving the flavors of the Sorrentine Peninsula, arguably one of the most beautiful spots in Italy and the world. While both of them have traveled extensively, the place, they raised the simple fare to their they maintain a respect for their origins, and highest standards. All ingredients come from today with the help of their sons Ernesto and the surrounding area of Sant’Agata sui Due Mario, they offer guests a refined experience Golfi, and are drizzled in local extra-virgin of Mediterranean haute cuisine. In 1890 Alfonso Costanzo Iaccarino, the grandfather of the present-day Alfonso, olive oil in an effort to draw out the essence of each flavor—and, in doing so, offer guests the ultimate taste of the region. returned to Sant’Agata sui Due Golfi after To ensure such quality, Alfonso began years in America. The location is stunning, at farming a plot of land in nearby Termini a point between the Gulf of Naples and the (Punta Campanella), where he cultivates his Gulf of Salerno on the west coast of Italy. Both own organic produce. The proof is on the bodies of water are renowned for their coastal palate. Dishes like Don Alfonso spaghetti and vistas and charming islands. Lush green hills rigatoni, Lucano goat cheese with fresh herbs, are dotted with lemon and olive trees, and sweet-and-sour lobster, and coffee-infused there is a constant sea breeze. The region also zabaglione cream are only a sampling of this flaunts an infamous culinary heritage, rich sophisticated menu. with seafood, citrus, and vibrant flavors. When Grandfather Alfonso opened his Livia and Alfonso’s passion for food and wine has been recognized worldwide; in fact, Don small restaurant over a century ago, he had Alfonso received two Michelin stars from the no idea that it would go on to become one respected guide and continues to top the list of the most respected establishments in the of essential stops on the Italian gastronomic country. When Livia and Alfonso took over tour. www.donalfonso.com 16 2009 • Brindiamo! featured chef Odette Fada Odette Fada has always known that she wanted to become a chef. She grew up in the city of Brescia, 51 miles from Milan in the Lombard region of northern Italy, and has fond memories of cooking with fresh ingredients from her family’s garden, and using her mother’s own jams to make crostate (fruit tarts). “I always loved cooking and baking for my five brothers and sisters,” she says. At just 13 years of age, and already passionate She joined San Domenico NY as executive chef about a career in the culinary arts, Odette in 1996 and still heads up the kitchen today. persuaded her parents to allow her to attend Odette was nominated for the 2003 Best Chef the Instituto Professionale Alberghiero in in New York City Award by the James Beard Iseo, the region’s most prestigious culinary Foundation, has been named one of the best and hospitality institution. After graduation, Italian chefs by Wine Spectator, and was the Odette helped her brother open a trattoria winner of the 1999 White Truffle Competition. in Brescia. She went on to work at some of Odette’s refined style perfectly matches the Italy’s highest-rated restaurants, including culinary philosophy at San Domenico NY. Ristorante Castello Malvezzi in Brescia, Her focus on primary ingredients results in Ristorante Vissani in Baschi, and Convivio creations characterized by intense, pure taste. Vissani in Rome. While working as chef de cuisine at Convivio, Regional Italian dishes are presented with her trademark simplicity and elegance. Odette met the late Italian restaurateur Mauro In December 2001, Odette was a featured Vincenti, whose Rex Il Ristorante in Los chef during the Gourmet Experience weekend Angeles had already become one of the most organized by Gourmet magazine at Copia: the famous and innovative Italian restaurants in American Center for Wine, Food, and the Arts America. Vincenti was so impressed with her in Napa, California. She was paired with Alain that he asked her to come to California and Ducasse for a demonstration, alongside other take over as his chef. For the next five years, notable chefs like Nobu Matsuhisa, Rocco Odette introduced her style of refined regional diSpirito, Ferran Adria, and Thomas Keller. cooking and earned Rex accolades from both customers and the media, including the Los Angeles Times’ highest rating. She also created high-profile menus for the entertainment Odette is already considered one of New York City’s best Italian chefs, and yet her culinary career path remains largely ahead of her. industry, such as the Grammy Awards dinners www.sandomeniconewyork.com for over 1,000 guests. On June 10, 2009, NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc. hosted its third annual NASDAQ OMX Food & Restaurant Industry Forum, including panel discussions about current and future trends of the food and restaurant industry sectors. Ornella Fado, creator and hostess of the television program Brindiamo! –“A Toast to the Finest Italian Restaurants” on NYCTV, interviewed such international chefs as Kerry Heffernan of South Gate and Odette Fada, executive chef at SD 26. Ornella also spoke at the NASDAQ closing bell ceremony, before panel participants. Brindiamo! • 2009 17 brindiamo! news Brindiamo! TM Fabulous Favorites CEO ORNELLA FADO OK Productions 2109 Broadway, 8-104 New York, NY 10023 Per concludere in dolcezza ed in bellezza—here are my favorite things. www.brindiamotv.com 6. 1. [email protected] Brindiamo! launched the first 2. cooking-demo dinner night on LWb[dj_d[Êi:Wo(&&/"WdZj^[ night was a great success. We are hosting a Brindiamo! Night the Brindiamo! Special Thanks: Frank De Lucia, Milly Perez, the OK Productions crew, and our great chefs. STEPHEN SHADRACH is the official photographer of Brindiamo! and Ornella Fado. first Friday of each month, so stay tuned 3. jeb[Whdceh[WXekjekhd[njkfYec_d] cooking-demo dinner. This is a great opportunity to cook, learn, and enjoy dinner with new friends and Ornella Fado. We at Brindiamo! always welcome 4. our friends with great prosecco 5. (Italian champagne), and then our chef 1. Necklace Nicole Romano has a very beautiful collection of jewelry this year—so bold! 2. Tea cakes They talks about the menu of the night and look just like gold bricks, and I store them in my kitchen thinking, “I have gold in my cabinet!”—gold for my teaches us how to make delicious recipes, stomach. When I first tasted this tea cake, I thought that it was the most delicious cake I had tasted in all from homemade pasta to filet mignon, my life. At the new restaurant Caravaggio, they offer tea cakes as a party favor after your delicious meal. 3. to molten chocolate cake. Gone With The Wind is one of my favorite movies. Margaret Mitchell wrote only one novel in her life, but this novel became one of the most beloved movies of all time. There is so much drama, romance, passion, cruelty, and cynicism, but Scarlett’s proclamation, “After all, tomorrow is another day!” always leaves the audience with a simple, optimistic thought. Vivien Leigh played a perfect Scarlett. 4. This Alessi egg holder is perfect for holding your egg, and also to help you keep smiling while Watch Brindiamo! every Saturday at 10:30 a.m. your are eating. 5. Tinker Bell I just love Tinker Bell. I love her pretty face and WdZ/0)&f$c$edDO9JL$ her huge personality. I love that she always speaks her mind, and it’s not always easy when you are such a little fairy. 6. Ray Ban sunglasses I find Ray Ban Visit us online at www.brindiamotv.com and www.brindiamochannel.com. sunglasses to be very special, and they fit me just perfectly. Brindiamo!ON AIR Join me, Ornella Fado, for an unforgettable immersion into the authentic cuisine and culture of the magnificent Amalfi Coast. Visit wineries and beYWb\Whci"WdZ[d`eo]h[WjYkb_dWho[nf[h_[dY[i at world-class restaurants, like Don Alfonso, featured in an episode of Brindiamo! Editor-in-Chief PAMELA JOUAN Managing Editor ANNIE SHAPERO Assistant Editor STEPHANE HENRION Copy Editor KELLY SUZAN WAGGONER Contributing Editors ANNIE SHAPERO PAMELA JOUAN Photography STEPHEN SHADRACH Advertising [email protected] Marketing Director KATHERINE PAYNE HLP 321 Dean Street Suite 1 Brooklyn, NY 11217 Printed and bound in the U.S.A. AMALFI COAST TOUR 18 2009 • Brindiamo! HLP makes every effort to ensure that the information it publishes is correct but cannot be held responsible for any errors or omissions. © 2009 All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited. “One of A merica’s top 25 Caber net Sauvignon producers of the l ast 25 years” – Wine & Spirits M agazine, October 2007 2 0 0 6 W i ner y of t he Y e a r %JTUSJCVUFECZ8+%FVUTDI4POT-UE)BSSJTPO/:XKEFVUTDIDPN Reserve Tier: Crafted from the finest vineyard sources, the Reserves represent the pinnacle of winemaking at Geyser Peak Winery. Superlative grapes are transformed into the seductive and boldly expressive Reserve wines, a process that commences with a rigorous selection in the vineyard and continues through fermentation, blending, and aging. Geyser Peak Reserves are noted for their depth of character and complexity and are enjoyed by oenophiles the world over. Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon: Ascentia Vineyard, which sits on rolling hillsides of diverse soil types and sun exposures, and Walking Tree Vineyard, on an Eastfacing slope just above the winery, are cultivated year-round by a dedicated team and form the core of the winery’s Cabernet program. The vines yield grapes of intense berry fruit aromas and flavors and richly textured palate structures. w w w.w j d e u t s c h . c o m