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Entertainment Finance Lifestyle News NYC

OUTDOOR HOLIDAY VILLAGE OPENS AT METROTECH COMMONS 

Brookfield Properties opens the Holiday Village at MetroTech Commons in Downtown Brooklyn with 25+ local vendors

 

Today, Brookfield Properties opened its first-ever Holiday Village at the MetroTech Commons in Downtown Brooklyn. The open-air holiday market will host more than 25 local vendors with an emphasis on artisans, contemporary fashion, accessories, home goods, beauty products, jewelry, plants, and artisanal distillers.

The Holiday Village is located in the center of the Commons, directly in front of the Christmas tree. The opening today will feature a live ice carving as well as a tree lighting ceremony.

The market will be open at the following times and dates:

Wednesday, December 2nd: 11 am- 8 pm
Thursday, December 3rd: 10 am- 7 pm
Friday, December 4th – Sunday, December 6th: 11 am- 7 pm
Thursday, December 10th – Sunday, December 13th: 11 am- 7 pm
Thursday, December 17th – Thursday, December 24th: 11 am- 7 pm

Many of this year’s vendors are based in Brooklyn and make their goods locally. Some of the 25+ featured vendors include:

OUTDOOR HOLIDAY VILLAGE OPENS AT METROTECH COMMONS 
OUTDOOR HOLIDAY VILLAGE OPENS AT METROTECH COMMONS

Beach House Towels, a vibrant and colorful brand with an obsession for all-natural Turkish textiles. They offer 100% natural towels, robes, throws, and blankets perfect for the beach, your home, and anywhere in between.

Bellewaera, a zero-waste fashion company that makes its handmade garments in Brooklyn through sustainable practices.

Brooklyn Bar, a small business of bar soaps, bath & body, and scented candles handcrafted in Brooklyn.

Cooper’s Daughter Spirits at Olde York Farm, a woman-owned and family-operated distillery sourcing Hudson Valley ingredients to make seasonal spirits.

Gone to the Dogs, a BIPOC, women-owned, social enterprise focused on well-designed, fun, and stylish pet goods through an ethical and sustainable business model.

JoyVanna, a Brooklyn based all-natural candle company

Mama Lam’s, a Queens-based company that hand cooks and jars small batches of delicious, mouthwatering Malaysian style curry paste and hot sauce.

Planter Rob Store, a socially conscious plant shop that offers indoor plants and merchandise that encourages engaging conversations around social justice.

Pop Pins NYC, a fashion pin line dedicated to celebrating black pop culture.

Red Bridge Studio, artfully designed textiles and ceramics.

MetroTech’s entire complex totals approximately 5.5 million square feet

Featuring street-level retail space and the three-acre, centrally located greenspace MetroTech Commons. In Brookfield’s signature placemaking style, MetroTech Commons offers year-round activities for tenants and the community to enjoy. Programming at MetroTech Commons includes outdoor yoga classes, movie nights, concerts curated by BAM, and the popular Brooklyn Brews – a celebration of the local community featuring Brooklyn breweries, music, lawn games, and more.

MetroTech is centrally located with direct access to the R, A, C, and F trains and just minutes away from the 4, 5, 2, and 3 trains, with quick access to Manhattan and many other Brooklyn neighborhoods.

About Brookfield Properties

Brookfield Properties is a fully-integrated, global real estate services company that provides industry-leading portfolio management and development capabilities across the real estate investment strategies of Brookfield Asset Management — a global alternative asset manager with over $515 billion in assets under management.

 

Photo by Elly Fairytale from Pexels

Categories
Featured News NYC

Pete Hamill The Quintessential Journalist 1935-2020

My literary hero is Pete Hamill

by John Esposito

His storied career as an acclaimed journalist, iconic newspaperman, editor of both the New York Post and the New York Daily News, best selling novelist, superb essayist, respected educator, lecturer, and screenwriter leaves behind a rich and enduring legacy that the journalism world can only hope to emulate. For many, he was the living embodiment of New York City who chronicled the life of New Yorkers more than anyone of his generation.

Pete Hamill served as my major influence and inspiration in pursuing a writing career. I loved his newspaper columns, novels, nonfiction, memoirs, and countless magazine essays.

He never forgot his Brooklyn roots and wrote powerful pieces that identified with working-class men and women including the suffering and downtrodden in our society.

 

Pete Hamill The Quintessential Journalist 1935-2020

Mr. Hamill’s writings are filled with honesty, real nostalgia, not sentimental drivel, and never syrupy sweet. He was proud of the writing craft and served it with great honor. He was immensely proficient as a hard-hitting tabloid columnist reporting on international and national events, local city politics, America’s urban riots of the 1960s, murders, strikes, the 1966 civil rights march, the Vietnam war, conflicts in Nicaragua, Lebanon and Northern Ireland, and the September 11, 2001 terrorists attack at the World Trade Center, as much as he was an equally skilled generalist in writing and conversing about the likes of Jackie Robinson and his beloved Brooklyn Dodgers, New York City history, Diego Rivera and painting, jazz, Ernest Hemingway, Jackie Gleason, Madonna and Howard Cosell, a love of newspapers, newsrooms, typewriters and deadlines, Milton Caniff and comic-book heroes, famous women in his life: Jacqueline Onassis, Shirley MacLaine, and Linda Ronstadt, talking boxing while mentoring Jose Torres, the education of Mike Tyson in prison, Greek coffee shops, the Great American Songbook, Paul Sann, editor extraordinaire, the indispensability of public libraries, drinking at the Lion’s Head, Billie Holiday and the blues, life on the Brooklyn stoop and playing stickball on streets empty of cars, the artistry of Bob Dylan and John Lennon, living in Mexico, Ireland and Rome, friendship with Robert Kennedy, the Knicks, sobriety, the art and cultural treasures to be found in museums, and the voice and tenacity of Frank Sinatra.

Pete Hamill The Quintessential Journalist 1935-2020
Pete Hamill

I had the good fortune of knowing Pete Hamill since 2001.

Our association resulted in five published interviews and book reviews for Downtown, My Manhattan, a memoir (2004), a required reading in certain New York City public schoolsthe best-selling novels, North River (2007) and Tabloid City (2011); the short story compilation, The Christmas Kid, and Other Brooklyn Stories (2012), and the national best-selling book essay, Why Sinatra Matters (1998 and re-released 2015). His masterpiece novel, Forever (2003), has taken its place among the great works of historical fiction, with New York City as the centerpiece. This tome is destined to stand alongside his most famous best-sellers, A Drinking Life (1994) and Snow in August (1997).

At the time of his passing on August 5, 2020, Pete Hamill, age 85, was writing a memoir about growing up in his native Brooklyn, where he had recently returned to live after achieving fame and notoriety in Manhattan and becoming a legendary journalist. It was to be titled, “(Returning to) The Old Country.” Mr. Hamill’s affinity for New York City, his proud Irish-American heritage, and proclivity to be the best possible newspaperman one could be, were only surpassed by the love and devotion he had for his wonderful and supportive wife, Fukiko Aoki Hamill, and the large, close-knit family that adored him.

Pete Hamill will be remembered best by those who knew him as a regular guy, a kind-hearted gentleman, who was always patient and giving of his time to young writers. I have never known anyone who disliked the man.

His politics differed from mine at times but that never mattered to me.

It was all about the writing, friendship, and respect. Mr. Hamill had a long list of friends and admirers. He was someone with whom you felt an immediate connection, whether meeting him for the first time on the Lower Manhattan streets or from reading his books and columns. In many respects, he personified the everyman, but we all knew he was so much more. When final days came calling for certain celebrated individuals who received high marks in various fields of renown, their greatness was sometimes embellished and exaggerated. That is unquestionably not the case when considering the merits of Pete Hamill. He is truly an American gem, whose contributions as an outstanding journalist and an admirable man will always be cherished.

In tribute to Pete Hamill, the name of my website, “Piecework Journals,” www.PieceworkJournals.com was borrowed liberally from the book title of his excellent work, Piecework (1996), a collection of brilliant essays. Thank you. Pete.

Byline: John Esposito is a freelance journalist based in New York and New Jersey. His work has appeared in various newspapers and magazines including USA Today, The New York Times, The Star-Ledger, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Greenwich Time, Stamford Advocate, The Record, Downtown-NYC, New Jersey Newsroom, The Irish Echo, UNICO, and Rosebud. Mr. Esposito maintains a website at www.PieceworkJournals.com

 

Categories
Fashion Featured NYC

First Women of Color Samira Nasr to lead US BAZAAR

Samira Nasr named editor in chief of the U.S. edition of Harper’s BAZAAR, overseeing content strategy and development across the brand’s print and digital platforms.

With the Black Lives Matter movement we are seeing a huge surge in visibility, support, and awareness for #BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color), a new term helping to build a collective community, promoting the inclusion of all people of color.

The percentage of black hires in the U.S. grew from 4.8% in 2018 to 5.5% in 2019, a .7% increase, and female employees didn’t fare much better, dropping from 33.2% of global hires in 2018 to 32.5% in 2019.

In a statement this week Hearst President and CEO Steven R. Swartz and Hearst Magazines President Troy Young announced their first-ever black Editor in Chief of the company’s iconic fashion magazine, Harper’s Bazaar.

This announcement could not come at a better time, it’s time that equitable hiring practices become the norm, rather than the exception. Personally, I feel that we should not stop until the percentage of BIPOC hires is equal to white and we must move to lower the large gaps in income, create more promotional opportunities, and advancement for all.

Samira Nasr will commence her new role as Editor in Chief of Harper’s BAZAAR on July 6, 2020, reporting to Hearst Magazines Chief Content Officer Kate Lewis.

Samira is the first Black editor in chief in the history of the 153-year-old publication.

In her own words, “Fashion and BAZAAR are synonymous,” Nasr says. “It is a tremendous privilege to be entrusted with moving this legacy brand into a new era—one that is colorful, inclusive, and celebrates the beauty of fashion on every platform—while carrying on the tradition of innovative art direction and great style that the BAZAAR audience loves so much. The most beautiful part of working in magazines is the teamwork and creating a community. I can’t wait to get started.”

 

New Editor in Cheif Samira Nasr U.S. Harper's BAZAAR
Samira Nasr with Anita Hill from IG

 

Recently Samira was the executive fashion director at Vanity Fair, managing and directing the fashion department and all fashion content, including styling for their iconic covers such as the 25th annual Hollywood issue, the spring style issue featuring cover star Lupita Nyong’o, and the May 2019 issue with Nicole Kidman.

Harper’s BAZAAR is a leading American fashion brand with a point of view that is hugely influential in the U.S. and around the world,” Young says. “Samira’s important voice will continue to evolve the brand’s distinct position as a style touchstone for fashion’s most discerning.”

 

New Editor in Chief Samira Nasr U.S. Harper's BAZAAR
Samira Nasr U.S. Harper’s BAZAAR

 

Coming back to Hearst Magazines, Nasr held the role of fashion director at ELLE for five years. Prior to that, she was style director for InStyle.

In addition to working with top fashion magazines in publishing, Nasr has also styled campaigns for fashion and beauty brands, including Laura Mercier, Tiffany & Co., Tory Burch, Estée Lauder, L’Oréal, Clarins, and more.

After earning a graduate degree in journalism at New York University, she went on to begin her career in fashion working as an assistant to Grace Coddington, former creative director of Vogue.

BAZAAR has always presented the world of fashion through a unique lens—smart, vibrant, adoring. Those words could not better describe Samira, who understands and delights in the world of fashion, but has a thoroughly modern and distinctive take,” Lewis says. “She innately understands the BAZAAR woman, because she is the BAZAAR woman: passionate about fashion, culture, and the issues that matter today. I know she will make something magical here.”

Born in Montreal, Canada, Nasr currently resides in Brooklyn, New York, with her son.

Categories
Featured Living Nutrition

Cooking Matzah in 18 Minutes by Rachel McMinn

Passover is one of the Jewish holidays that stands out for me because my family always gathered together for a large and delicious Seder.

 

Everyone brought their signature dish to the table, and we saw the return of the hard as a rock Passover rolls that we swallowed down with gallons of water once a year. The daffodils, tulips, and hyacinth that grew in our front yard were always cut into a few vibrant bouquets and put on the seder table, heavy with the scent of spring. I’d always be helping out in the kitchen as my mother prepared matzoh ball soup, roasted turkey, chopped liver, charoset, bitter herbs – and all the trimmings. Even though I wasn’t the youngest, I always carefully practiced the four questions – just in case.

 

Cooking Matzah in 18 Minutes
Photo by Rachel McMinn,

Yet, for whatever reason, we never made the mainstay of the holiday: the matzah. Each year we would buy box after box of the stiff cardboard-like matzah that fills the shelves every March and early April. This year I decided to start the tradition of making fresh matzah with my young daughter so that it can become one of the memories she carries with her when she hears the word “Passover.”

 

So, because the Jewish people had only 18 minutes to prepare their bread before they fled from Egypt, we made our matzah in only 18 minutes, too. Here’s how you can make it in your home.

 

 

Cooking Matzah in 18 Minutes
Photo by Rachel McMinn

 

Tools: Large bowl, baking sheet or pizza stone, rolling pin, flat surface to roll dough on, a fork, measuring cups

Ingredients: 1 cup flour, 1/3 to ½ cup water, a sprinkle of flour for your flat surface

Directions:

  1. Preheat your oven to 500 degrees
  2. In a large bowl, mix your flour and water together by hand. It should form a dough that sticks together well but is neither sticky nor too crumbly. Add more or less water to achieve this.
  3. Place your ball of dough on your flat surface and knead the dough briefly to ensure it is the right consistency. Start rolling out your dough until it is pretty thin, less than ¼ inch.
  4. Use the fork to poke holes in the dough, all over. Make sure the holes go all the way through the dough. We don’t want the dough to bubble or rise at all.
  5. Place your dough onto your baking sheet or stone and place in the oven.
  6. Cook for approximately 5-7 minutes and then carefully flip the matzah to ensure both sides are cooked. Continue cooking for about another 4-5 minutes until the sides are browned and the top is lightly browned.
  7. Let your matzah cool and enjoy!

 

Cooking Matzah in 18 Minutes
Image credit: Rachel McMinn

 

Cooking Matzah in 18 Minutes
Image credit: Rachel McMinn

 

Rachel McMinn is an early childhood educator at Buckle My Shoe Preschool in Tribeca, who has taught the young 2year old children for almost nine years. She holds a Masters in Early Childhood Education from Hunter College and a Writing degree from Pratt Institute. She lives in Brooklyn with her daughter, post-production & screenwriting husband, and two attention-seeking cats.

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Categories
Beauty Featured

GIVING BACK, BEAUTIFULLY

Written by Léna Andrè

This article ran in an earlier issue of Downtown Magazine

GIVING BACK, BEAUTIFULLY

Fré’s Protect Me, Purify Me, and Revive Me are designed for active lives, giving you the clear complexion and healthy glow of freshly washed skin. Purify gently cleanses; Revive infuses with vitamins, moisture, and restores collagen; Protect is an ultra-light SPF 30 formula. With every set purchased, Fré will plant an endangered argan tree in Morocco. freskincare.com

 

Laura Mercier’s Face Illuminator highlighting powder is made with prismatic pigments and is buildable for as much—or as little—shine as you want. Each September, Mercier creates a limited-edition product with 100% of the proceeds going towards the Laura Mercier Ovarian Cancer Fund. lauramercier.com

 

Hot Lips 2 in Secret Salma by Charlotte Tilbury is a sultry deep rose plum shade inspired by Salma Hayek, and has 3D glowing pigments, and a cashmere matte finish. The company has pledged £1 million from the line’s sales to Women for Women International. charlottetillbury.com

 

 

Brooklyn Botany’s Sweet Orange Scrub is fragrant with sweet orange essential oil in a base of Dead Sea salt, coconut oil, and aloe vera juice. Brooklyn Botany is dedicated to revolutionizing the skin care industry by delivering botanicallyrich skincare in the purest state possible. brooklynbotany.com

 

 

Chantecaille’s Philanthropy Cheek Shade Bee (Emotion), is a featherweight formula in golden coral that provides the perfect summer glow, and supports the Xerces Society in their efforts to protect bee habitats. chantecaille.com

 

 

GIVING BACK, BEAUTIFULLY

 

Lush Charity Pot is a deliciously-scented body lotion with ylang ylang and rosewood oils in a cocoa butter base. The company sources its ingredients from the Sustainable Lush Fund, which supports regenerative agriculture. 100% of the proceeds of Charity Pot go to small, grassroots organizations working in environmental conservation, animal welfare, and human rights. lushusa.com

 

Lancôme’s Matte Shaker Liquid Lipstick comes in 35 shades, and has a sponge tip for perfect application. The new formula does not dry out your lips, and imparts rich, ultra-pigmented color. Lancôme supports St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital with a yearly campaign as well as events such as the St. Jude Teen Formal, which provides makeovers for teen patients. lancome-usa.com

 

Stylecraft’s Scrubs Gentle Sonic Cleansing Brush is a high-tech way to exfoliate your skin every day, with six gentle settings for speed, pressure, and sonic vibration. A portion of every sale benefits Art in Action, a school arts program for children from kindergarten to eighth grade. stylecraftus.com

 

 

 

Thrive’s Headliner Lipstick and Lip Filler Longwearing + Plumping Lip Liner deliver intense hydration and impactful color in a 100% vegan and cruelty free formula. For every purchase, Thrive donates to one of over 50 organizations that empowers women. thrivecausmetics.com

 

 

 

GIVING BACK, BEAUTIFULLYCapri, by Skylar is a blend of bergamot, neroli, and citrus notes evocative of the island for which it is named. Skylar supports Step Up, a non-profit that provides mentorship for underprivileged girls across the country. skylar.com

 

 

 

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Categories
Bars Dining Restaurants Uncategorized

Get Sauced at SAUCED: A Wine Bar for Wine Lovers

Sauced, Four Men Hospitality’s newest Brooklyn hotspot, lives up to the hype. Lauded by oenophiles and novice wine lovers alike, this little wine bar casts a seductive spell. Led by celebrated winemaker Jordan Veran, Sauced perfectly plays off his expertise, offering exquisite wines at an affordable price in a comfort-meets-cool environment. Veran not only studied winemaking throughout France, but also served as the wine manager at L’Avant Comptoir in Paris—the renowned restaurant from Yves Camberorde. But it isn’t just his knowledge of wine that makes Sauced successful, it’s a belief in creating a space for the local community to enjoy, over and over again. And with a 150 bottle list and 20 wines by the glass, tastings will never get old—especially as these are the types of wines you will seek out, time and time again. The accompanying food program is nothing to scoff at either—chefs Facundo Kairuz, formerly of Chez Ma Tante, and Henry Lu, of Loosie’s Kitchen and formerly of Llama Inn, design the repeatedly delicious menu. While dishes such as their Cured Pork Belly Pintxos and Celery Root Puree and Chicharron rotate daily, Sauced’s charcuterie and cheese program is consistent (and consistently amazing). And as the summer months fast approach, Sauced-goers can expect fun-filled nights with sizzling D.J.’s, karaoke nights, and outdoor ping pong games. If you need any more reason to visit Sauced, it’s great wine and culinary indulging with a conscience. The venue operates on a zero-waste food program with a focus on sustainability overall. See it for yourself! Sauced is located at 331 Bedford Ave., in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

Photograph by Brianna Balducci.

Downtown: We are beyond excited about Sauced. Can you tell our readers the concept behind this new wine bar?

Damien del Rio of Four Men Hospitality: Sauced is simply a neighborhood bar that serves up good wine and fun vibes. Our goal is to show people a good time while making wine accessible.

Downtown: How are you (Four Men Hospitality) so deftly opening such a large series of hotspots in Williamsburg, seemingly one after another, with such ease?

DDR: There is nothing easy about what we do. As a job, it is one of the most demanding, but the fact that we don’t necessarily see it as a job, but more of lifestyle, is what makes it look easy.

Downtown: How does Sauced fit into your repertoire of offerings (Loosie’s Kitchen, Etiquette, Loosie Rouge)?

Photograph by Brianna Balducci.

DDR: As with our other venues, Sauced lives to create a place for community. It is, however, the first to focus fully on wine. Our intention is to bring a space to the neighborhood where friends and future friends can gather and enjoy good wine and food at an approachable price point.

Downtown: How did you begin to work with celebrated winemaker Jordan Veran on this project?

DDR: Jordan is a friend that shares our same philosophy toward wine and community. From the time we met in Paris it was mutually understood we would eventually work together on something. This time it happens to be a bar. Soon enough it may be a vineyard. Who knows? This is just how the universe works. Good energy begets good energy.

Downtown: What do you love about his contributions to Sauced? What drew all of you to working with him?

Photograph by Brianna Balducci.

DDR: Jordan has a natural approach to sharing his knowledge of wine. It comes from his culture and education, he studied oenology and worked on vineyards in Australia, where his passion for winemaking took shape. When he returned to France, he managed L’avant Comptoir in Paris, a wine bar with over 500 references and no wine menu. The vineyards were in his backyard, the winemakers are his friends. Culturally speaking it’s a very different approach to how we as Americans experience wine. This is what he shares with our clients and what compelled us to work with him on this project.

Downtown: We can vouch for the quality of the wines, each one we tried was absolutely delicious and exactly tailored to what we each wanted. How are each of the wines chosen? Do all of you agree on them?

DDR: Jordan chooses, we just pour and drink. Most of the winemakers we serve he knows personally. This is what makes the experience so intimate.

Downtown: What regions does Jordan mostly source the wines from?

Photograph by Brianna Balducci.

DDR: Many come from France but are not limited to the country. We have wine from Greece, Italy, Corsica, Austria, and Spain. Let’s just say 95% of our wines come from Europe.

Downtown: What about Sauced caters to burgeoning and dedicated oenophiles?

DDR: We serve good juice at very low markups. You can come and try several wines in a night and not walk away feeling guilty that you’ve spent your rent money here.

Downtown: We loved your food pairings. Can give us some highlights on what kind of food platters and appetizers you offer at Sauced?

Photograph by Brianna Balducci.

DDR: Our food offering has a focus on small plates, again at an affordable price point. Unless we have a guest chef, our menu items never exceed $10.

Downtown: How did you begin to work with Facundo Kairuz? What are some of the dishes he contributes that we should try? Who sources your cheeses?

DDR: Facundo is a friend of a friend. As we were starting to grow our business in the area our mutual friend introduced because she felt he would be a great fit for what we are looking to create. Our menu changes both daily and weekly depending on what is coming into our other places. What we do stay consistent with is our charcuterie and cheese program which is sourced between Food Matters Again and our friends at Sogno Toscano.

Photograph by Brianna Balducci.

Downtown: Tell us about the space: what do envision for Sauced now and in the summer?

DDR: Sauced is just starting to take off. We expect more deejays, crazy karaoke nights, and outdoor ping pong in the summer.

Downtown: We love that you are implementing a zero-waste program across all your business ventures, Sauced included. How are you implementing this program? Why do you think it is so important in this day and age?

DDR: All of our menu development takes a very conscious approach to food waste and sustainability. With three different operations, we are able to create different menu offerings for each venue from derivative products that would otherwise be considered waste. In this day and age, we have a responsibility to do so and it works to our advantage when done correctly.

Downtown: What would you like neighborhood locals and wine lovers alike to know about Sauced?

DDR: We offer Happy Hour flights from 5–7:  Three wines for $21! We also offer Happy Hour sparkling from midnight to close at 50% off.

Photograph by Brianna Balducci.