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Dining Featured NYC Restaurants

Downtown Highlights: Tea and Sympathy A bit of British New York City

We’re sympathetic to those who have not been here for a proper British Tea. We had the pleasure of experiencing a traditional British comfort food restaurant, appropriately named Tea and Sympathy. There are basically two types: “low” tea and “high” tea. 

Scone with Raspberry jam and clotted cream

Anna Maria Russell, the 7th Duchess of Bedford and a dear friend of Queen Victoria, can be accredited with introducing the concept of “afternoon” or “low” tea to upper-class households. Her butler at her request, to bring only tea, bread, butter, perhaps even a few scones to her chambers around 5 pm, the time of day when we all feel slightly peckish, but not ready for a full meal. Eventually, the Duchess, enjoyed this on a daily basis, to the point where she invited her friends, essentially creating a new social ritual.

High Tea, the origins of afternoon tea show clearly it was the preserve of the rich in the 19th century. For workers in the newly industrialized Britain, tea time had to wait until after work. By that hour, tea was generally served with heartier dishes, such as meat, fish, egg dishes, substantially more than just tea and cakes. Workers needed sustenance after a hard day of labor, this meal is more often hot and filling, accompanied by a pot of good, strong tea to revive them from a day’s work.

No need to travel all the way to London for this authentic British ritual, Tea and Sympathy serves classic dishes including Scones with Clotted Cream, Welsh Rarebit, Bangers, and Mash, Sunday Roast Beef and Yorkshire Pudding, and more.

We had the sheer pleasure of pairing our delights with the UK’s choice for sparkling wine from Chapel Down exclusive only to Tea and Sympathy here in New York.

After years of being served at Buckingham Palace (including the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s wedding), Chapel Down was introduced to NYC with a partnership with the quintessential British restaurant Tea & Sympathy in Greenwich Village. 

Tea & Sympathy has been serving traditional British comfort food to the West Village since 1990. Their traditional menu offers classic British favorites including Afternoon Tea, Bangers and Mash, and even the beloved Shepherd’s Pie. Now customers can pair the experience with a bottle of either Chapel Down’s rose or Bacchus-based Brut sparkling wine.

Chapel Down Rose Sparkling Wine
Scrumptious Fish and Chips from A Salt and Battery

Tea & Sympathy opened its doors in 1990 and has been a staple for Brits living in the US and us American’s who truly love all the UK’s favorite foods. Next door you can find A Salt & Battery one of the best fish and chips shops in all of NYC!

Tea & Sympathy Store

Afternoon Tea

High Tea

In this episode, Sam enjoys a superb British Afternoon Tea. This meal came on a two-tier platter with tea sandwiches including egg salad, chicken salad, and tuna salad sandwiches.

These sandwiches were delicious, comforting, and light.

Sandwiches the British way

This lunch also included various cakes and baked goods like the sticky toffee pudding cupcake and scones with clotted cream. We also had the pleasure of trying Tea and Sympathy’s signature black tea. It was delicious!

Gluten-Free Lunch with Tea

Marley tried the Absolutely Fabulous Salad, one of the gluten-free lunch options at Tea and Sympathy This mixed green salad is complete with chicken, avocado, a hard-boiled egg, bacon, tomatoes, and a delicious vinaigrette dressing.

GF Salad with Chicken, Egg, and Bacon

Tea and Sympathy are currently searching for a new place to purchase gluten-free bread from. They’re hoping to offer a gluten-free Afternoon Tea option soon!

Visiting Tea and Sympathy felt like visiting London. It’s an experience you don’t want to miss. When you visit, be sure to check out the adorable shop next door that sells British treats, teapots, and more.

Sunday dinner Roast Beef and Yorkshire Pudding
Tea & Sympathy famous car

For the last episode of Downtown Highlights, click here.

Categories
Music

Album of the Year: Civilian By Frank Tovey

2019 has been all so overwhelming, hasn’t it? Being trapped in this infinity loop of crisis and pundits, all at our fingertips? We mindlessly scroll through the drone of Facebook, greedily lapping up salacious headlines and fretting over our future. Is anything changing for the better? Has the ennui always existed? Humanity loves believing in a simpler past. The deluge of programming and movies rebooting old material and old scripts is played out so heavily now one wonders if innovation is allowed anymore, or if we’re just going to keep pacifying ourselves with cozy familiarity. The 1980s seem as much of a utopia now as the 1960s did when The Wonder Years premiered in 1988.

Frank Tovey saw right through the excess, saccharine and glamour of the Reagan/Thatcher era, and, much like the soothsayer of Julius Caesar, went ignored by the masses. There was no room for nostalgia here.

Fad Gadget, photo by Florence Doorgeest

Frank Tovey’s proto-industrial band Fad Gadget, the first signed to Mute Records, boldly steered electronic music into the realm of industrial sound. Eschewing the stationary, robotic playing of his early synthwave contemporaries, Tovey shocked audiences with intense art performances: ripping out body hair, crowd surfing, being tarred and feathered, climbing rafters with a microphone stuffed in his mouth, often seriously harming himself with head gashes, black eyes and snapped tendons.

Fad Gadget albums were an eclectic mix of electric drills, drumming, Orff-inspired vocal arrangements, musique concrete, and shrieks. Tovey’s message and notorious reputation clearly threatened the suits; his lyric material found more sympathetic bedfellows with The Pogues, the Kinks, and Billy Bragg, by way of Einstürzende Neubauten and Iggy Pop. Tovey’s message was highly confrontational, bitterly anti-commercial, and deeply vulnerable. As most pop stars crooned about romantic love spats, Tovey operated on a different plane: warning humanity of the dangers of late capitalism.

Photo by Anton Corbijn

Despite never making Top of the Pops, Frank Tovey still wielded tremendous influence in the UK and West Germany. A fledgling Depeche Mode were entranced by his early performances, and signed to Mute soon after. The entire industrial genre owes him a tip of the hat, with artists like Skinny Puppy, NIN, and Marilyn Manson snatching the relay baton.

By the late 80s, however, Tovey pulled an about-face with his sound. He tucked the chaotic Fad Gadget in bed for a long nap, picked up an acoustic guitar, and penned brand new protest folk as Frank Tovey. After 1986’s Snakes and Ladders, which retained many sonic elements of Fad Gadget, and a side project called MKultra, he released the extraordinary Civilian in 1988.

The sonic switch confused his fans, the press and even his own label, but his fundamental message remained. The irony was, Tovey had always been a folk musician, albeit one with a synthesizer. His lyrics delved into humanity, the human experience, and the Everyman existing in a technologically-fueled fascism. Much like Bowie, Tovey found inspiration from various collaborators.

“It was never about transitioning from electro to folk with Frank,” says John Cutliffe of The Pyros, with whom Tovey would collaborate on his final albums. “It was about songs and sound and the musicians he surrounded himself with. His influences had always been eclectic, and his love of manipulating sounds electronically inspired so many, but that is also what we were doing with the more traditional folk and rock instruments. We would push the limits of what they could do and play…Frank didn’t care if it was a banjo or a synth. The song mattered, and the layers of sound we could use to draw out the emotion of the song was the only thing that was relevant.”

Over thirty years later, Civilian remains as prescient as ever as it slips into 42-minute slow motion tumble of Western civilization’s house of cards. This was not a world Tovey wanted for his beloved children.

Civilian is a hypnotic channeling of rage at corporate greed and corruption. The album opens with New Jerusalem, a screeching cacophony of crowd chants and a droning, nightmarish recounting of a fascist police state and street violence. It is a bleak, paranoid scene of innocents falling victim to the militaristic whims of “big enterprise.”

Ultramarine bitterly attacks the Hollywood glorification of the American military complex:

Liberation comes

In jeans and Coca-Cola

Liberty this bullet’s

Got your name on it

You make the films

And you’re making history

Napalm burger bars

Popcorn victory

Tovey darkly closes Ultramarine with his own Wonder Years-style monologue, recounting a childhood memory of watching a Buddhist monk die by self-immolation on live television. So much for the veil of nostalgia.

From The City To The Isle of Dogs examines the gentrification of London neighborhoods already present by 1988, the continuing erasure of local culture, and the demise of the middle class. The jaunty banjo number Bridge Street Shuffle wryly predicts the horrific spectacle of human suffering via reality television.

I’ve got two tickets, front row seats
For the riverside
We can take a picnic
And watch the suicides

The Brotherhood lambasts the corrupt patriarchal power of fraternal societies. Diana echoes the wrenching pleas of infidelity forgiveness. Unknown Civilian explores the post-war home front, and the silent suffering of shell-shocked veterans.

Civilian as a whole is a horrifying, clairvoyant glimpse at Western society on the precipice of complete breakdown.

In 2002, Frank Tovey’s earnest heart suddenly gave out, and he shuffled off this mortal coil. By then, however, he had already tilled the parched earth for the greedy saplings of a post-9/11 dystopia. Too bad no one heeded his warnings when Civilian was first released, but it deserves a fresh listen. You won’t find a more perfect soundtrack to close out these chaotic 2010s.

Mute Records would be wise to re-release this treasure. It’s time. Fad loves you.

Bridge Street Shuffle:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jRD6ba1JPZo

Ultramarine:

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Categories
Fashion Featured

A Look at London Men’s Fashion Week Days 1 and 2

London Men’s fashion week featured models and bloggers alike. Here are some of our favorite looks from Days 1 and 2!

Photographs by Matthew Usukumah

Above, Richard Biedel poses in front of Truman Brewery wearing vintage Edward Sexton, Adam of London and Gaziano & Girling (left) and in front of Haberdasher’s Hall wearing Edward Crutchley, Percival Menswear and Grenson Shoes (right).

Here, Edmond Kamara from Cuts for Him sports a stunning pink suit by M&S with pockets done by Eton Shirts also in front of Truman Brewery.

Categories
Fashion Featured

Christian Cowan’s Vibrant Collection Brings the Fun to Fashion Week

Christian Cowan brought the party to NYFW! Playing off his club kid days in London and combining that with inspiration from strong New York City women, he created a vibrant and modern collection. With watch embroidered pieces and bright neon checkerboard tulle, his one of a kind techniques wowed this season. The embellishments were to die for, and I know so many Downtown moms who would love to rock the heels that he designed with Giuseppe Zanotti. Remember the ones that Cardi B wore with the special watch strap? They are already a go-to for stylists and celebrities but are now recreated with a fluorescent coating, giving them a more urban feel. The energy at this show was off the charts! – Marry Wassner, @downtownchicmoms

Categories
Featured Travel

Five Scenic Pools to Cool Off in This Summer

When the snow starts to melt and the birds start to chirp, our minds inevitably wander upon the prospect of some good, old-fashioned summer fun. Here are five of our favorite scenic pools around the world to cool off in:

Gansevoort NYC Scenic Pool

  1. Gansevoort Meatpacking NYC, New York

Featuring 360° views of Manhattan and the Hudson, and located in our very own Meatpacking District, Gansevoort’s rooftop pool is a trendy spot to soak in some rays. Don’t forget to grab a cocktail from their Plunge Rooftop Bar + Lounge.

The Curtain Hotel Scenic Pool

  1. The Curtain, London

East London’s Shoreditch neighborhood is full of hip spots, but The Curtain Hotel raises the bar with a Moroccan-inspired, scenic rooftop pool. Open to hotel guests and club members, the pool is heated and open year-round, with a myriad of food and drink options by their resident bar & restaurant, LIDO.

Hollywood Proper Residence Scenic Pool

  1. Hollywood Proper Residences, Los Angeles

Nothing quite says LA like a scenic rooftop pool in Hollywood. Sat atop 21 stories, the rooftop of the Hollywood Proper Residences features all-around views of the Los Angeles skyline, live music events, poolside cabanas and plenty to eat & drink at the Filifera bar and lounge.

Immersion Spa Scenic Pool

  1. Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa, Atlantic City

Soaring 32 stories above the streets of Atlantic City lies the two-story Immersion Spa at The Water Club, The Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa Group’s $400 million luxury accommodation. The Water Club features five different pools, including an infinity pool 300 feet above sea level and a window-lined Lap Pool offering some of the most scenic views in the city.

Panamericano Hotel Scenic Pool

  1. Panamericano Buenos Aires, a member of Worldhotels, Buenos Aires

Neighboring the Obelisk and the Colón Theatre in downtown Buenos Aires, Worldhotels’ Panamericano hotel offers up a hefty dose of luxury cool atop their checkerboard-tiled luxury rooftop pool, featuring some of the best views the capital city has to offer.

Photos courtesy of properties

Categories
Dining Events

Wine & Whiskey NYC Launches at Pouring Ribbons

This week marks the official launch of Whiskey & Wine NYC. On Wednesday, Mar. 29, the pop-up cocktail club open the doors to its launch event at Pouring Ribbons

Downtown met up with Owen Meyer, founder of Wine & Whiskey NYC, for some questions about Wine & Whiskey and his second concept Liquor Lab; Liquor Lab was recently tested out in Chicago and will soon launch in New York City.

Photo courtesy of Northsideinnovation.com

Can you tell me little more about the background of how the concept behind Whiskey & Wine NYC started?

Owen Meyer: There is a huge market of people out there who are very interested in learning about craft cocktails and the evolution of the industry but are intimidated by it. [Wine & Whiskey NYC] offers a platform for people to come experience cocktails without the pressure of picking a cocktail off a menu or not knowing what the ingredients are and then use it as a stepping stone to go out to a great cocktail bar and order what they have learned to like.

What has been the hardest part about starting up Whiskey & Wine NYC? And what’s been the best?

OM: I think the hardest part is getting the message through to people that we aren’t trying to be a substitute for going to their favorite bar. We are simply a middle man between those bars and the curious consumer who wants to learn something through an experience. People should look at W&W and say, “I can go to a cool private pop-up event, learn about some cocktails, meet some fun people, have a little bite to eat.” You really can’t beat that deal for the value and experience.

How do you go about creating events? Do you seek out the bars and bring the bartenders and members, or how does it work?

OM: We seek out established and upcoming bartenders and great private locations, then we create a one-time menu with that bartender, put up the info for our members to see and then we all meet at that location for the event. We’ll start out with 1-2 events per month and scale up accordingly to the point where we are doing several each month including brunch events and events out east in the summer with some of our partnership companies. 

Wine & Whiskey NYC wants to create a platform where bartenders can test out menus and tell stories – how exactly do you do you ensure this?

OM: That really lies within the bartenders we work with. There are so many talented bartenders out there and these events put the focus directly on them. It allows talented bartenders to test out some new — and proven — things that really tell their story in their own liquid way.

Who are your members? How do you ensure a variety in members?

OM: The whole membership thing isn’t meant to be cheesy or exclusive. It just means that you’re a quality type of guy or girl who seeks out cool experiences and the membership fee comes with free tickets to offset the cost. So, it really is just a barrier to entry to ensure we have a good group of people with similar interests. Nothing more.

Why introduce the concept in New York City?

OM: Why not? New York is the capital of the world, it’s the greatest city on earth — some will argue London, but I argue London is a city that sleeps. W&W is a concept that really, only works where you have people that seek out new and exciting things, and that has New York City written all over it.

What are you most excited about for your upcoming Grand Opening Launch?

OM: Working with the Pouring Ribbons guys for a location, Freddie Sarkis and one of our favorite craft distilleries of all time, CH Distillery. Some of us are from Chicago, so this launch event is sort of a Chicago to NYC theme with Freddie and CH.

I heard a little bird singing about bringing Liquor Lab to New York City. Can you reveal anything about that?  

OM: Yes! Liquor Lab is a concept we piloted in Chicago for a year to sort of test the waters and it was amazing. We are currently closing a round of funding needed to expand across the country as well as open our flagship Liquor Lab location here in New York City. This concept is like nothing you’ve seen or done before, and there are so many different experiences that we offer at the space so we are really excited to get the HQ Lab opened!

Wine & Whiskey NYC’s annual subscription fee of $175. The membership includes invitations to secret, exclusive pop-up events with an exciting menu of drinks and bites. You can learn more about the upcoming events on their website and social media. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xfh4NFE8KbI

Photos: Courtesy of Wine & Whiskey