Categories
Culture Dining Featured NYC

Fall Festa with Eataly Downtown

Fall is in the air and let’s get ready for all the festivities at Eataly Downtown, begin!

As the temperature begins to drop and the leaves change color, we’re welcoming the autumnal season with a Harvest Food & Wine Festa! Join Eataly on Friday, October 22nd from 6:00 to 8:00 PM at Eataly Downtown as they celebrate the bountiful fall season all’Italiana.

Showcasing more than 20+ wines from various regions of Italy, their Festa will be centered in the heart of their stunning marketplace where you can eat, drink, dance, and learn directly from Eataly’s producers and experts. Enjoy live music while you sip along and indulge in a selection of authentic Italian bites. From fresh pasta and savory paninis to housemade cannoli, this Festa is the perfect way to celebrate the end of the season – get your tickets now!
Fall Festa with Eataly Downtown
Note: this is an in-person event, and tickets will be limited allowing more space for social distancing. Proof of vaccination is required to attend this event.

 

It’s simple – 

1. GET YOUR TICKETS

These events sell out quickly, so be sure to buy your tickets online in order to secure your spot. All-access bracelets are $75.

2. PICK UP YOUR ALL-ACCESS BRACELET

On the day of the event, you will receive an all-access bracelet at check-in, which will allow you to explore the various stations located throughout our marketplace. Early check-in will open on their second-floor landing at 5 p.m.

3. TASTE AWAY

There is no limit – taste as many dishes, wines, and cocktails as you’d like. If you like a particular dish or drink, go back for more!

4. LEARN WITH EATALY’S EXPERTS

Curious to know more about a dish or wine you’re tasting? Just ask their many experts during the event. We believe the key to learning about food is tasting it, and there is no better place than one of our favorite Italian locations, Eataly Downtown.

 

 

Fall Festa with Eataly Downtown

 

This event takes place at Eataly NYC Downtown, located just steps away from the Oculus at 4 World Trade Center, 101 Liberty Street, Floor 3, New York, NY 10007. Questions? Contact us at 212.897.2895 or dt-privatedining@eataly.com.

Categories
Bars Dining Featured NYC Restaurants

Downtown Highlights: BiCE Cucina – Here, You’re Family

BiCE Cucina Opens a New Location in Soho

In this episode of Downtown Highlights, we visited BiCE Cucina, an authentic Italian restaurant that brings together hospitality and Northern Italian flavors. BiCE has two locations in New York City, Midtown and Soho. In this episode, we visited BiCE Cucina in Soho, their newest location.

BiCE Cucina Soho

The Story Behind BiCE

BiCE’s story starts about 90 years ago. It all started with Beatrice Ruggeri, also know as Bice. She shared her talent and love for food with her family and friends while growing up in Northern Italy. Impressed by Bice’s food, her friends and family encouraged her to open a restaurant, or “cucina”. She decided to listen to her loved ones and in 1926, she opened her own Trattoria in Milan with her husband, Gino.

Bice and Gino’s sons, Remo and Roberto, took over the business in 1970. They opened the first location in the United States in 1987. This restaurant is in Midtown, between 5th and Madison Avenue. BiCE quickly gained popularity around the world, opening locations in Palm Beach, Tokyo, LA, Paris, and Chicago over the span of three years. BiCE has even gained the attention of some major clientele such as the Kennedys. The legacy of BiCE continues on through Raffaele Ruggeri, Bice’s grandson.

Here, You’re Family

Raffaele’s goal for BiCE Cucina is clear: to make every guest feel welcome like they’re family. When you visit our restaurant “you’re coming into our home…and when you come into someone’s home, our home, you do everything you can to make sure you take care of your guests,” Raffaele Ruggeri explains to us. This goal is definitely being met, as we felt like we were home while eating here. As soon as we walked in the door, we felt welcome here by Ruggeri and the friendly staff.

Authentic and Light Cuisine

The Tuna Tartare

BiCE Cucina works hard to not only serve delicious food but food that is healthy and light. “We hope to create a beautiful restaurant where the food is really impeccable,” Ruggeri explains. BiCE Cucina has a wide variety of vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free options so everyone can find a dish that they love.

Everything that we tried at this restaurant was absolutely delectable. The food, including the pasta dishes, was incredibly light. In this episode, we tried three appetizers, the Tuna Tartare, Octopus Carpaccio, and Baked Eggplant Parmigiana, and two pasta dishes, the Tortellini and a gluten-free version of Tagliolini Aragosta. BiCE Cucina is not only a restaurant that serves delicious, healthy food, it is an experience. BiCE truly has something for everyone to enjoy. We will definitely be paying BiCE a visit again soon.

For more Downtown Highlights episodes, click here.

Categories
Chefs Dining Featured Restaurants

Downtown Highlights: Senza Gluten – 100% Gluten-Free

Welcome back to Downtown Highlights on Gluten-Free

The series in which we take the opportunity to “highlight” businesses in NYC, like the dedicated gluten-free Italian eatery, Senza Gluten.

As a result to this unpredictably tumultuous year and a half we’ve had, brick and mortar locations like this one have taken a hit thanks to the pandemic.

It is important to us here at Downtown to make sure that we’re serving the places that serve us. 

For this episode of Downtown Highlights, we paid a visit to the esteemed Senza Gluten in Greenwich Village. The name Senza Gluten has Italian origins, of course, and translates to “without Gluten”.

 

Tiramisu

 

The restaurant was created in 2014, by Chef Jemiko Solo.

Chef’s goal in opening Senza was simple: to ensure a 100% gluten-free atmosphere. Guests can enjoy a gluten-free meal, devoid entirely of gluten or any risk of cross-contamination. You won’t find a spec of gluten inside the entire facility. 

Our own host of Downtown Highlights, Marley Gifford, has celiac disease herself, visiting the facility was a euphoric experience as it is for many visitors of Senza Gluten with gluten intolerances.

 

Calamari

 

A Restaurant Made for those with Gluten Intolerances – Gluten-Free

Chef Solo does not have any gluten intolerances himself. However, many of his friends and relations suffer from various food allergies.

Chef made it his mission to help his friends, and all clients enjoying their food, and life, to the fullest.

He dedicates his work to ensure that his guests can again enjoy delicious dishes that disguise themselves as tasting just like the glutinous dishes we know and love.

Having the ability to eat glutinous dishes allows Solo to taste his dishes with an advantage, and gets him closer to the real thing.

The gluten-free possibilities don’t stop at the restaurant. Just down the street from the restaurant is the Senza Gluten Cafe & Bakery, which was opened in 2018.

 

Shortbread Cookies

 

This location allows the restaurant to expand its menu of different kinds of bread, pastries, and other baked goods. It is there that they also bake some of their savory dishes, like their arancini and mushroom ravioli, both Senza must-try.

 

Gnocchi

 

Pay a visit to Senza Gluten and bring both your gluten-free friends and ones that aren’t. We bet they’ll barely be able to tell the difference.

To see the last Downtown Highlights episode, click here.

Categories
Dining NYC

INDOOR DINING IS RETURNING TO NEW YORK CITY

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT INDOOR DINING.

 

The day restaurants citywide have been waiting for is finally here. Governor Cuomo announced Wednesday that indoor dining can resume in New York City on September 30.

 

INDOOR DINING IS RETURNING TO NEW YORK CITY
Malibu Farms Seaport

 

The announcement comes with a list of restrictions and rules intended to prevent further spread of COVID-19. Restaurants will start at 25% capacity. If the citywide infection rate stays low, restaurants can increase their indoor capacity to 50% on November 1.

But if the infection rate goes back up, restaurants may be forced to shut down again.

Still, the announcement is good news for local restaurants. For months, establishments have been pleading with the mayor and governor to release a plan for a return to operating indoors, particularly since the infection rate has remained below 1% for the past month.

 

INDOOR DINING IS RETURNING TO NEW YORK CITY
Da Claudio

 

The service and hospitality industry has suffered considerably due to COVID-19, and the push for indoor dining was a push for its continued survival. The pandemic has been especially tough on bars and restaurants, an industry that recently employed more than 315,000 New Yorkers but has been operating at a fraction of its usual business since the city reopened. Thousands of establishments, including some of New York’s most storied diners and watering holes, have shuttered for good or shouldered a huge financial burden since the pandemic started.

 

INDOOR DINING IS RETURNING TO NEW YORK CITY
The Fulton

Here are the restrictions for when indoor dining service relaunches at the end of the month:

 

INDOOR DINING IS RETURNING TO NEW YORK CITY
Nobu Downtown

—25% occupancy limit 

—All patrons must get their temperature checked at the door 

—At least one member of each party must leave contact information for potential contact tracing if an infected person is linked to the establishment 

—Service must end at midnight 

—No bar service will be allowed; table service only 

—Masks must be worn by diners at all times except when seated

—Tables must be 6 feet apart 

—Establishments must adhere to enhanced air filtration, ventilation, and purification standards, though specific details on these standards are not yet available

INDOOR DINING IS RETURNING TO NEW YORK CITY
Senza Gluten

It’s unclear how many bars and restaurants closed so far, but a New York Times report in August said as many as one-third of small businesses may have been lost for good. Expanded outdoor dining, which was introduced in June, is currently slated to last through October — it has been a hit with patrons, and some hope it will get extended indefinitely. Still, industry leaders have complained, the governor’s restrictions and enforcement have been too severe, causing even more financial problems.

 

INDOOR DINING IS RETURNING TO NEW YORK CITY
Cut, New York

 

If you’re planning to do some indoor dining, remember to wear your mask when talking to your server and tip generously. It’s going to be a long recovery.

 

Downtown Alliance 

photo: iStock

Categories
Dining Featured Indulgence NYC Restaurants

A Southern Italian Eatery in Union Square Raises the Bar

As I write this article, my mouth is watering, and I find myself wishing that I was  sitting down for another meal at Pasta Eater, a new Southern Italian eatery in Union Square.

One of Downtown’s long-time editors Jackie Grupe, and I had the distinct pleasure of accepting an invitation for a tasting at this 6-month-old newcomer, Pasta Eater.

 

A Southern Italian Eatery New York, Raises the Bar
Pasta Eater New York, NY

 

We arrived around 7 PM to a lively, upbeat restaurant, with large windows looking onto the street, and warm, friendly staffers greeted us. That’s usually a clear indication that we are off to a good start. Once seated, we were introduced to Chef Luigi Cetrulo after our lovely chat, we decided to have Chef prepare his favorite dishes for us to sample.

Every dish outdid the one before, all the way to the very last bite.

A few of the dishes we enjoyed: Moscardini in Umido, Slowly cooked baby octopuses in San Marzano tomato sauce, Paccheri pasta with octopus ragù, crunchy black olives, and crumbled Amaretto biscotti, and for dessert, Cheesecake Con Nutella e Pistacchio.

 

A Southern Italian Eatery New York, Raises the Bar
Agnello Scottato Lamb chops marinated with lemon and thyme
A Southern Italian Eatery New York, Raises the Bar
Slowly cooked baby octopuses in San Marzano tomato sauce
A Southern Italian Eatery New York, Raises the Bar
Cheesecake Con Nutella e Pistacchio

For pasta experts, the pasta at Pasta Eater is freshly made in their kitchen. There is a detectable difference from dry to fresh pasta, no matter how much you pay for packaged pasta. Serve it fresh, that’s my motto!

 

A Southern Italian Eatery New York, Raises the Bar
Pasta Giusto

 

The item which impressed me the most were the lamb chops. I am usually not a fan of lamb, therefore I rarely order it for fear that I will be disappointed. Chef Luigi, you have made me a lamb chop lover.

DTM: Tell us about the chef  – where is he from and when did he know he wanted to be a chef?

A Southern Italian Eatery New York, Raises the Bar
Chef Luigi Cetrulo

PE: Luigi Cetrulo (33) was born in Foggia (Apulia) and was immersed in the pasta tradition from a very early age when on Sunday he would help his mother, Antonietta, cook the Sunday “sauce” that would accompany an all pasta lunch for the family. He soon worked as a chef for the best hotels and restaurants in Italy, Switzerland, and NYC where he moved in 2013. The Pasta Eater concept was born when he began working with Giusto Priola in 2017. 

DTM: Where else have they worked in NYC?

PE: The owner, Giusto Priola (from Misilmeri, a small village near Palermo in Sicily) moved to New York from Italy more than 20 years ago. He started his career as a restaurateur with the opening
 of the wildly successful “Cacio e Pepe” (2004), he was the first to bring the renowned Cacio e Pepe pasta to the NYC tables. He later opened a highly acclaimed restaurant “Cacio e Vino” (2006) which became the emblem of Sicilian Cuisine in NYC. Giusto boasts 20 years of experience in the food business, which has led him to stand out as an Italian culinary pioneer.

 

A Southern Italian Eatery New York, Raises the Bar
Owner Giusto Priola

DTM: Tell us about the front of the house and who runs it, where do they hail from?

PE: The most important aspect of “the front of the house” is the fact that we have a pasta machine which makes fresh pasta every day. For the types of pasta that cannot be made with the pasta machine (i.e.orecchiette) people will notice that a pasta maker will be continuously making pasta by hand in front of the restaurant’s guests and in the restaurant’s window.

“The place was buzzing without being loud. There was very much a neighborhood feel. The food was simply prepared, highlighting the main ingredient as the star of the show—grilled octopus, tuna carpaccio, lamb chops. All delicious!” Jackie Grupe

DTM: How did they come together to create this amazing Southern Italian restaurant, and why did they choose this location?

PE: Luigi and Giusto met serendipitously in 2017 and immediately began wondering where their shared passion for food would have taken them …

DTM: Everyone seated around us appears to be regulars, and some even come in twice a week. They had nothing but remarkable things to say about the food, service, and the restaurant. Why do you think Pasta Eater has taken off? In just 3 months, it is standing room only!

PE: We believe that if the quality of the food we serve is high, like something we would serve to, say our family, our guests will leave satisfied and they will come back. We would never sacrifice the quality of our ingredients to save a few cents. We only serve the best and we do it with love. As if our dishes were made for a family member and that’s why our guests come back. This concept is also reflected in the way our staff behaves. We want all the people who visit our restaurant to feel at home – 360 degrees. They have to taste it in the food and feel it in the way they are treated. This is the secret to our “success”.

 

DTM: We’ve heard that other businesses before Pasta Eater never made it in that location, does this concern you?

A Southern Italian Eatery New York, Raises the Bar
Pasta Giusto

PE: Not at all. We are on a very busy street in the heart of Union Square’s district. There is no reason to be concerned.

We believe in what we do and we hope people who don’t know us will find us randomly or come to us through word of mouth. The important part is that they come back once they have tried us.

 

DTM: How did you come up with the unusual name, Pasta Eater? 

 

A Southern Italian Eatery New York, Raises the Bar
Pasta Giusto
Pacchero Al Ragú Di Polpo

 

PE: The name “Pasta Eater” was invented by Giusto Priola, who’s extremely grateful to America for what it did for him. “Pasta” is an Italian word everyone in the world knows. “Eater” is an English word, easy to remember. The name is understandable by everyone: PASTA EATER. Apart from being easy to remember it puts the person eating in the spotlight and not the restaurant itself, which is very different from all other restaurants’ names.

 

A Southern Italian Eatery New York, Raises the Bar
Fresh Pasta – Pasta Eater

 

Andiamo a Pasta Eater, remember this name, you too will find yourself craving a meal at this superb Southern Italian eatery. Pasta Eater is here to stay, run don’t walk to book reservations, and tell them Downtown Magazine sent you! (Pasta Eater, 9 East 17th Street, 212.627.5910)

 

Categories
Dining Featured Restaurants

Taste Summertime in Italy at Sorbillo on the Bowery

Tomatoes are emblematic of two things: Italian food and summer. Sorbillo, which comes from renowned Napolitan Pizzaioli Gino and Toto Sorbillo who also operate eight restaurants in Italy, is ready to stuff you silly with pizza, pasta, and antipasti.

Photo by Liz Clayman

Sorbillo is known for offering Gino Sorbillo’s signature Neapolitan pizzas, but now the restaurant is expanding the menu to include more than just pies. Guests can choose from a variety of new pastas such a homemade Black Squid Ink Tagliolini with sautéed shrimp, clams, calamari, cherry tomatoes, and white wine; Spaghetti alla Carbonara with Guanciale and egg yolk; and Parmigiana Di Melanzane with eggplant, mozzarella, San Marzano tomatoes, and Parmigiano Reggiano. Other additions include pan-seared Salmon in herb butter served with mashed potatoes and sautéed baby spinach, Rib-eye al Profumo di Rosmarino over a bed of grilled vegetables, and Saltimbocca alla Romana—chicken rolled with prosciutto and served with smoked mozzarella and a creamy mushroom sauce. 

Photo by Liz Clayman

Obviously you’ll still be ordering a few signature pizzas. The dough is handmade with Caputo type 0 organic flour then fermented using natural yeast so it is flavorful and easy to digest. Almost all of the pies feature San Marzano tomatoes, but we also love the Margherita Gialla with yellow cherry tomatoes or the Portofino with pesto, Mozzarella Bufala, and Datterino tomatoes. Sorbillo’s pizza is some of the most authentic and delicious in the city, make sure you try it for yourself this summer!

Sorbillo
334 Bowery
Sunday–Thursday: 11:00 AM – 10:30 PM
Friday–Saturday: 11:00 AM – 11:00 PM