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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.
Categories
Art Culture Events Featured Movies

Rooftop Films: What to Know, Where to Go, and How It Went

I did not know what to expect from the Rooftop Films Summer Series. I had the core facts: I was going to the William Vale in Williamsburg to watch an indie film, Pink Wall, on the building’s roof. Rooftop Films shows these kinds of indie films by up-and-coming filmmakers and uses proceeds from its events to support the future projects of those filmmakers. Between those facts were a lot of little questions, the kinds of questions you do not think about until you are a couple of blocks away from the venue.

Dinner was my first concern, so I took care of that beforehand. If you are ever in the area, Mister Dips is a burger and fries place operated out of a slipstream trailer parked by the building. Their “Dirty Dipped Waffles” fries are messy but oh-so-worth-it. I am glad I ate; dinner is not part of the Rooftop package.

The line at the William Vale moved quickly, and soon I found myself on the rooftop level. It’s a bar–popular, gorgeous in glass, and designed for a view. I moved through and found my way up a flight of stairs to yet another rooftop level, this one covered in chairs. The view of Manhattan across the water was stunning. I was early, so I spent some time admiring the view. The event was sponsored by Ketel One Vodka and Corona, with drinks provided, which didn’t hurt the experience.

The audience settles in for Pink Wall as the sun sets on Manhattan. Credit: Rooftop Films – James Baksh

I made my way to a seat as more guests arrived, grabbing a bag of Lays Poppables (another sponsor) as I did. There were a lot of couples, which doesn’t surprise me. Something changes about a movie date when it takes place 200-plus feet above the ground in the open air as the sun sets on New York City. There were also plenty of groups; the group next to me had been dragged there by one of their number who loved films but didn’t want to go alone. Everyone was excited.

The program opened with a short speech by Programming and Festival Coordinator Maria Rhodes, introducing the Rooftop Films event and musical guest Faten Kanaan, a Brooklyn-based performer. Kanaan uses a vintage synth to loop music into ever-more-complex melodies, which she does live, a performance helped by the wind whipped up on the rooftop.

Finally, the movie. Pink Wall was terrific: a scrambled retelling of the rise and fall of a six-year relationship in six moments. The combination of vivid storytelling and the wide space between each moment are reminiscent of memories, hazy and out of order, and let each viewer–myself included–see something of themselves in the relationship. Pink Wall manages to capture the intimate parts of relationships that don’t make it into most films: fights ended in moments of shared absurdity, awkward moments at dinner tables, and those fights that feel like something’s changed even if it won’t become apparent for years to come. It’s something you’ll never see in a mainstream movie theater and a compelling argument for both independent films and for projects like Rooftop Films.

A last shoutout to Pink Wall Director Tom Cullen and star Jay Duplass, who were both present after the film for questions. Finishing Pink Wall and then hearing from the minds who created it was a special treat.

Pink Wall Director Tom Cullen (left) and star Jay Duplass (right) answer questions after the film. Credit: Rooftop Films – James Baksh

If you’re a cinephile, a tourist, in a relationship, or just out on a date, check out Rooftop Films. The highrise rooftop indie film experience feels uniquely New York and offers a chance to take your couch date outdoors in a manner you can’t replicate elsewhere. Films continue through the summer and can be found on the Rooftop Films website.

Categories
Art Culture Featured

BEYOND THE STREETS Extends Beyond Your Typical Art Exhibit

BEYOND THE STREETS has packed its bags from the streets of Los Angeles and traveled to the East Coast to make its debut in one of the art capitals of the world, New York City. Known as the premier exhibition for graffiti, street art, and everything in between, BEYOND THE STREETS decided to take over the city as it’s the epicenter where this art form prevailed. Taking over 100,000 square feet and two floors in the new 25 Kent building in North Williamsburg, the exhibition showcases original artworks, paintings, sculptures, photography, and installations from more than 150 artists from around the world, including the likes of Shepard Fairey, Vhils, Takashi Murakami, MADSAKI, Maya Hayuk, Lady Pink, among others.

DABSMYLA, an Australian husband-and-wife visual artist duo, partnered up with Amelia Posada from Birch and Bone, a floral company in Los Angeles, to do a breathtaking floral installation at BEYOND THE STREET’s exhibit in Los Angeles last year. This year, the couple decided to partner up with Posada to create another floral installation, but this time with a specific theme – unintentionally perfect in time for Pride month.

“We’ve been working on a series of paintings that are a rainbow series like this, with the painting, it’s like gradient, yellow down to blue. And so we wanted to make this installation, something similar to that. First, we collected all the flowers we had, counted them all together, and then worked a mathematical equation on how to add more flowers so that it would make the gradient. We got all the flowers in L.A. prepared and then we were in New York to set up the installation.”

Artists such as MADSAKI and Maya Hayuk talked about their humble beginnings in discovering their connection with art. MADSAKI, a Japanese-American, was born in Japan but moved to the suburbs of New Jersey around the age of six. Upon arriving and growing up, he couldn’t speak much English, partly because he didn’t understand what was happening around him. It wasn’t until he made the connection of drawing as a form of communication.

Artwork by MADSAKI. Images provided by BEYOND THE STREET

“I started to pick up the pen or crayon or whatever, and draw anything. If I wanted to tell the kids to look at the airplane, I can’t say airplane. So I drew an airplane. That’s how I really picked up drawing because I never drew before. But when I learned that I can communicate with drawing to people without speaking the language. I was like ‘Oh this is cool, I don’t even have to talk.”

By his mid-twenties and beyond, he’s worked with painting and focusing on working with cartoonish images from his childhood and a combination of words, some containing profanity.

Hayuk, on the other hand, start diving into street art when she was hanging around New York and the SoHo area was just beginning to be built and look promising. She always enjoyed working with large wax oil sticks. “We were painting like weird words and clowns and whatever, so I wouldn’t call it street art. It was more, ‘I’m bored, let’s go painting’,” she said.

Artwork by Maya Hayuk. Images provided by BEYOND THE STREET

However, one thing that Hayuk is very adamant about is refusing to use the term ‘street art’ or putting any descriptive word before ‘art.’

“I mean when you call art, art then it’s art. And you don’t have to put the word street in front of it necessarily. If you look at a group show, it doesn’t say street art on it. It’s just a group of artist names and then you see the association between them.”

One thing that Hayuk pointed out was the differences and dynamics of the actual exhibit. As BEYOND THE STREETS New York promotes itself as a graffiti and street art show, many of the artists don’t fit that particular mold, which is probably why the insert an “and beyond” in the advertising of their brand. She did joke around at the end and inserted that she hates the term ‘urban art’ even more.

There were many other standout pieces at the exhibit, including an honorary Beastie Boys section with archival pieces designed by Cey Adams and small toy-size rail carts repurposed with graffiti plastered on them. An additional bonus to the show was a pop-up shop on the second floor that featured refreshments and merch by many of the artists featured at the show.

BEYOND THE STREETS made its mark on extending the expectations of any art exhibit you’ve ever been to.

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For more information and visitation to the exhibit, check out https://beyondthestreets.com/pages/visit to learn more.

Categories
Bars Dining Featured

Lemon’s at Wythe Hotel is the Place to See and Be Seen This Summer

Stepping out of the elevator into Lemon’s rooftop space at the top of Wythe Hotel is actually stepping into the 1960’s world of Signora Lemon, a fictional housewife who threw lavish and legendary lunches turned cocktail parties at her home in Emilio Romagna, Italy. Just as her home did, Lemon’s will be home to luminaries from the creative and hospitality worlds, a group that now includes you, because once you hear about Lemon’s you won’t be able to stay away. Vintage Nectarine-hued damask wallpaper adorns the venue’s interior walls, complemented by sunset colored cushions on walnut wooden banquettes all meant to evoke coastal Italian soirees.

The space is the brainchild of a dream team of New York hospitality superstars. Jon Neidich and Golden Age Hospitality (Acme, The Happiest Hour, Slowly Shirley) conceived the concept with acclaimed chefs Aidan O’Neal and Jake Leiber (Chez Ma Tante) along with beverage gurus Jim Kearns (Happiest Hour, Slowly Shirley) and Christine Kang (Soho House) to create the ideal warm-weather haunt. Neidich has brought in local Williamsburg cult DJ legends Chances with Wolves to handle all music and programming ensuring that the space will have an old school vibe primarily from vinyl and 45s.

The food menu includes snacks like salumi, raw oysters, and stracciatella with olive oil and bread that will look familiar to anyone who has lazed away a summer afternoon in the cafes of Italy. Options like grilled calamari, sugar snap peas, and tuna carpaccio on cracker crisps run with the light-eating coastal vibe, while a selection of Italian-style toasted sandwiches, topped with ingredients like ham and tomato, offer a few heartier nibbles. 

The beverage program features a selection of low ABV spritz-like cocktails inspired by the culture of Italian Aperitifs that will let patrons experience a tipple or three during the day while still being able to make their evening plans. The venue’s namesake citrus comes in a spiked lemonade served in a vintage pitcher and garnished with lavender. The Capri, Son made with Tequila, grapefruit, calamansi, and honey topped with sparkling wine can be ordered in large format for groups. Lemon’s will also offer a picnic style format, served in lemon yellow, vintage coolers and accompanied by a snack trio. Playful twists show this team can concoct serious cocktails without taking themselves too seriously. For another summer delight, Lemon’s beverage team has partnered with Oddfellows to develop a line of boozy popsicles that will come in flavors like cantaloupe, Limoncello, and Italian citrus.

Lemon’s will definitely have great food and beverages, but the real mission is to create a festive vibe that makes guests feel like they are at a friend’s home. The amazing views both day and night are complemented by a cocktail and a snack plus a hearty side of people watching, because, as we said, Lemon’s is the newest place to see and be seen this summer.

Lemon’s
80 Wythe Avenue, Brooklyn
Monday–Thursday: 5:00–11:00 PM Outside, 5:00 PM – 1:00 AM Inside
Friday: 2:00 PM – 1:00 AM Outside, 2:00 PM – 2:00 AM Inside
Saturday: 12:00 PM – 1:00 AM Outside, 12:00 PM – 2:00 AM Inside
Sunday: 12:00 PM – 12:00 AM

Categories
Dining Featured Indulgence

Your Weekly Indulgence: Rhubarb Pavlova at Reynard

Your Weekly Indulgence highlights the most luxurious dishes New York has to offer. Use the hashtag #ywidowntown and tag us @downtownmagnyc on Instagram to let us know how you’re indulging!

If you haven’t checked out Reynard, the New American restaurant in Williamsburg’s Wythe Hotel, you’re missing out on delicious food in a can’t beat location. The menu ranges from house made bone broth and pastries to lunch sandwiches and salads and grilled or roasted proteins for dinner.

This summer the dessert menu includes a rhubarb pavlova with elderflower, whipped white chocolate, and pistachio. If you’ve never had the meringue based dessert named after ballerina Anna Pavlova this is the perfect one to try as you sip on dessert wine and enjoy a summer evening.

Reynard
80 Wythe Avenue, Williamsburg

Breakfast:
Monday–Friday: 7:00–11:00 AM
Saturday–Sunday: 7:00–10:00 AM

Lunch:
Monday–Friday: 11:00 AM – 3:00 PM

Brunch:
Saturday–Sunday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM

Dinner:
Sunday–Thursday: 6:00–11:00 PM
Friday–Saturday: 6:00 PM – 12:00 AM

Categories
Dining Featured Indulgence

Your Weekly Indulgence: Caviar Service at Aska

Your Weekly Indulgence highlights the most luxurious dishes New York has to offer. Use the hashtag #ywidowntown and tag us @downtownmagnyc on Instagram to let us know how you’re indulging!

Nordic Cuisine is a trend that doesn’t seem to be going anywhere, especially in New York. Aska is a New York style restaurant with Nordic Roots from Swedish chef Fredrik Berselius located in Williamsburg. The restaurant has received many accolades including various Best New Restaurant awards, three-stars from the New York Times, and two Michelin stars.

It doesn’t get much more indulgent than a tasting menu, but Aska is pushing the limits with their caviar service available in the cellar bar or garden. Options include Vendace roe or Finnish caviar from Carelia served with potato pancakes and smoked cultured cream – an extravagant treat that is perfect enjoyed with a glass of champagne!

Photo by Charlie Bennet

Aska
47 South 5th Street
Williamsburg, Brooklyn

Dining Room by Reservation Only
Tuesday–Saturday from 6:00 PM

Cellar Lounge
Tuesday–Saturday: 6:00 PM – 12:00 AM