Showing posts with label PAST. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PAST. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Old School Italian 100 Years Old NYC



portoricocoffeejan2019

Porto Rico Coffee Roasters , Since 1907

The name may sound Puerto Rican, but it's not. Porto Rico Coffee is Italian, owned and operated by the Italian-American Longo family in Greenwich Village Since  1907


 
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RAFETTO'S PASTA
In Greenwich Village Since 1906

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d2e74-8rafettooooo


Fresh Homemade RAVIOLIS 

#FETTUCCINE #LASAGNA #MANICOTTI

#CAVATELLI #PASTA  and ?


To have a great little pasta shop like Raffetto's is a true Blessing. For years this part of Greenwich Village was a hardcore Italian neighborhoood filled with Italian Immigrants mostly fromthe Southern Italian Regions of Naples (Napolitan), Sicily (Sicilian), and Calabrese, with some Genoese (Genoa) sprikled in as well, as were the Raffetto family who opened their passta shop on Houston Street in the South Greenwich Village neighborhood in 1906, and I'm for one of thousands who are so grateful they did. I'm able to go around the block and get my box of 48 homemade Meat Or Cheeese Ravioli and grated Peccorino or Parmigiano to sprinkle over the Ravioli.
You get a box of Raffetto Raviolis and leave them in your freezer. Whenever you're going to have lunch or dinner, all you have to do is put on a pot of boiling water, throw your Ravioli in, and a few minutes later they're ready to eat. Drain the raviolis, lay on a plate, put on a pate of butter, a tiny bit of Olive Oil and sprinkle on some grated cheese and you're all ready to go with a delicious plate of Italian Ravioli. "What's better than that?" Ravioli from Raffetto Pasta are a God Send.

I love to dress them with Butter & Parmigiano as they dress ravioli in most places around Italy. Or do as the the Neapolitans and Caprese prefer, dressed in Sugo di Pomodoro (Tomato Sauce), and cheese.  



montemosconi




MONTE'S TRATTORIA
On Macdougal Street in GREENWICH VILLAGE Since 1918
100 YEAR OLD NEW YORK ITALIAN
Owned and Operated by The MOSCONI FAMILY
Three Generations of MOSCONI'S in front of MONTE'S
PIETRO MOSCONO (Chef/Owner) with Son PETER (GM/Owner) 
and PIETRO'S Grandsons : Pietro, Anthony, and Paulo

 

Like Rafettos Pasta and Porto Rico Italian Coffee Roasters, Monte's Trattoria is a beloved 100 year old, Italian Food Business in Greenwich Village New York. And just like Rafettto's, Caffe Reggio, and Porto Rico, Monte's is a God-Send of a place that we can all go to with our friends and family, for a good Old School Italian meal, and enjoy life. We are quite fortunate that places like Rafetto and Monte's are still here and haven't been obliterated by high-rent and other variables which have taken a toll on wonderful Old School Italian places like Lanza's and DeRobertis Italian Pastries, two 100 year old Italian food-spots (a restaurant & Pastry Shop) that so sadly recently closed. Places like Monte's Trattoria and John's of E. 12th Street are two "Living Museum Pieces" that Than God are both still open for us to enjoy and have those warm wonderful feeling of Old New York Italian Enclaves, you can still have a tasty Italian Dinner in restaurants that have been serving New Yorkers and people from literally All Around The World for 100 Years and more. "We Thank You All."


   
11RAFETTO


Inside RAFFETTO'S


 
11JohnsPIZZA


Not 100 YEARS OLD

But JOHN'S PIZZERIA of BLEECKER STREET

Is Not Far Behind, serving some of America's BEST PIZZA

Since 1929
Photo COPYRIGHT DANIEL BELLINO ZWICKE

I've been going to John's Pizzeria on Bleeccker Street in Greenwich Village, New York since the late 1970s ... It's long been a favorite of mine. The PIZZA is wonderful, the ambiance, prices, and everything about the place, "I just Love it."



RAO'S

East Harlem 

NEW YORK




The Dining Room

RAO'S

"And You CAN'T GET a TABLE !"





MEATBALLS


RECIPES 





JOHN'S of East 12th STREET

GOING STRONG SINCE 1908

Once a SPEAKEASY, in the Back Room

Front Room has Always been an ITALIAN RESTAURANT

Original Decor from 1908





Screen Shot 2018-02-17 at 2.15.26 PM

Vesuvio Bakery

Italian Bread Bakers
PRINCE STREET
Artwork Copyright DanielBellinoZwicke .com

 
A Readers Comment o The old VESUVIO BAKERY
.
I used to live around the corner, on prince street in soho, back when the neighborhood’s italian immigrant roots were much more evident than they are now. there was none of the abercrombie crew emporio starbucks navy barn nonsense back then…. storefronts were owner-occupied a la michael anchin, or (real) art galleries and museums (guggenheim soho, anyone?) or art “stores” like keith haring’s pop shop, or independent interiors shops like ad hoc softwares and almost everything on lafayette and the forever-missed canal surplus down on, you guessed it, canal street. by the time i’d moved into the neighborhood, soho was well on it’s way to transforming from a once-african-then-irish-then-italian immigrant neighborhood into an artist neighborhood, and, though i didn’t realize it at the time, into the bourgouise enclave i’d flee just a few years later for artier (and more affordable) digs.
but, in the meantime, mr. dapolito welcomed us all.
Anothny Dapolito was wonderful and equally friendly to his old friends and “newcomers” like me, probably 40, 50 years his junior. from the first time i walked into vesuvio bakery until the last time i was there before his death (he’d been frail and sick and not always behind the counter in the last years,) he treated me like a part of the neighborhood and i felt, as an extension of that welcome, like a part of the family. a distant cousin, perhaps, but family, nonetheless.

It bore a stark contrast to my neighborhood baker near my just-previous apartment, which happened to be in paris, france… there, the baker (boulangeriere) pretended not to even know who i was for the first year i lived there, despite my arrival roughly four days per week for a fresh baguette and croissants on almost the weekend.

when mr. dapolito died, the doors stayed open, and when people would inquire where he was, the kind and stoic and slightly sad but honest and open reply, given no doubt by someone who loved him more than we did, was this,”he died last week… but thank you for asking about him.” that “vesuvio bakery” storefront is an iconic new york image, and mr. dapolito was everything that was right with new york. i am glad i got to know him, beyond the iconic surface, if only a little bit. His bread wasn’t half bad, either.




 
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ITALIAN AMERICA'S Favorite Recipes
Including Spaghetti Meatballs
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