Showing posts with label Eataly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eataly. Show all posts

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Top 10: Best Beach Reads for Foodies

Nothing feels better than laying on the beach with an icy beverage and digging into a good book, especially when the book has to do with something delicious. Here are our favorite summer reads that are fit for the food-loving beach bum. Now, pass that margarita. by Joleen Zanuzoski

Blood, Bones & Butter: The Inadvertent Education of a Reluctant Chef by Gabrielle Hamilton, 
Chef, Owner Prune 54 East First Street nr. Second Ave. 
You know you're about to dig into something juicy when Mario Batali says he "will read this book to my children and then burn all the books I have written for pretending to be anything even close to it." This book is actually all it's cracked up to be - it's an inspiring, delicious read for anyone that appreciates the art of every bite.

Haven't been to her East Village restaurant? You're missing out. Prune is an excellent choice for brunch (get there early, expect a wait) and a cozy, romantic dinner at one of Hamilton's coveted ten tables.

Heat: An Amateur's Adventures As Kitchen Slave, Line-Cook, Pasta Maker, And Apprentice to a Dante-Quoting Butcher in Tuscany by Bill Buford
Former fiction editor of The New Yorker 
Just because author Bill Buford could whip up a decent pasta dish in the comfort of his own home, he thought he could conquer the depths of a restaurant kitchen. Of all the kitchen's he selection, he went to Mario Batali's Babbo in the West Village to experience the art of restaurant cooking. His love of Italian food led him to Tuscany to a restaurant where Mario Batali cooked as an apprentice. He uncovers the secrets of pasta and how to prepare and cook meat properly. The best part - he shares it all with us. The worst - you want to eat pasta for breakfast, lunch and dinner immediately following each chapter.


Julie & Julia by Julie Powell After watching the movie starring Meryl Streep and Amy Adams, I needed to read the book that was its inspiration. Julie Powell, trying to break out of the rut of her nine-to-five job commits to cook each of the 524 recipes in Julia Child's 1961 epic cookbook, Mastering the Art of French Cooking and blog all about it. As she maneuvers around her tiny Queens kitchen, she brings the reader along with her hysterical tales of crazy friends, her unsatisfying career and her attempt to try to break through the monotany of life. Through Powell's journey through each recipe, you realize that entering your thirties isn't so scary as long as you have a bottle of wine and some bœuf bourguignon. Maybe a little butter, too. 

I had to find out where this Queens girl likes to eat when she isn't roasting a chicken or killing lobsters at home. "I've been spending my life at Lounge 47 in Long Island City. Min Chen has come up with a lovely menu." Powell helped conceptualize some of the dishes, so naturally she is a big fan. Her favorite dishes? "The fried brussels sprouts with sriracha are addictive, and I could eat the scarlet-hued beet fusilli with mint and poppy seeds every day." In Manhattan, she is "faithful to old favorites" and mentions Lupa and Prune as oldies but goodies. When she needs a good dose of Chinese food, she craves the dumplings and au zhou chicken at Grand Szechuan on 9th Avenue. 




Yes, Chef by Marcus Samuelsson
Chef, Owner Red Rooster Harlem 310 Malcolm X Boulevard nr. 126th Street
At three years old, Marcus Samuelson was orphaned in Ethiopia and adopted by a middle-class family in Sweden where him and his sister were raised. His Swedish grandmother instilled in him a love of cooking and from that point on, you couldn't get him out of the kitchen. New Yorkers that have been following the restaurant scene for a while remember at the age of twenty- four, Samuelsson earned a three-star rating by The New York Times for running the kitchen of Aquavit, a seasonal Nordic restaurant in Midtown East. He has since parted ways and opened the hottest place Harlem has seen in years - Red Rooster. Downtowners that never venture above fourteenth street are hopping on the 2 train and savoring every bite of Sugar Hill steak, Harlem chowder and sweet potato doughnuts that will have you coming back for more.

Tender at the Bone: Growing up at the Table by Ruth Reichl
Former restaurant critic of The New York Times
My girl crush with Ruth Reichl started when I read this book years ago. The beautiful and touching way she writes about her experiences with Comfort Me with Apples and Garlic and Sapphires: The Secret Life of a Critic in Disguise. This former restaurant critic for The New York Times and editor in chief of defunct Gourmet magazine speaks about food in the most beautiful and appetizing way possible. In Tender at the Bone, Reichl shares how she discovered that "food could be a way of making sense of the world...if you watched people as they ate, you could find out who they are." This memoir tells us about the people who shaped Reichl's world and led her to discover her passion for food - it is part of what led me to mine.

Medium Raw: A Bloody Valentine to the World of Food and the People Who Cook It by Anthony Bourdain
Former chef of Brasserie Les Halles 411 Park Avenue South nr. 29th St.  What would a book list filled with chef tales be without Anthony Bourdain? His first book, Kitchen Confidential was the first "tell-all" book about what really goes on and who is really cooking your food in some of the most high-end kitchens in Manhattan. Medium Raw is the sequel of Bourdain's journey from degenerate and druggie to globe-traveling professional eater and father.

Want to visit Bourdain's old stomping grounds? Les Halles is an excellent option for lunch in Flatiron, as well as a bustling French bistro that turns out all the classics for dinner. My favorite? Sharing an order of their delicious pommes frites and a nice bottle of Bordeaux with someone special. Incroyable!



It Must've Been Something I Ate by Jeffrey Steingarten
Vogue magazine food writer 
Steingarten is known for his glamourous and mouthwatering food writing for Vogue and a compilation of his work for the magazine is showcased here. His first book The Man Who Ate Everything was equally as brilliant, with stories of his travels, food experiences and meeting some of the most notable tastemakers in the business. Some of the essays aren't even about food - his search for phen fen and his chronicles of obtaining a coveted reservation at the hottest restaurant in New York City are two of my personal favorite stories in the collection.

Letters to a Young Chef by Daniel Boulud
Owner, Daniel 60 East 65th Street nr. Park Ave. 
Even though I'm not an aspiring chef and the thought of cooking perfect dishes and timing courses appropriately for hundreds of people every night gives me the shakes, I love to know the way amazing and accomplished chefs think and that is exactly what Boulud shares with us in his part memoir, part cookbook, part how-to book. His "10 Commandments of a Chef" is a great list for food novices and experts, alike. There is a reason why he is the king of a huge, expansive restaurant empire - read this book to find out why.

The crème de la crème of his restaurant empire, Daniel, is one of only five Manhattan restaurants to earn a four star rating from The New York Times and is an ideal option for a special occasion romantic dinner, a fancy pre-theatre prix fixe (three courses with a wine pairing, $125) and a fantastic place for vegetarians - Daniel's $108 three-course vegetarian prix fixe is one of the best options for food-loving plant-eaters around.

Restaurant Man by Joe Bastianich
Owner, Del Posto 85 Tenth Avenue nr. 15th St.  
This memoir is nothing short than nonstop entertainment, chronicling the rise of Bastianich as a mega-successful restauranteur and vintner. He grew up in a working-class family in Queens and now oversees an Italian empire with Mario Batali. Babbo, Del Posto and Eataly are three of his success stories, not to mention that he runs the New York City marathon every year, is a skilled business man and entrepreneur and is a well-respected name around the streets of New York.

Want to experience one of the Batali/Bastianich creations? Head to Italian palace called Del Posto in Chelsea. Indulge in the seven-course "Tradizionale" prix fixe ($145), filled with decadent dishes like the Timpano alla Tucci which was made famous by Stanley Tucci in Big Night. A buttery pastry crust is filled with pasta, meatballs, ragu, peas, chicken and mozzarella. And that's just one course.





Don't Try This At Home: Culinary Catastrophes of the World's Greatest Chefs by Kimberly Witherspoon and Andrew Freedman
Over forty of the world's most notable and accomplished chefs  tell stories of their worst flubs in the kitchen, making cooking novices feel better about every amateur mistake they have ever committed. Dan Barber talks to fish, Scott Conant writes about the persistence of eels, Michael Lomonaco feeds Pavoratti and Bill Telepan waxes poetic on the "Fish Guys" versus "The Meat Guys." These outrageous tales almost seem to crazy to be true, but they are and it makes us love our favorite chefs even more.  

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

SPLURGE! Favorite Restaurants of NYC's Best Fitness Instructors

You've heard it before, food lovers. The more calories you eat, the more you should burn. Translation: you gotta move more than you mangia. You have to wonder between endless sets of burpees and mountain climbers and turning up the resistance on your bike another turn to the right, do fitness instructors ever splurge? Have their lips ever touched a baguette? Is sugar a curse word to them? Does cheese exist in their world? Can they even pronounce 'Momofuku' and how do they feel about pork buns?

The truth is, most of NYC's most sought after fitness instructors are huge food obsessives, but in a good way. They enjoy going out and eating and of course, showing that if you burn a gagillion calories a week, you have more room to dig into the good stuff every once in a while.

We've rounded up a few of Manhattan's favorite fitness instructors and found out where they like to chow down and how many of their classes it would take to burn off their favorite dish on the menu. Yes, they're human and eat food that isn't limited to boneless skinless chicken breast and kale. And guess what? They look amazing doing it. By Joleen Zanuzoski, Editor


Darryl Photo: Vegas Magazine 
Darryl Gaines, TranscendCycleat Equinox 
Truffle parmigiano fries at Delicatessen 54 Prince Street nr. Lafayette St. 
His energy is infectious and his playlists will have you riding "TO THE BEAT!" in no time. Darryl's bikes book up 26 hours on the dot before class time and as Darryl-devotees know, if you missed the booking window you better get ready to be a part of a sprawling, anxiety-filled line of wait-listers before class begins. After his Tuesday evening and Sunday afternoon classes at Equinox SoHo, you can find Darryl and his loyal following snacking and discussing the stars (literally - Gaines is a professional and highly respected astrologer) at nearby Delicatessen. How many classes would it take to burn off his favorite indulgence? "One class, of course! Ok...maybe two," he says. The truffle-parm fries clock in at about 1100 calories, so Transcend first, then get your truffle on. His classes fly by so quickly, this seems like a double splurge to us.

Tracy Anderson, Tracy Anderson Method
Biscuits at The Lion 62 West 9th Street nr. Sixth Ave. Yes, she's trained Madonna and Gwyneth Paltrow with her signature workouts, but when she's not training Hollywood's hottest, Anderson can be found toning locals at her TriBeca studio or promoting her new fitness and nutrition plan, Metamorphosis. Her ultimate indulgence is John Delucie's biscuits at The Lion. "I have been addicted to his biscuits since the moment I savored one at The Waverly Inn. I will follow him anywhere he puts those biscuits! I always change up the entrees and usually drink a Sancerre." Her second favorite dish? "[The Lion's] bread pudding. I have [Chef Delucie] sub the fruit for chocolate every time." Well, she doesn't get that body eating biscuits and chocolate.

Nicholas Pratley, SoulCycle
Sea Salt Caramel and Hazelnut Gelato at Eataly 200 Fifth Avenue nr. 23rd St. Pratley is the newest, chiseled addition to the SoulCycle NYC universe and we would like to personally thank Australia, Los Angeles and God for sending him to us. His classes are high-energy, no nonsense and you will find yourself throwing $31 in the air with utter glee every time you snag a bike to one of his spin-a-thons. What's better than seeing a fit man like Nick sweat it out? Watching him savor a cup of gelato. Follow him to Eataly and snag a cup of sea salt caramel or Piedmont hazelnut gelato from Batali's Gelataria. "I LOVE food, so the more options the better - that is why Eataly is such a joyous place." It will only take one or two SoulCycles to burn off this creamy, cooling indulgence.

Kristi Molinaro, 30/60/90 at Equinox
Pappa al Pomodoro at Bread Tribeca 301 Church Street nr. Walker St. Walk into any Equinox in NYC and it's a guarantee you will bump into someone sprinting to lock down a spot with their mini-step in one of Molinaro's HIIT (High-Intensity Interval Training) classes. 30/60/90 is designed like a 45-minutes personal training session except it's in a room packed to the gills with Molinaro's loyal following. "Since each 30/60/90 class burns about 550 calories, I would probably have to take two classes to burn off my splurge meal as long as I kept the bread to one piece and wine to two glasses! And since HIIT burns additional calories for the 36 hours after your workout, I might even be able to sneak in another glass of wine." Molinaro's indulgence after a hard day of making "every second count" to her 30/60/90 devotees: The insanely delicious tomato soup with bread and olive oil with a glass of pinot noir at Bread in NoLita or TriBeca.
Keoni Hudoba, Barry's Bootcamp 
Salted Caramel Cupcake at City Cakes 251 West 18th Street nr. Eighth Ave. It's hard to miss this Hawaiian heartthrob galavanting throughout NYC. Not only will his infectious laugh wake you up at one of his early AM Barry's sessions, so will his great one-liners that will push you to the limit. With Keoni's envious build, you would think he lives, eats and breathes egg whites and protein shakes, but no no. He is a may-jor foodie. "I love food but I love dessert more! I have a serious sweet tooth." Hudoba can't get enough of Marc Stellrecht and Benny Rivera's City Cakes in Chelsea. You can find him there on a weekly basis, digging into one of their salted caramel cupcakes or nibbling on a half-pound peanut butter or oatmeal raisin cookie. "If you do my Barry's class correctly, it would take about half of the class to burn off a City Cakes cupcake." Oh, well if you put it that way - I'll take a dozen cupcakes and a dozen Barry's classes, please. Now, move!
Stephanie Culen, SacredStrength at Equinox
Green Vegetable Curry at Spice Market 403 West 13th Street nr. Ninth Ave. There is something about a yoga class led by Stephanie Culen that just makes everything right in the world. You could be having one of those "I'm over New York - I'm moving to the West Coast!" kind of days and she will make you zen out in no time. Her signature yoga class is Vinyasa-style with a faster flow, letting you move and shake those chakras in the sweatiest way possible. All yogi levels are welcome and her gentle, hands-on approach is absolute perfection. Her splurge when she isn't leading a packed class into their final savasana? Jean George's Spice Market in MePa. "It takes me to India with the authentic Kerala decor. I order a Ginger Margarita and the  Vegetables in Green Curry with Coconut Sticky Rice." With her enviable yoga body, it's hard to believe she even knows what coconut sticky rice tastes like.

Photo: Karen Thornton, The Peche

LA Russell, Megaformer Hardcore 65 at SLT
PB&J Doughnuts, Doughnut Plant 220 West 23rd Street nr. Seventh Ave. 
This California girl is notoriously known in the SLT community as seriously hardcore and the Megaformer Hardcore class is a testament to how intense a pilates reformer can really be. When LA isn't noshing on healthy snacks like the green juice, cheezy kale chips and funyuns at Organic Avenue she splurges on a peanut butter and jelly doughnut at Doughnut Plant. "I love the quirky atmosphere - it's genius to add rosewater cream to a doughnut and top it off with a flower petal!" Each class combines cardio training, weight bearing exercise and Pilates, burning 500-650 calories in 50 minutes.

Omar Sandoval, Titan Method at Equinox
Jumbo Cheeseburger and Sweet Potato Fries at Chirping Chicken 355 Amsterdam Avenue nr. 77th St. If your workout regimen involves kicking, punching, striking or swishing a wooden sword in the air, most likely you have taken a class with "The Titan," Omar Sandoval. Sandoval teaches 28 classes a week consisting of Ilaria Montagnani's Powerstrike, Impact, Bodystrikes and Forza workouts and his own signature class, Titan Method. The class consists of intense five-minute rounds of weights and cardio involving anything from jump squats to burpees, followed by a short recovery and then doing it all over again for 60 minutes. Not only will you burn major calories in class, but Sandoval guarantees a calorie burn twenty-four hours after you leave the gym. How does he refuel? Usually with a healthy order of chicken and rice and beans from Chirping Chicken where he is called "Somamu" by the staff which means "strong man" in Swedish. When he's feeling naughty after teaching for six hours he goes all out. "I order a triple cheeseburger and sweet potato fries from Chirping Chicken. Sometimes a side of chicken strips, too. I will sweat it off the next day." So there you have it folks - you have to do six hours of insane Titan-esque workouts to burn off a huge cheeseburger. Don't shoot the messenger. 

Sara Carr, CrossFit NYC - The Black Box
Crispy Bacon at Craft 43 East 19th Street nr. Park Ave. South After getting smoked in a heavy lifting competition by a 70 year old man in her first CrossFit class, Carr has been throwing tires around and whipping people into shape on the regular. This former gymnast and heavy lifter loves to indulge her inner glutton at Tom Colicchio's Craft. "Everything on the menu is great, but the two things I always order are the crispy bacon appetizer and the sugar and spice doughnuts for dessert. The bacon comes in cubes and never fails to taste amazing with a really great texture. Plus, any CrossFitter will tell you a good meal is never complete without bacon! Also, another favorite at Craft is the 30-day dry aged sirloin which comes with the bone marrow." She isn't much for counting calories, but thinks "one or two grueling CrossFit workouts should  annihilate the calories consumed on a meal at Craft." Anything that allows me to eat crispy bacon with wild abandon, sign me up!