Hemingways Favorite Hotel The Gritti Palace Venice Italy Ernest Hemingway Harrys Bar Cipriani

 


The GRAND CANAL

The GRITTI PALACE

The GITTI PALACE HOTEL

VENICE




The GRITTI PALACE


The GRITTI PALACE







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Ernest Hemingway with Wife Martha Gellhorn

The GRITTI PALACE

VENICE, ITALY

Not only can I look down from Hemingway’s window, I can also sit in his chair.”

Adrian Mourby in the newly unveiled Hemingway Suite at the Gritti Palace which reopened last month after an 18 month refurbishment.

Outside my window the men who punt the black traghetti back and forth joke while waiting for customers. The traghetto has crossed at this point for centuries. There are only a few places on the great serpentine coil of Venice’s Grand Canal that are still served by them, but when Hemingway, Somerset Maugham or John Ruskin wanted to get across the Grand Canal, these eminent men of English letters could just walk outside the Gritti Palace and step on board. It’s one of the many advantages of this sixteenth century brick palazzo that became a hotel in the nineteenth.

To commemorate these writers, the newly reopened Gritti Palace has named a suite after each.

Not only can I look down from Hemingway’s window, I can also sit in his chair. When the Gritti closed eighteen months ago for refurbishment, every item of furniture, every picture and Murano glass chandelier was labelled and stored, which is why I know that Papa Hemingway sat in this unremarkable low green chair. By the time Hem was staying at the Gritti he had grown corpulent, sitting here his belly would have rested low on his thighs. As I take his place, I can’t help wondering what he would have made of the new Gritti and the suite that bears his name. No doubt he would have found it all a bit over-decorated, and more to the taste of “Miss Mary”, his hard-faced fourth wife who is pictured on the wall opposite. She and Papa are standing on the terrace of the Gritti during one of her visits, circa 1949.


The HEMINGWAY SUITE

The GRITTI PALACE HOTEL




There is only one Gritti Palace, and there is only one true Hemingway’s Suite. 

Of course, as an avid Hemingway fan, I’m aware that when that black and white photo was taken Hem (left with Mary) was infuriating Miss Mary with a new infatuation. Ernest Hemingway was 50 and had recently fallen for a young Venetian artist, Countess Adriana Ivancich. She was only 19 and quite unaware of the strength of his feelings. Frustrated, Hemingway poured his passion into the worst he ever wrote, Across the River and into the Trees. The story is a thinly veiled fantasy in which an old American colonel, marked for death, is having a barely unconsummated affair with Renata, a young Venetian aristocrat. Hem wrote the book fuelled by crates of Valpolicella which he would buy from Harry’s bar round the corner. I feel rather sorry for the author, physically old before his time, staggering back to the Gritti at night or waking as light played on the surface of the Grand Canal, and taking a bottle of Valpolicella and the Herald Tribune to the lavatory with him, as Colonel Cantwell does.

A man needs toys. Big men need big toys. 

When the book came out, it was a critical disaster. Worse Hemingway made the guilty mistake of dedicating his book of Adriana fantasies to Mary. No wonder she looks so tightly wound in that photo. Ironically the critical mauling that Hemingway received over Across the River and into the Trees spurred him to hit back with The Old Man and the Sea, which won him the Nobel Prize for Literature – though I’m sure  Mary Hemingway would have had something to say about the fact that the cover illustration of that book was done by the young woman he fell in love with in Venice. 


The HEMINGWAY SUITE

The GRITTI PALACE HOTEL


VENICE HOTELS

Models of HEMINGWAYS BOATS

The HEMINGWAY SUITE


And finally: Rum with a view. 
The bar in the author’s former suite is well stocked …

The HEMINGWAY SUITE

The GRITTI PALACE HOTEL



In 1948, Hemingway stayed in Venice’s glamorous GRITTI PALACE Gritti Palace has also hosted other celebrated figures, like Peggy Guggenheim, Elizabeth Taylor, and Richard Burton, and is still known as one of Venice’s most alluring luxury hotels. Even when Hemingway was in Venice and not staying at Gritti Palace, he came often to dine and socialize.



ERNEST HEMINGWAY

Behind The BAR – HARRY’S BAR

VENICE, ITALY


At this time Hemingway began to frequent Harry’s Bar and befriends the owner Giuseppe Cipriani, a warm local man who took much pride in his establishment. At Harry’s, Hemingway could observe and meet people, while eating, drinking, and writing in style at his table in the corner. Although Hemingway was Harry’s Bar most celebrated guest, perhaps because he went so frequently, it is also known for entertaining famous creative characters like Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, Truman Capote, Orson Welles, and Woody Allen. The owner, Ciprani invented the ‘Bellini,’ a light, sparkling cocktail made with Prosecco and fresh white peaches, which is still served at Harry’s Bar. Hemingway was partial to Harry’s Montgomery cocktail, which was made with gin and a touch of vermouth, as well as Venice’s divine wines.

Seduced by Venice’s excellent wine and food, Hemingway soon craved more solitude and invigorating stimulation to write, so he moved to the Venetian island of Torcello. On Torcello, Hemingway had the chance to hole himself away to write. He also was able to engage in more active, adventurous pursuits, like jetting across the Grand Canal, and hunting game with his Venetian friends. On this tiny island, Hemingway wrote another novel, Across the River and into the Trees.






GIUSEPPE CIPRIANI & ERNEST HEMINGWAY

VENICE





HARY’S BAR, VENICE

ERNEST HEMINGWAY with Owner GIUSEPPE CIPRIANI




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I Miss Blimpies Submarine Sandwiches

 

BLIMPIES

I”I MISS YOU GUYS”

I MISS The SUBS



    “I Miss BLIMPIE’S” Yes I do. I first discovered Blimpie’s when I was a teenager growing up in 1970s New Jersey, Blimpie’s made tasty Sub Sandwiches that were quite affordable. They had a wide selection of Sandwiches to choose from, but my favorite and just about only way to go was with a Blimpie Best or similar Italian-Style Combo Sandwich that was made with Ham, Salami, and Provolone Cheese, and topped with shredded Lettuce, Onions, and sliced Tomatoes, dressed with Oil & Vinegar and seasoned with Salt, Pepper, and dried Oregano. The Sandwiches always pleased. They were very consitent, the Sandwiches always tasted the same, which is a good thing, because you always knew what you were getting. You oredered the sandwich you liked, and alwasys tasted the same., and that’s not easy to do. Well they didn’t have to cook anything, so it was pretty simple. The Bread, Meat Products, and Cheese were always the exact same on any Sandwich you ordered. The only way they could possibly screw up was with the seasonings of Salt, Pepper, Oil & Vinegar, and Oregano. But the empoyees were well versed and they usually did a good job. I never any complaints. I always loved my sandwiches, and was never disappointed. Not once. I nver really thought about it before, but now as I’m writing this little piece I do realized just how Good Blimpie’s and their Tasty Sandwiches were. They were Pretty Amazing, come to think of it. I did about. I went, oredered my Sandwich, ate it, enjoyed it, and left, until the next time I had a craving for one, and I did at least once a month or more for years, until the Blimpie that I used to go on 4th Avenue and 13th Street closed, and I couldn’t get a Blimpie Sandwich anymore. A sad day it was. I miss them, and I can’t stand SUBWAY, I think they SUCK. Their sandwiches are of low quality, and I;d rather have a Blimpie, but I can’t. Such is Life. It can be cruel at times. And the fact I can’t eat a Blimpie Sandwich anymore, I’d say is a bit sad, but what can I do? Reminisce, that’s about all I can do.

Basta !!!


DBZ



As if it were an old, reclusive celebrity, a coworker asked, “Does Blimpie’s still exist?” Yes, yes, Blimpie is still alive and, presumably, well. At the very least, there are still plenty in NYC. While we associate the sandwich franchise with 1990s strip malls, did you know one of the first shops opened here in the 1960s? Here it is, your short and probably totally unnecessary history of Blimpie.


First of all, Blimpie is called that because one of the founders, Tony Conza, didn’t like the sounds of “subs.” Conza, along Peter DeCarlo and Angelo Bandassare, opened their first shop in Hoboken in 1964, and apparently people in the area weren’t familiar with the term “hoagie,” so that was out, too. As the legend goes, Conza found “blimpie” while flipping through a dictionary, and felt it was appropriate. 






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“BLIMPIE”  – A BRIEF HISTORY


Blimpie began its journey on the Jersey side of the Hudson River when 3 high school pals teamed up after graduation to develop it with $2,500 in funding, They opened the first Blimpie at the corner of Seventh and Washington Streets in Hoboken, N.J., according to NJ.com.

The year was 1964, and Blimpie didn’t want to sound like just another submarine sandwich company — a factor that factored into its name. Scouring a dictionary, Blimpie’s young brain trust was quickly drawn to the word ‘”blimp” and the accompanying picture that they felt resembled the bread of a submarine sandwich (per QSR).

The ship-to-sub comparison was apt enough for founders Tony Conza, Peter DeCarlo, and Angelo Baldassare, who approved a name that would see the company long past its first location. That being said, Blimpie’s first sandwich shop no longer exists. 

Blimpie’s ideological foundation was first laid out during a party conversation between founders Tony Conza, Peter DeCarlo, and Angelo Baldassare in Jersey City, N.J. According to the New York Times, the atmosphere and accompanying drinks catalyzed a brainstorm of business ideas. Unsure of what kind of venture to start, the future Blimpie founders tossed around concepts until they eventually settled on the idea of a sandwich shop.

Blimpie’s belief that this concept could work was backed by the success of Mike’s Submarines in Point Pleasant, N.J., a place that was typically bursting with patronage. Intrigued by its popularity, Blimpie’s founders performed some culinary espionage by eating some of Mike’s Subs. Impressed by what they ate, they opened their own sandwich shop in a similar vein. Mimicking their mentor proved a sage choice, as both sandwich chains still exist today. There is one exception, though — Mike’s Submarines is now known as Jersey Mike’s.

Long before “move fast and break things” became a popular startup motto, Blimpie was stirring up dust and drywall in the 1960s. Aggressively gunning for expansion, the founders of Blimpie exploded their base readily. By 1967, they had successfully expanded into Manhattan, with 10 Blimpies already churning out hoagie-style Subs.

Four of these franchises were owned by founders Tony Conza and Peter DeCarlo, and although it may not sound like much in our age of easy venture capital, running 4 Blimpies back then proved more than Conza and DeCarlo could handle.

Unable to keep lightning in the bottle without a formal business education, Conza and DeCarlo were flying by the seat of their pants. Per the New York Times, Conza and DeCarlo “admitted they weren’t skilled businessmen.” As it turned out, they were “incautious about the costs of goods and employee salaries.”

Conza and DeCarlo would bend but would not fold, selling all 4 Blimpies they personally owned. They shifted their focus on building back Blimpie’s bottom line through franchising.


In 1976 BLIMPIE SPLIT Into TWO COMPANIES


It’s tough to keep even the best teams together, and the Blimpie crew was no exception. Citing a difference in opinion, as DeCarlo wanted to keep Blimpie East Coast and Conza wanted to expand southward, the original founders decided to reform Blimpie into 2 distinct companies under the same trademark. 

It was decided DeCarlo would run Blimpie Metropolitan and retain control of the majority of Blimpie’s New York, New Jersey, and East Coast locations. Conza would head the original company, but renamed it International Blimpie Corporation while crafting a new imprint. Conza relished the opportunity and quickly franchised Blimpies “wherever there was interest,” according to the New York Times. Conza would eventually admit the error of his ways, and over the years, many of those locations damaged the brand before closing down. They allegedly drove customers up the wall with filthy bathrooms and discordant employees.


Blimpie went public in 1983


In the blur of Blimpie’s forced growth throughout the 70s and 80s, they also sought public investment. Blimpie’s rise was rapid, but stores were closing rapidly as well (via Reference for Business). It’s clear the underwriter held reservations, as Blimpie’s initial public offering debuted at 90 cents per share — an unpromising number, even when adjusted for inflation. It served as a flashing indicator that the 80s would bring turbulent times for this blimp-inspired brand.

Blimpie’s aggressive expansion also resulted in marks against sanitation. Founder Tony Conza’s loose approach to franchising led to undisciplined franchisees and resulted in a massive identity crisis for the Blimpie brand. According to the New York Times, Blimpie had such “renegade owners” who flouted their business formula that some bad actors even sold Chinese food and pizza. However, there was a silver lining — these maverick moves were also a cry for help, begging Blimpie to expand its menu. It became an idea it pursued in the following decade.

If you’ve ever wondered why Subway is so enormous, a big part of that may be Blimpie’s decision to pump the brakes on its best product in the 1980s: the sub sandwich.

As Subway made moves in the submarine sandwich sector, Blimpie pivoted toward a sit-down restaurant idea that became the Border Cafe (via the New York Times). It was a short-lived endeavor that hemorrhaged funds shortly after striking ground in Manhattan. Although Border Cafe’s initial numbers were promising, not even former New York Yankee great Dave Winfield could save them as a partial owner (via Reference for Business). However, that was the small problem. The big problem? Blimpie gave Subway an inch and it took a mile. It padded a sandwich-selling lead that only grew wider and would never again be threatened by Blimpie.

If you’ve ever wondered why Subway is so enormous, a big part of that may be Blimpie’s decision to pump the brakes on its best product in the 1980s: the sub sandwich.

As Subway made moves in the submarine sandwich sector, Blimpie pivoted toward a sit-down restaurant idea that became the Border Cafe (via the New York Times). It was a short-lived endeavor that hemorrhaged funds shortly after striking ground in Manhattan. Although Border Cafe’s initial numbers were promising, not even former New York Yankee great Dave Winfield could save them as a partial owner (via Reference for Business). However, that was the small problem. The big problem? Blimpie gave Subway an inch and it took a mile. It padded a sandwich-selling lead that only grew wider and would never again be threatened by Blimpie.

Hemingway Inspired me to Write

HemingwatERNESTttfe

HEMINGWAY

 

Yes, it was the great Ernest Hemingway who inspired me to write. And it wasn’t just his great writings but the man and the life he led. For Hemingway was the ultimate Man’s Man as they say. He was rough and tumble and didn’t take crap from know one. A lady’s man Ernest Hemingway was, a hunter, adventurer, traveler, writer, and mercenary. The man’s life was even more interesting than the characters in his books. 

The first book I read by Ernest Hemingway was a required read in High School English Class when we were assigned to read and study The Old Man & The Seas, Hemingway’s great classic novel of the old Cuban fisherman Santiago in Havana, Cuba and his fight and struggles to fight a great fish, a fight that mimics the struggles of life.

I read just about everything Hemingway I could get my hands on; all his novels, his short stories, and biography’s and articles written on the great writer of prose. I read a Farewell to Arms, The Sun Also Rises (my favorite), the complete short stories, magazine articles, and the bibliography “Papa Hemingway” by close friend and biographer A.E. Hotchner.

I traveled in the footsteps of Hemingway, going to his homes in Key West and Havana, Cuba. I bought a book called Hemingway;s Paris, and I followed in the footsteps of the great writer, going to all his favorite restaurants and cafes. I ate Choucroute at Brasserie Lipp on the Boulevard Saint Michel in Paris, I had drinks at Cafe Select and Closerie des Lilas, both on the Boulevard Montparnasse. I strolled the Luxenbourg Gardens, and at escargots and drank Beaujolais at Polidor, just like Ernest did. Yes I wanted to be Hemingway, I tried and tried, but I would never come anywhere near close to being the writer that Ernest Hemingway was. I could write nice little short stories, but a novel? No way. I have become a writer, I know, not a great one, not by a long shot, but a writer never-the-less, and a published and Best Selling Author at that, no less, but no Hemingway. But my writings do serve a purpose, and many do like (even love) my writings (books). I write about Italian Food, Italy, and the Italian, and Italian-American lifestyle and culture. I write little stories about Italian Food, Italian-Americans, Italy, and Italians, and people seem to like them.

Hemingway helped teach me to write, and I taught myself to write with the help of the great Ernest Hemingway and other writers. I’t go to my favorite cafe in Greenwich Village, Caffe Dante, and I’d write. I’d write and write and practice as much as I could. I’d read and write, trying to hone my craft, the craft of writing. I dreamed of writing a great novel as all writers do. This would not happen. Who knows, maybe it will one day, but don’t count on it. I don’t, but you never know, someday my writing skills may one day develop enough to do so, “one never knows.”

Before I ever started writing, I’d never known that I’d be able to write and have a book published, did I? I now have seven books published and three of them have become best sellers and I am a Best Selling Author, but not of novels. I wish I could write a great screenplay, that would be made into a successful movie, but as of now? No way, but I have had some good success and I’m quite happy the way things have developed. I make some money at it, I’m not rich, and I still have my day job, but I love what I do, and I am quite happy doing all this. Going to the cafe, just about every day, and I write, I promote, and I learn, all thanks to Hemingway, the man who inspired me. To write.

Basta.


 

Daniel Bellino Zwicke

 

 

HEMINGWAYyyygd

Ernest Hemingway



 

Part II

 

My 1st Book. My first book was La Tavola. How I wrote it, and how quick I wrote it was quite amazing. Of course I had always wanted to write a book, I started one called The Bachelors Cookbook, but I never finished it. I didn’t have the tools, or a formula. After starting that first book, The Bachelors Cookbook was a cookbook to teach and help bachelors how to cook, but not only that. It was a book to teach bachelors (single men) how to cook, and subsist on their own, and how to save money by cooking and make life easier and more enjoyable for themselves. But there was another major angle to the book, and that was how to meet and romance women, by learning and knowing how to cook for them, and how by doing so would greatly enhance you chance of having romantic interludes and relationships with the opposite sex, women. Well I thought, that this was all great, and it was and is, and now that I’m reading this, and rehashing on this great idea of mine, and I now have quite a lot of experience, know-how and all that, that I think it’s high-time that I do it. I now have the formula.

The formula? What is it you ask? Well, I do have a very good writing formula to write and produce good non-fiction books. For me, non-fiction is a whole lot easier to write than fiction, which I know I’m not great at, but non-fiction is a whole other thing, and I do believe I’m pretty good at this, and my track record has proven so with 7 books, three of them Best Sellers.

So back to my formula, what is it you ask? Well, the whole ting is to # 1 have a Theme of what you book is going to be about. For me, I write about food, travel, and experiences regarding these subjects and subject matter. I write mostly about food and to be more specific Italian and Italian-American Food and lifestyles. I’ll think up a them, Sunday Sauce for example, and then building a book around this. Sunday Sauce is the famed Italian-American dish, also known as gravy, that Italian-Americans eat each and every Sunday all over America, and especially in the great Italian Americans enclaves of New York, Boston, New Jersey, Baltimore, Brooklyn, and other parts of the country that have Italian neighborhoods with a strong Italian population that includes business such as Italian Restaurants, caffes, Pork Stores, Bakeries, specialty shops, Italian Butcher Shops, and the like, necessary for Italian living.

When you have your theme, you need to make an outline with topics and sub-topics that pertain to the  main theme of the book. So with my book Sunday Sauce I had an outline that included such topics as Meatballs, the Pork Store, Pasta and other topics that pertained to Sunday Sauce, how to make it, the rituals around it. as well as stories and antidotes that tied into this main theme of the book.

Taking the topic of pasta, several sub-topics to pasta in my book Sunday Sauce were; Spaghetti Vongole (Clam Sauce), Spaghetti Meatballs, Tomato Sauce and other topics.

Once I had my outline, I’d write one-by-one on each topic in the outline. Each topic was a chapter in the book and I’d knock them off one at a time. It was easy.

Now I’ve had a lot of different experiences as far as Italian Food and cooking go. I have a great repertoire of recipes that are in my books, so I tell stories about the food, the dishes, I have my recipes that are included in the book, and my books are a collection of Italian recipes as stories of all the different dishes in the great repertoire of Italian Cuisine. And  a large part of all this is to inspired people to cook wonderful Italian dishes, and to bring friends and family together at the dinner table. This is what it’s all about; cooking tasty Italian Food, eating with friends and family, and having wonderful times around the table. This is my passion, and that’s a Key element

. in all of this. if you have a passion, write about it, and it all should come together easily. And so this is how I do it all. This is how I’ve had seven books published, and I keep doing it. I enjoy it. I love it, and hope you will to. Good Luck.

 


Daniel Bellino Zwicke



PS .. My 1st book was La TAVOLA  – Italian-American New Yorker’s Adventures of The Table, and this is where I first discovered and created my formula for writing my books. 

Again, good luck to you all.

  

 
Daniel’s    BOOKS by Daniel Belino Zwicke on AMAZON.com

Daniel-Bellino-Zwicke.com

  

 
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The RAT PACK – Brief History

 

The RAT PACK

FRANK SAMMY & DINO




10 RAT PACK Facts
1. The Rat Pack was a term used to describe a group of musicians and actors in the 1950s and ’60s who embodied the term “cool.” Famously consisting of big names like Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., Dean Martin, Joey Bishop and Peter Lawford, the A-List group took Hollywood by storm.

2. The name “Rat Pack” was not actually a complimentary term. The phrase’s origin comes from a moment when iconic movie star Humphrey Bogart came home from Las Vegas with his hard-partying group of friends. Bogart’s wife, actress Lauren Bacall, allegedly came downstairs and scolded the group, claiming they looked “like a goddamn rat pack.” The catchphrase quickly caught on.

3. There were actually two different Rat Packs, one popular in the ’50s and another (the most famous and notable) in the ’60s. The first consisted of Humphrey Bogart, Mickey Rooney, Errol Flynn, Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, Cesar Romero and Jerry Lewis.

4. The name of the iconic Great Dane cartoon character Scooby-Doo has Frank Sinatra to thank for his namesake. The famous mutt’s creator, Iwao Takamoto, listened to Sinatra’s hit song “Strangers in the Night” and noticed his scatting (which sounded like “dooby dooby doo.”) This ultimately led to the character’s name.

5. Ocean’s 11 (1960) was a famed heist movie that featured all five of the Pack’s members in lead roles (Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., Dean Martin, Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop).

6. Dean Martin wasn’t actually a big fan of parties, despite his reputation and membership in the Pack. Not only was he religious and a devout Catholic, but he was also self-described as shy and ashamed of the way he spoke.

BOGEY & BACALL

Humprhrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall actually started The RAT PACK, 
and it was Lauren Bacall who came up with the name, when her husband
Humphrey Bogart held court at their Beverly Hills home, with the likes of :
Judy Garland, Sid Luft, David Niven, Cary Grant, Humphrey Bogart,
Frank Sinatra, Jimmy VanHuesen, Rex Harrison, Lauren Bacall,
Spencer Tracy, Katherine Hephurn and others.

One day, as Bogey was and the above friends were hanging aroud, drinking at
the Bogart’s Hombly Hills home, Larent Bacall took a look at them, and saide,
“you look like a Pack of Rats,” and it turned into The Rat pack and the name stuck,
and after Bogart died and as Frank Sinatra an original Bogart Rat Pack member and
his friends: Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr.,  performed and hungout together
 in Las Vegas, the press attached The Rat Pack name to this new group
The Rat Pack, the name stuck and the rest of course is history, and Las Vegas and Hollywood Legend.





The RAT PACK in VEGAS

During the filming of OCEANS 11


7. Joey Bishop was considered the more serious man of the group regarding comedy and wild antics. Ironically, he was also the member who wrote their comedic material behind the scenes.

8. Bishop was also insecure about his standing with the Pack and felt like an outsider. He would constantly wait for an invitation to join the rest of the group when dining. His close friend Sinatra once reportedly said, “Goddammit, how long does he have to be with me before he knows he can eat with us?”

9. The group often performed at the Copa Room in the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas. Whenever a member was booked, billboards would hint at the surprise appearances of the other members.

10. The Rat Pack was known for its association with many famous actresses, including Lauren Bacall, Shirley MacLaine, Marilyn Monroe, Juliette Prowse and Angie Dickinson. The leading ladies made many appearances in the Rat Pack films. Frank Sinatra even had romantic relationships with Prowse and Dickinson.





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Sinatra Eats – Favorite Italian Food

SINATRA EATS
 
Frank Sinatra at GILLY’S New York
 
With Daughters NANCY (L) and TINA SINATRA
 
And FRIENDS
 
One of Frank’s favorite spots when in New York was owned by one of his closest friends (and Bodyguard) Gilly Rizzo .. Jilly’s served Chinese Food and Franks’s favorite was their Chicken Chowmein .. 
 
Frank threw many parties there, eating, drinking, telling stories and what-not.
 
 
Frank Sinatra Out on The Town
 
With ED SULLIVAN and Other Friends
 
The SINATRA COOKBOOK
NONNA BELLINO’S COOKBOOK
 
aka The SINATRA COOKBOOK
 
LERCARA FRIDDI – SICILY
 
 
 
 
 
FRANK MARTY DOLLY & DANNY
Frank Sinatra’s father was born and raised in the town of Lercara Friddi, Sicily, about 45 minutes south of the Sicilian capital of Palermo. Frank’s father Saverio Martino Sinatra immigrated to New York City with his mother in 1903. His father FRancesco Sinatra was already living there and working in a pencil factory. 
 
Frank Sinatra’s mother Dortea (Dolly) Gravante was born in Lumarzo, Italy, a small town near Genoa. She was born the day after Christmas, December 1897. Her family immigrated to America when she was just and infant. 
 
Dolly and Marty Senatra met and married in 1913. There only child Frank Sinatra was born December 12, 1915. The rest is history.
 
Of Frank Sinatra’s two parents Dolly and Martino, they both cooked, but Marty was the better cook of the two, and often cooked dinner for his wife and child, and himself. Martino learned to cook from his mother and aunts who were all Sicilian, and Martino cooked most Sicilian dishes like, Caponata, Pasta con Sarde, and Baked Ziti with Meatballs.
 
Italian-American author Daniel Bellino Z’s maternal grandparents, Giuseppina Salemi and Fillipo Bellino were both born in Lercara Friddi, Sicily, the same town that Frank Sinatra’s father comes from. The women in Danie’s family were wonderful cooks, including Daniel’s Aunt Fran, Wanda, and Aunt Helen, an his mother’s mother Giuseppina, the woman named in his cookbook 
Granma Bellino’s Italian Cookbook, “Recipes from My Sicilian Nonna” This cookbook is the closest we get to a Frank Sinatra Cookbook, and so some people have refered to it 
 
 
To Cook and Eat like Frank Sinatra, Grandma Bellino’s Italian Cookbook is the closest cookbook that comes clost to the recipes of dishes that Frank Sinatra ate, growing up in Hoboken, New Jersey. It’s available on Amazon.com …
MARTINO & DOLLY SINATRA
 
WEDDING DAY
 
1913
 
DOLLY FRANK & MARTINO SINATRA
 
Hoboken, New Jersey
FRANK & DOLLY SINATRA
 
 
 
The SINATRAS
 
At GILLYS
 
NEW YORK
 

Frank Sinatra, both the greatest singer and greatest entertainer of the 20th Century. No question. Sinatra was a legendary icon whose star still shines bright. He was a musical icon, celebrity, international personality, and to millions of Italian-Americans he was our own, a paisan. Frank was an Italian-American whose ancestry is from Genoa on his mother’s side of the family and Sicilian on his father’s side. And being Italian, Frank loved the food he grew up with, Dolly made a mean Marianara Sauce as well as Meatballs and the all-time Italian-American favorite Sunday Sauce (aka Gravy). Frank loved the food of his childhood; the Spaghetti & Meatballs, Stuffed Artichokes, Pasta Fazool, Frittata, Eggplant Parmigiana and all the usual suspects of the Italian-American table. It’s a well known fact that Frank’s favorite restaurant was Patsy’s on 56th Street in New York … When Frank went to Patsy’s his favorite dishes were Calms Posillipo and Veal Milanese with a nice plate of Spaghetti Pomodoro in-between, and maybe a slice of Cheesecake to finish if Frank was in the mood.


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FRANK and AVA


“MANGIA BENE”

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FRANK’S FAVORITE RESTAURANT

Patsy’s 56th Street, NEW YORK, NY



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VEAL MILANESE and CLAMS POSILLIPO .. Two of FRANK’S Favorites





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CLAMS POSILLIPO
 
“One of FRANK’S FAVORITES” !
 
 
SICILIAN FOOD RECIPES
 
FROM LERCARA FRIDDI
 
The SAME TOWN as The SINATRA FAMILY
 
SICILY
 
 
 
GRANDMA BELLINO’S COOKBOOK
 
The CLOSEST THING to a SINATRA  COOKBOOK
 
With RECIPES FROM SINATRA’S HOME TOWN in SICILY
 
SOUPS – PASTA _ EGGPLANT – ARTICHOKES & MORE
 
All of FRANK SINATRA’S FAVORITE ITALIAN FOODS

 

 
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Frank tosses the Spaghetti





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Dean Martin with Frank as Sammy Davis Jr pours Frank a Jack Daniels








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Frank Sinatra dines with Marylyn Monroe

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Frank Sinatra with Lauren Bacall at 21 Club , NEW YORK






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Gnocchi Pomodoro
 
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Frank Sinatra ‘s Egg Sandwiches
 
 
 
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Frank Eats a Donut



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GINO’S on Lexington Avenue was a Sinatra favorite ..



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A waiter and the famed Zebra Wallpaper of Gino’s ..

GINO’S “SECRTE SAUCE” SALSA SEGRETO



PJ CLARKE’S

One of Frank’s favorite Bars 
 
PJ CLARKES – Fine Art Print
 
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Learn How to Make SUNDAY SAUCE alla SINATRA

And SPAGHETTI MEATBALLS alla SINATRA
 
Recipes in SUNDAY SAUCE by Daniel Bellino






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SPAGHETTI & METBALLS


alla SINATRA


RECIPE

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VISITING NEW YORK NEW YORK
ANYWHERE WORLDWIDE
 
 
 
FLIGHTS & HOTELS
 
WORLDWIDE
.

Stay at The White Lotus Hotel – Taormina Sicily

 

The WHITE LOTUS

San DOMENCO PALACE

TAORMINA,  SICILY

WHITE LOTUS 

Season II

TAORMINA SICILY


The POOL 

San DOMENICO PALACE HOTEL

TAORMINA SICILY

The Ficticious Hotel in The White Lotus
San DOMENICO PALACE HOTEL, Taormina, SICILY

A FOUR SEASONS HOTEL
Located in Taormina City Centre neighborhood, San Domenico Palace, Taormina, A Four Seasons Hotel is connected to a rail/subway station. Greek Theatre and Taormina Roman Odeon are cultural highlights, and some of the area’s landmarks include Palazzo Corvaja and Porta Messina. Traveling with kids? Consider Villa Comunale Garden and Passopisciaro. Discover the area’s water adventures with jet skiing and kayaking nearby, or enjoy the great outdoors with hiking/biking trails and horse riding.

San Domenico Palace, Taormina, A Four Seasons Hotel is a unique hotel, with terraces overlooking Mount Etna and the Bay of Taormina. It features a fitness centre, a beauty corner, and an outdoor swimming pool.

This luxury hotel in Taormina consists of 2 historic buildings. The Garden Wing is a former 15th-century convent with cloister. The Grand Hotel Wing was added in 1896.

All rooms are uniquely decorated, and equipped with air conditioning and TV with satellite channels. Most rooms offer views of the sea, and some also have a private balcony.

Mentioned in the most famous food guides, the restaurants and bars of the hotel serve traditional Sicilian cuisine. Breakfast buffet is served at the restaurant and includes local pastries.







Sna DOMENICO PALACE 

A FOUR SEASONS HOTEL  

TAORMINA



“The WHITE LOTUS”






San Domenico Palace

Taormina, Sicily

HOTELS & FLIGHTS WORLWIDE

Including Taormina Sicily

And All ITALY

“My two Friends will be coming and going”



Micael Imperoli in The WHITE LOTUS


Not too Late for CHRISTMAS Feast of The 7 Fish Italian Christmas

 

IT’S NOT TOO LATE !!!

For The FEAST of The 7 FISH

GET IT at AMAZON KINDLE

DECEMBER 24th




The FEAST of The 7 FISH

ITALIAN CHRISTMAS

“La VIGILIA”

RECIPES


“GET IT ISNTANTLY”

If You were Too Late to Order Paperback

GET IT NOW !!!

The FEAST of The 7 FISH

by Daniel Bellino Zwicke

In PAPERBACK, at AMAZON.com

ITALIAN CHRISTMAS



The FEAST of The 7 FISH COOKBOOK


La Vigila “THE FEAST of The 7 FISH” is The Southern Italian Ritual Christmas Eve Meal of 7 Fish, Representing The 7 Sacraments of Holy The Roman Catholic Church .. This Meal is a Sacred Ritual of The South of Italy and Italian-Americans in New York, New Jersey, Boston, Providence, San Francisco, New Orleans, Philly and Pittsburgh. And You’d be surprised to know that it is Mostly of The South of Italy and of Italian-America and that many Italians from Central Italy to The North have do not partake of This Great Traditional Feast as it is mainly of The South. Have You ever wanted to Make or Eat one, but Don’t Know Where to Start? The Know-How is mostly Passed Down in Families from one Generation to the Next and Not Much Has Been Written on This Great Subject. Not Until Now anyway with the Publication of This  by Daniel Bellino Zwicke. 

You’ll Find Everything You Need to Know to Partake, Make, and Eat this Most Important Meal of The Italian Calender Year The FEAST of THE 7 FISH, known in Italy as Festa di Sette Pesci.. 

The Book contains Stories, Recipes, and Instructions on How to Make This Great Feast, Your Very Own “FEAST of SEVEN FISHES” so Cook, Make, and Partake, and Mangia Bene. 

The FEAST of The 7 FISH by Daniel Bellino is a Amazon Best Seller and Top Book of this eclusive Genre of The Feast of The Seven Fishes. Buon Appetito e Mangia Bene !





“ALSO For CHRISTMAS” !!!



POSITANO The AMALFI COAST

TRAVEL GUIDE – COOKBOOK

For CHRISTMAS



“TRAVEL to POSITANO This CHRISTMAS”

The AMALFI COAST – ITALY

Do You Like to Armchair Travel ?








The SINATRA Tee Shirt

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SINATRA
 
 
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Frank Sinatra
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SUNDAY SAUCE
 
alla SINATRA