Best Selling Cookbook author Daniel Bellino Zwicke

 


Author DANIEL BELLINO ZWICKE

NEW YORK, NY

DANIEL BELLINO ZWICKE


Daniel Bellino Zwicke (often credited as Daniel Bellino “Z”) is a prominent New York City-based author, restaurateur, and food, wine, and travel writer with over 35 years of experience in the culinary industry. Based out of Greenwich Village, he is widely recognized as an authority on Italian-American culinary traditions and Italian wine. 

Professional Culinary Background
Before transitioning into a full-time writing career, Zwicke established a robust footprint in the New York food scene: [12]
  • Bar Cichetti: He was the creator, chef, wine director, and managing partner of this establishment, which was celebrated as America’s first-ever Venetian wine bar (Bàcaro).
  • Da Silvano: He spent several years working as a manager and maître d’ at this legendary Greenwich Village institution.
  • Education: He formalized his culinary foundation by attending the New York Technical College in Brooklyn. 
Notable Published Works
Zwicke has written an array of best-selling cookbooks and travel guides available on platforms like Amazon and ThriftBooks. His books blend traditional recipes with personal stories, local histories, and cultural anecdotes. 
  • Sunday Sauce: When Italian-Americans Cook: His highly popular definitive guide exploring the rituals and recipes behind traditional Italian-American “gravy”.
  • Grandma Bellino’s Italian Cookbook: A collection of authentic Sicilian recipes passed down from his grandmother.
  • The Feast of the 7 Fish: A dedicated cookbook detailing the traditional Italian Christmas Eve seafood dinner.
  • Sinatra Sauce: Music, Meatballs & Merriment: A cookbook designed for lifelong fans of Frank Sinatra, blending food with musical culture.
  • Segreto Italiano: A deep dive into secret Italian family recipes and regional favorite dishes.
  • Positano The Amalfi Coast Cookbook / Travel Guide: A multi-genre book offering travel insights alongside coastal southern Italian recipes.
  • Got Any Kahlua?: A pop-culture culinary departure subtitled The Collected Recipes of The Dude, a.k.a. The Big Lebowski Cookbook. [123456789] on AMAZON.com
You can read further updates on his literary projects through his Official Website or check his author updates on his Goodreads Author Profile. [12]
If you are looking for something specific, please let me know if you would like:
  • A breakdown of a specific recipe from his books (like his Sunday Sauce or Ragu)
  • Information on his latest upcoming book projects
  • Recommendations for Venetian wine pairings inspired by his restaurant background.






DANIEL at The TEATRO GRECO

SIRUCUSA, SICILY


WINE DIRECTOR DAYS

At RISTORANTE BARBETTA

NEW YORK CITY






DANIEL’S LATEST

“SINATRA SCUCE”


SINATRA SAUCE

The COOKBOOK

COOK & EAT LIKE FRANK



Pregame Cocktails in New York – Daniel Bellino Z – Pregaming

 

MARTINIS

 


Pre-GAMING? Have you heard about it? What is it you want to know? Pre-Gaming, when it comes to cocktails, or the drinking of any alcoholic beverages, is when you are going out to a nightclub, or for drinks at a bar or cocktail lounge, but have one or two drinks at home before going out. Why? Well, mostly to save money. Especially these days, days of $20 plus cocktails. The act of pre-gaming serves as social, financial, and preparatory way to start off the evening. Pre-gaming is a major way to save money, as it’s a lot cheaper to buy alcohol at a liquor store and make cocktails at home, as compared to drinking in a nightclub or cocktail lounge where drinks can cost $20 or more, plus with tax and tip, you’re looking at a cocktails cost $30 or more by the time you pay for the drink and add the tax and tip. “It’s insane.”

Back in the 1980s when I was a young man in my 20s, I often pre-gamed. My apartment was on Avenue A in New York’s East Village, and on nights offf, if my friends and I were going out to a club, we’d often pre-game at my house, having a drink or two before we left. At the time Stolychnya was a popular Russian Vodka, and my personal favorite in those years, so I always had a bottle of Stoli in my freezer. It’s customary to keep Russian Vodka in the freezer, just in case you didn’t’ know, and my drink of choice was Stoli & Grapefruit. During those times drinks ranged from $5 to $7 a pop. It was much cheaper back then, but still, at the time, though not expensive, that was exactly cheap, so as today, with everything from groceries, gas, and cocktails at bars and cocktail lounges in New York City, we were looking to save money too. My friends would come over, we’d drink Stoli, then head on out, primed with one or two drinks at home. 

Back in the 1980s East Village, wE had another way to pre-game before heading to one of our favorite nightclubs. We had lost of great inexpensive bars in my neighborhood, where you could get a cheap beer or cocktail. My favorite was the Holiday Ounge on St Marks Place, where I could get my favorite drink – Stoli & Grapefruit for only $2.It was a cool little bar run by one of the local Ukrainians “Stephan,” who I always loved seeing behind the bar, and ordering my drink from. Yes, it would cost me just $3, paying $2 for the drink, and leaving Stephan a $1 tip, so it was almost as cheap as (very cheap anyway) to pre-game at a local bar, as it was to drink at home, so we’d pre-game at the Holiday Lounge, have a one drink there, then head to Nell’s, Area, The Paladium, or whichever club we were going to that night. Yes things were much cheaper back then. You could go to a diner, and get a whole breakfast of 2 Eggs, with potatoes, toast, and coffee for just $2.99, which would cost you a little more than $4 zithtax and tip. Today, that same breakfast cost you $20 plus. That’s why I never go out for breakfast anymore. I eat breakfast at home. 

Besides saving money, which often is the main reason for pre-gaming (pre-drinking), saving money is not the only reason to do pre-game drinking at home. Having pre-game cocktails at home allows people to gather in a more intimate quieter setting to converse, listen to your own chosen music, and bond before going to a completely different World inside a New York City nightclub. 

Yes, I was listening, as usual to 1010 New Radio at home in Greenwich Village, as I always do. 1010 Wins New Radio “Give Us 1o Minutes & we’ll Give You the World,” is there slogan, and I’m a fan. Besides getting all the Big World News Stories, and the biggest news stories of New York City, they always give you all sorts of interesting other stories and info, that you wouldn’t get on network news. I find out so many things from 1010 news radio, I just love it. They give you little tidbits and if I need more info, I just jump on my phone and Google for more info. And so, I heard that Pre-Gaming Drinks at Home has now become a big thing, do to the “High Cost” of cocktails in New York City, bars, cocktail lounges, clubs, and restaurants. It’s just too much, and people have a choice. They “Pre-Game.” Something I’ve been doing in New York, since 1983. Yes, I’m usually ahead of the curve. On many things. I started drinking Negroni’s way back in the Summer of 1985, a good 30 plus years before most Americans discovered the famous Italian cocktail, and it became all the rage in New York and all over America. But I knew about them 33 years before they became the rage. Same thing with Cubano Sandwiches, and the Aperol Spritz, I discovered them many years before the rest of America finally caught up. Brag? No, just facts. I’m usually ahead of the curve. Anyway? 



by Daniel Bellino Zwicke – NYC








A NEGRONI COCKTAIL

HOW to MAKE a NEGRONI

Ingredients :

CAMPARI
GIN 
SWEET VERMOUTH
ICE
Fresh ORANGE Slices

Fill a Rock Glass with Ice. Add equal parts of Campari, Gin, & Sweet Vermouth. Garnish with a slice of Orange.

Serve.
Note : Most people probably don’t have Rock Glasses. You can make the drink using a wine glass instead.






An APEROL SPRITZ
HOW to MAKE an “APEROL SPRITZ”
INGREDIENTS :
APEROL
PROSECCO
CLUB SODA
ICE
ORANGE Slices
1 & 1/2 ounces Aperol
3 & 1/2 ounces Prosecco
1 ounce Club Soda
Ice
Orange Slice
Fill a wine glass with Ice. Add the Aperol, then the Prosecco, and top with the club soda. Stir, and add a fresh Orange slice.
Serve and Enjoy.
ALSO  –
The 3-2-1 RULE for making an APEROL SPRITZ
To make a classic Aperol Spritz, use the 3-2-1 rule: combine 3 parts Prosecco, 2 parts Aperol, and 1 part soda water in a wine glass filled with ice. Garnish with a fresh orange slice for a refreshing, bittersweet, and bubbly cocktail




CLASSIC COKTAILS


FRANK SINATRA


SINATRA SAUCE

The COOKBOOK

COOK & EAT LIKE FRANK

“COCKTAILS TOO”


The ROLLING STONES

The ROLLING STONES

ROLLING STONES NEW YORK T-SHirt

“ONE of a KIND”

This is an EXCLUSIVE PIECE

CAN NOT Be PURCHASE ANYWHERE ELSE

ONLY at COOL GIFTS TEES on ETSY

Frank Sinatra Pasta Tomato Sauce Recipe – Daniel Bellino Zwicke

 



FRANK Makes PASTA

FRANK SINATRA Shows DINAH SHORE

HOW to MAKE TOMATO SAUCE

“SPAGHETTI POMODORO”

“SINATRA PASTA”

Frank Sinatra’s connection to pasta sauce includes a commercial line of pasta sauce that he launched in the 1980s. It was his mother Dolly Sinatra’s recipe. The line had limited success before closing down with a short run.

A recently published popular book titled SINTRA SAUCE by fellow Jeresyite Italian-American author Daniel Bellino Zwicke contains many Italian food recipes of dishes that Frank Sinatra ate, including recipes from his mother Dolly, father Martino, his aunts, and Frank Sinatra’s own recipe for Salsa Pomodoro to make his Spaghetti with Tomato Sauce which he once demonstrated on television on the Dinah Shore Show.


SPAGHETTI POMODORO 
RECIPE “FRANK’S TOMATO SAUCE”
Frank’s Salsa Pomodoro is a quickly made tomato sauce that retains fresh tomato flavour, as opposed to sauces that are cooked for longer periods of time. It is simply made with top quality ingredients of San Marzano Tomatoes, Italian Olive Oil, fresh garlic, salt, black pepper, and  Bay Leaves, and fresh Basil. The best quality ingredients and short cooking time is what gives Frank’s Sauce its fresh wonderful taste.
SALSA POMODORO
  • Ingredients:
  • 1 pound imported Italian Spaghetti
  • 1 (28 ounce) can Whole Peeled San Marzano Tomatoes, crushed by hand
  • 8 tablespoons imported Italian Extra-Virgin Olive Oil
  • 3 cloves Garlic, peeled and lightly smashed
  • Handful of Fresh Basil Leaves, torn
  • Kosher salt and black pepper to taste
  • Optional: Pinch of red pepper flakes 

  • Instructions:
  • Infuse the Oil: Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the smashed garlic cloves and sauté for 2–3 minutes until golden brown. Sinatra’s Rule: Remove the garlic once it’s golden to leave only a subtle infusion.
  1. Start the Sauce: Carefully add the hand-crushed tomatoes and their juices to the oil. Add red pepper flakes if using. Simmer on medium-low for about 15–20 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the sauce slightly thickens but remains bright red.
  2. Cook Pasta: While the sauce simmers, cook spaghetti in a large pot of heavily salted boiling water until al dente (firm to the bite).
  3. Finish & Emulsify: Reserve 1/2 cup of pasta water, then drain the spaghetti. Add the pasta directly into the sauce skillet.
  4. Toss: Add the torn basil and a splash of the reserved pasta water. Toss vigorously over medium heat for 1 minute until the sauce coats every strand. Serve immediately. 


Daniel Bellino Z






The SINATRA COOKBOOK

“SINATRA SAUCE”

COOK & EAT LIKE FRANK

His FAVORITE ITALIAN RECIPES


How to Make a Chopped Cheese Sandwich – Recipe New York City

 

A CHOPPED CHEESE SANDWICH

NEW YORK



The CHOPPED CHEESE SANDWICH

Birthplace – Blue Sky Deli, East Harlem, New York

A Chopped Cheese” is a popular NEW YORK CITY Sandwich made in Bodegas in East Harlem, and now all over New York City. A chopped cheese sandwich features Ground Beef sautéed with Onions, and melted Cheese (usually Yellow American Cheese). These ingredients are cooked and chopped together on a Flattop Griddle (or in a pan if making at home). These ingredients are put into a Hero Roll, and topped with lettuce, Tomato, and condiments like Mayonnaise, and /or Ketchup. The sandwich is known for its tasty savory flavour, and substance to satisfy ones hunger. The sandwich has been described as a deconstructed Hamburger, and is a Staples of New York City food culture.

Key Components

  • Meat: GROUND BEEF, seasoned with salt, pepper, garlic, or adobo seasoning. 
  • CHEESE  Typically American cheese, melted into the meat mixture. 
  • Vegetables: Sautéed ONIONS are standard; lettuce and tomatoes are common additions. 
  • Condiments: Mayonnaise and ketchup are popular choices, often spread on the roll. 
  • Bread: A long Hero Roll or hoagie roll. 

  • HOW to MAKE a CHOPPED CHEESE SANDWICH
Preparation :
  1. Sauté chopped Onions on a griddle or skillet.
  2. Add Ground Beef patties, seasoning them as they cook.
  3. Chop the meat and onions together as they cook, mixing thoroughly.
  4. Add CHEESE slices and let them melt into the meat mixture.
  5. Spread condiments on the roll, add the meat/cheese mixture, and top with lettuce and tomato. 

ORIGIN
  • The sandwich is widely believed to have originated in East Harlem, New York City, with many crediting Blue Sky Deli (also known as Hajji’s) as the birthplace. 


The BADASS COOKBOOK

BLUE RIBBON MEATLOAF

PRIZE WINNING CHILI

THe BEST SANDWICHES

And SECRET RECIPES

The BADASS COOKBOOK
.

Pavarotti Pasta Recipe by Bellino Spaghetti alla Luciano

 

LUCIANO Cooks PASTA


“BRAVO LUCIANO” !!!

PAVAROTTI PASTA

Recipe :

1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 medium Onion, peeled and sliced
2 j- 32 oz. jars of Italian Tomato Passata (we like Mutti)
3 cloves Garlic, peeled and chopped
2 tbsp. Tomato Paste
1/4 cup red wine
1/4 cup chopped Italian Parsley
12 fresh Basil Leaves, washed and torn with your hands
1/2 cup grated Parmesan or Romano cheese
1/2 teaspoon Red Pepper Flakes
1 pound of imported Italian Spaghetti (best quality)

In a large skillet, add the Olive Oil and onion. Cook the onion on low heat for 4 minutes. Add the garlic and cook on low heat for 2 minutes.

Add the wine, turn heat to high, and cook for 5 minutes.

Add the Tomatoes, Tomato Paste. Add 1 1/2 teaspoon each of Salt & ground Black Pepper, and half of the Pecorino Cheese.

Bring to the boil. Once the tomatoes start to bubble, low heat to low, and cook on low heat for 20 minutes, being sure to stir with a wooden spoon, scraping the bottom of the pot with the wooden spoon to keep the tomatoes from sticking  or burning.

After 20 minutes, add the Basil & Parsley, and cook 5 minutes more. The Tomato Sauce is done. Turn the heat off and let it rest in the pot.

Fill a large pot, 3/4 full with water. Add 2 tablespoons salt. Bring the water to a rapid boil. Add the Spaghetti.

Cook the spaghetti according to the directions on the package. Two minutes before the the pasta cooking time on package, remove one cup of water from the pot and reserve. When the spaghetti is 1 minute away from the cooking time on package, turn the heat off and drain the pasta in a colander.

Add the Spaghetti back to the pot it cooked in and add half of the cooking water. Add 2 cups of the tomato sauce. to the pot, and turn the heat on to a low flame. Cook for 2 minutes on a low flame. Add more of the pasta cooking water if it gets too dry.

Turn the heat off, and drizzle some olive oil over the spaghetti and mix.

Plate a portion of Spaghetti onto each persons plate. Add about half a cup of Tomato Sauce on top of each portion of Spaghetti, and serve.

Serve with grated Pecorino or Parmigiana Cheese on the side. 

Enjoy !


Recipe by Daniel Bellino Zwicke








SPAGHETTI alla PAVAROTTI 


A DINNER PARTY at LUCIANO’S

NEW YORK






SINATRA & PAVAROTTI







And PASTA SINATRA !!!

SINATRA SAUCE 

The COOKBOOK

COOK & EAT LIKE FRANK

His FAVORITE ITALIAN RECIPES

Daniel Bellino Zwicke






Remembering Josh – Josh Ozersky

 

 

JOSH OZERSKY

RIP



REMEMBERING JOSH

Joshua Ozersky (August 22, 1967 – May 4, 2015) was an American food writer and historian. He first came to prominence as a founding editor of New York Magazine’s food blog, Grub Street, for which he received a James Beard Foundation Award (with co-editor Daniel Maurer) in 2008. He was the author of several books, including The Hamburger: A History – Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, and Archie Bunker’s America: TV in an Era of Change, 1968–1978 . He was Editor-at-Large for Esquire, writing about food and restaurants. He also wrote frequently for The Wall Street JournalFood & Wine, and The New York Observer, among other places. Although read primarily as a food writer, he has said in numerous public appearances that he disliked “food writing” as such, and that his strongest influences were G. K. ChestertonThomas Babington Macaulay and A. J. Liebling.

Ozersky was born in Miami in 1967. He moved to Atlantic City, New Jersey, in 1979 when his father, the painter David Ozersky, got a job as a stage technician in the first of the area’s casino-hotels, Resorts International. He attended Atlantic City High School and Rutgers University. His mother, Anita Ozersky, died suddenly when he was 14 years of age. Of his interest in food, he has said in interviews, “I was a friendless child, and a solitary and celibate teenager … my father and I only spoke about movies and food, and food far more than movies. He was a great gastronome and taught me to self-medicate my loneliness with steaks and sausages.”[4] He later attended New York University‘s School of Journalism and started work towards a doctoral degree at the University of Notre Dame, where he eventually received a master’s degree in American history. 

After graduating from Rutgers University in 1989, Ozersky wrote for several publications on media and cultural history topics, most frequently in Tikkun. The first articles he was paid to write appeared in a short-lived satirical weekly called “The Hoboken Review,” based in Hoboken, NJ, where Ozersky lived at the time.[7] Among his earliest works for The Hoboken Review was an article titled, “I like it greasy,” in which he celebrates his disdain for overly-health-conscious eating—a recurring theme in his future food writing. From 1990 to 1993 he wrote two weekly columns for the West Side Spirit, a free weekly newspaper in New York City: a semi-humorous “TV Picks” column and a cheap-eats column called “The Impoverished Gourmand” under the name “Casper Gutman.” Many consider this guise, which was loosely based on the character from The Maltese Falcon, as a forerunner of “Mr. Cutlets,” his later fictive persona. In the mid-1990s, he wrote for Suck.com under the name “The Boob”, as well as for Newsday, where he frequently contributed essays on culture and media. His book “Archie Bunker’s America: TV in an Era of Change”  a cultural history of television programming, received a disappointing critical reception. Although his ambition at this time was to establish himself as a public intellectual after the example of his mentors, Neil Postman and Mark Crispin Miller, he eventually turned to food writing full-time with the publication of his 2003 book “Meat Me in Manhattan” 2008’s “The Hamburger: A History”  was a critical success, receiving positive reviews in publications on both sides of the Atlantic, including The EconomistThe TimesThe Observer and Forbes

Subsequent to “Meat Me in Manhattan”‘s publication, Ozersky was a contributing restaurant critic for Newsday (2004–2006), and wrote regularly for the website Slashfood and the New York Law Journal. He became the founding editor of New York Magazine food blog Grub Street,[13] a position he held until 2008, when he moved over to Citysearch as National Restaurant Editor. There he ran a daily food blog based on the model of Grub Street called The Feedbag, along with his regular Citysearch duties.[14] He left in 2009 to start Ozersky.TV, a venture with Eater founder Ben Leventhal, featuring short films about restaurants and cooking, which debuted in July 2010. He wrote the “Taste of America” column for Time from 2010 to 2012. Both Ozersky TV, “Taste of America,” and his work in The Wall Street Journal was nominated for James Beard Awards. Essays by Ozersky were also included in “The Best Food Writing” anthologies of 2009, 2012 and 2014.

In 2010, Ozersky was criticized by Robert Sietsema Writing about his wedding in Time without disclosing that the chefs who participated donated the food as wedding gifts. Ozersky defended himself, saying that the chefs involved were among his closest friends, and that the most prominent of them, Michael White, had his daughter in the wedding party as a flower girl. 

Ozersky was found and pronounced dead in his Conrad Chicago hotel room on May 4, 2015, while in the city for the James Beard Foundation Awards. Officials said the autopsy reveals he died after suffering a seizure in the hotel shower and drowned.

Ozersky was the founder of Meatopia, a large meat-centric outdoor culinary event, which has been held in New York City for the past ten years. In 2013 Meatopia events were held in London, England and San Antonio, Texas, with more cities planned for 2014. Meatopia held a very small event in 2013 in New York City while focusing the majority of its efforts on the London and Texas events. Each year has had a different theme such as “Slaughter of the Innocent” (baby animals); “Lamb Bam Thank You M’aam” (whole lambs); “City Meat,” (NYC 2012) in which the festival was divided up into multiple “neighborhoods” such as Offalwood, Carcass Hill, and Beaktown; and most recently (NYC 2014) The Carnivore’s Ball, a celebration of the 10th annual Meatopia which was hosted by Michael Symon. Meatopia has been called “a glorious city of meat” by The Huffington Post[ and “a bacchanal of pork, beef, lamb, chicken, duck, turkey and quail” by The New York Times.



JOSH 


Josh Ozersky was one of the Great Food Writers of All-Time. He had a style of writing and chatting on food, that was all his own. There was no-one quite like Josh. The closest to this Giant of Food Writing and pontificating would be the late great Anthony Bourdain. Another Giant. These two men were a great gift to The Food World and its millions of fans. And they both left us far too soon, and millions mourn them.

Josh was not nearly as well know and popular as Anthony, but he was certainly his equal. They both had their own styles, which were both absolutely wonderful, yet different. Hey, they were wo different human beings. 

When Josh passed away, he was only 47 years old. Anthony Bourdain was 61 when he passed. It was a tremendous loss and the World Mourned. Tony had millions of fans. The world still mourns Bourdain’s passing, and pine for him. Sadly these two giants of human beings (food writers / hosts) are sorely missed, and will always be remembered.


RIP







JOSH OZERSKY on BURGERS


At The  SPOTTED PIG New York


OZERSKY on BURGERS

“The Burger is Omnipotent and Irresistible”


“It’s the most Single Powerful Force in The Food Universe”


“But, Better Than Filet Mignon cause It Has Flavor” 


“A Hamburger is the most Universal Symbol of What it Means to Be
an American”


“To turn away from the Hamburger would be to abrogate everything
that makes us American. Or Human for that Matter”


“HAMBURGERIZE” !!!


“This is Like BURGER BLING. This is like a Status Symbol of Conspicuous Consumption”

(On Eating a BLACK LABEL BURGER)



“The Worse Things are, The More People Need a Great Cheap Food”







SHAKE SHACK BURGERS

“Josh Loved Them”



HAMBURGER TRIBUTE to JOSH



Nick SOLARES for EATER

Tribute to JOSH OZERSKY

EATING “The OZERSKY”

BURGER






BOURDAIN & OZERSKY at KEENS

“TWO GIANTS”

GONE TOO SOON

ANTHONY BOURDAIN & JOSH OZERSKY 
at “KEEN’S STEAK HOUSE”

NEW YORK, NEW YORK






SINATRA SAUCE

COOK & EAT LIKE FRANK

His FAVORITE ITALIAN RECIPES

STORIES TOO !







Pizza Night in Jersey – 60s New Jersey

 

Screen Shot 2017-11-29 at 4.26.43 PM
Pizza Town
Route 46 , Garfield , New Jersey

“The First Place I ever had a Calzone!”



 

My first memories of PIZZA were from Bella Pizza in East Rutherford, New Jersey. I was a young boy and this Pizzeria just opened on Park Avenue. It was a standard Pizzeria like many others found all over the New York-New Jersey metro area, serving solid pizza just the way the locals like it. The pizza was of a high standard as all the pizza must be if you’re going to make and sell Pizza in the heavily Italian-Populated New York and New Jersey areas. A large pie which you just ordered as a Pizza, the one that is known as Pizza Margherita in Italy is made of the pizza dough topped with tomato sauce, Mozzarella Cheese, salt, pepper, and a little olive oil. Basta!

   The Pizza in America are much larger than those made in Italy and are cut into 8 triangular slices and are enough for 2 or 3 people to eat, or even four if you’re not that hungry or sharing a Pizza just as a snack in-between meals. I can still remember the price of the pizza at Bella Pizza in East Rutherford back in the 60s a whole pie cost just $1.50 and a slice was .20 cents. So if you wanted what they call in Napoli and all over Italy the Pizza Margherita, you just simply ordered a Pizza, or a Cheese Pie, or simply a Pie, meaning it was with Tomato, Mozzarella , and Basil and no other toppings. And if you wanted extra toppings, you just say a Pepperoni Pie, or half mushroom half pepperoni, or a Sausage Pie or whatever. That’s the way it was and more or less still is with ordering Pizza at your standard pizzeria. Nowadays most pizza cost between $2.25 and $2.75 a slice and about $16.00 to $20 and even more for a whole plain pie.

   Anyway, as most kids did and do, we loved eating pizza, and on most Friday nights it was Pizza Night for many families in Jersey. Mom didn’t want to cook that night, the kids loved getting pizza and looked forward to it as a special treat on Friday nights, as we knew it as Pizza Night and we just loved it. We’d have pizza, Coca-Cola and some sort of sweets, a cake or Ice Cream for desserts after we ate our Pizza. Yes Friday Night Pizza was always a much loved treat as a child growing up in Jersey in the 1960s and 70s. We’d listen to WABC Radio and Top 20 Hits, R&B, and Rock-N-Roll and all was fine in the World, we had all that we needed. How I miss those sweet days of youth and a simpler time than today. Back then you had everything you needed in life. We had Radio and TV and we still do today. We had Cars that were beautiful unlike some of the ugly ones of today. We had the Telephone, no cel phones or internet, we didn’t need them. We all had a Football, a Basketball, a Baseball Bat, Baseball, and Glove to play Baseball, Basketball, and Football as all healthy American boys did back then. We didn’t have Video Games but we had Aurora Racing Car sets, maybe Electric Trains, and wonderful Board Games like; Monopoly, Candyland, Chess, Checkers, Stratego, and Battle Ship. And one of the most wonderful things we had back then in the 60s & 70s was great music unlike the Crap they call music today, we had Great Top 100 Hits, wonderful R&B sounds of Motown and The Philly Sound, we had The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, and Rock-N-Roll, what do the kids have for music today? Sadly, just Crap Rap and the other garbage they think is music. Yes it’s quite sad what has happened to music in the past 20 years. But yes we had everything we needed; Radio, TV, cars, a stereo, Sports, great music to listen to, and Pizza, we always had Pizza, we still do.

   Well sorry, I got off topic, but it’s all part of the story you see. In Italy when it comes to Pizza it’s a bit different than the way Pizza is done in America. Pizza was born in Napoli where it is revered into a high religion and is to made just so. The Pizza is much smaller and is made for one and they do not make slices unless you are in Rome or other parts of Italy where they make Pizza that is made in large pans ahead of time and then cut into squares and heated up when a customer orders some. That’s Pizza Taglio, and most Pizza made in Italy is Neapolitan Pizza that is made to order. As we’ve said they are individual sized (about 12” round) for one person and made to order and are cooked in hot wood burning ovens to strict standardized specifications. A Pizza Margherita made in the true Neapolitan fashion is made with fresh tomato puree, olive oil, salt, fresh garlic, basil, and mozzarella placed on top, then the pizza cooks in the hot wood burning oven, and is ready in just about 4-5 minutes. Pizza Margherita was created by Raffaella Esposito in 1889 where he was working at Pizzeria di Pietro. He made the Pizza and named it in honor of Queen Margherita of Savoy who was visiting Naples (Napoli) at the time. American Pizza on the other hand is made with a cooked sauce and we tend to put more sauce and cheese than they do in Italy .

   Now, my own experience eating Pizza in Italy. Well the first pizza I first had in Italy was Pizza Taglio (pan Pizza) and not the Classic Neapolitan Pizza, which is by far the dominant pizza in all Italy, and though there is Pizza Taglio which is sold in square slices, it’s a mere fraction as far as its presence goes, which is just about 1% of all Pizza consumed in Italy is Pizza Taglio, the rest being classic Neapolitan. Anyway, there’s very good pizzeria that makes Pan Pizza close to the train station in Rome. Like other pizzerias that make Pizza Taglio in Italy, there’s an array of different pizzas with different toppings that are already made and are laid out before you. You choose which type of pizza you’d like, tell them the size you want, they cut it and weight it to determine the price by weigh.

Yes the pizza is a bit different in America, but it’s dammed good, and America makes the world’s best pizza outside of Italy. And as far as Pizza goes in America, everyone knows that the best Pizza in the country is made in New York, and especially in Brooklyn with great shrines to Pizza in the form of; Tottono’s in Coney Island, Grimaldi’s, and DiFara Pizza by Pizza Maestro Dom DeMarco. Then you’ve got John’s on Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village and the first Pizzeria ever to exist in the United States Lombardi’s on Prince Street, established in 1905.

   Anyway, enough with the technicalities of Pizza, sometimes things are analyzed too much, just eat it and enjoy. We loved eating Pizza on Pizza Night or any time of the week when we were lucky enough to get it. And there is one particular time that I always remember. We went on a trip with our local church to the big beautiful Riverside Cathedral in New York one time, and it was a very special trip. When we came home, the Priest and other church officials made a little Pizza Party for us in the church basement. They ordered a bunch of Pizzas for all the kids (Grownups too) and it was a very special thing for us, as pizza always was and even so to this day. Yes there’s nothing like when you’re a child and they have a Pizza Party for you, we just loved it. And so these are my memories of Pizza.

 

Excerpted From “MANGIA ITALIANO” Memories of Italian Food  




     by Daniel Bellino-Zwicke

 

 

Screen Shot 2017-11-29 at 4.30.42 PM.png
Typical Large Pie for PIZZA NIGHT in The 60s



 

Read about PIZZA NIGHT , CANNOLIS, PROVOLONE, MEATBALLS, 
Growing Up Italian in America, Italian Food, Italy, and more, 
in best selling author Daniel Bellino-Zwicke’s 
latest book, Mangia Italiano – Memories of Italian Food.


 

 

 

Screen Shot 2016-08-22 at 11.04.43 AM.png
MANGIA ITALIANO !

The Latest From Daniel Bellino “Z”





PIZZA DOUGH RECIPE

POSITANO The AMALFI COAST

TRAVEL GUIDE – COOKBOOK

100 REGIONAL RECIPES – NAPLES

Including – PIZZA DOUGH PIZZA Recipe
POSITANO CAPRI NAPLES SORRENTO













.

 

The Worlds Best Tacos – Burritos Taco Stand Taqueria Mexico City

Taqueria El CALIFA De LEON

MEXICO CITY


TACOS El CALIFA De LEON

  • Tacos El Califa de León, a taco stand in Mexico City, won a Michelin star
  • Its famous tortillas cost nearly $5 and go best with a Coke, according to the chef
  • Michelin-star chef Arturo Rivera Martínez said the honor was ‘neat’ and ‘cool’

Mexico City’s Tacos El Califa de León has received a Michelin star, making it the only taco stand in the world to receive the coveted award from the French dining guide. 

Not making a big fuss of the incredible honor, the tiny restaurant’s main chef, Arturo Rivera Martínez, stood over his grill Wednesday searing meat for a horde of hungry customers as he’s done for 20 years. 

Asked how he felt about receiving the Michelin star Rivera Martínez said ‘está chido … está padre,’ meaning:’It’s neat, it’s cool.’

Although Michelin representatives came Wednesday to present him with his well-deserved full-sleeved white chef’s jacket, he didn’t put it on. Not out of disrespect, but simply because his cooking area is tiny – 10 feet by 10 feet – and extremely hot.

Diners at the stand can only order tacos, and the meat inside comes from either a cow’s rib, loin or fore shank. 

The prices at the taco stand, however, are a lot more affordable with a huge taco costing nearly $5. Customers say the tacos there are the best, if not the cheapest, in the city.

El Califa de León has been around since 1968 and has been doing the same things that’s made it so successful since the beginning.

Thousands of times a day, Rivera Martínez grabs a fresh, thinly sliced fillet of beef from a stack and slaps it on the 680 degree steel grill. 

He then dashes a pinch of salt over the meat and squeezes half a lime on top before grabbing a soft piece of freshly rolled tortilla dough to heat it up on the grill.

Less than a minute later – he didn’t share exactly how long because ‘that’s a secret’ – he flips the beef, flips the tortilla and assembles it on the plate for the waiting customer.





Chef Arturo Rivera Martínez prepares an order of Tacos 
at the Tacos El Califa de León taco stand, in Mexico City




SAUCES & EXTRA FIXINS







SIMPLE TACOS For GRINGOS

AMERICA’S FAVORITE FOODS

And SECRET RECIPES

TACOS BURRITOS

CHILI – BBQ – BURGERS

SOUP – STEAKS & MORE




FLIGHTS & HOTELS

WORLDWIDE






Clemenza Mob War Godfather Sunday Sauce Recipe

 



CLEMENZA Teaches MICHAEL How to Make SUNDAY SAUCE

Richard Castellano as Peter Clemenza and Al Pacino as Michael Corleone

In FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA’S The GODFATHER

Novel by MARIO PUZO



SUNDAY SAUCE

by Daniel Bellino “Z”




“Come here kid, lem-me show you something. You never know when you’re gonna have to cook for 20 guys some day.” Pete Clemenza says to Michael Corleone (Al Pacino) in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather. It’s one of the most famed movie scenes in history, and of great importance to Italian-Americans. Clemenza is making “Gravy” aka Sunday Sauce, the Supreme Dish of Italian-America, and the dish that brings Italian Families together each and every Sunday. Learn How to Make Clemenza’s Sunday Sauce, Meatballs, Pasta Fazool, Momma DiMaggio’s Gravy, Goodfellas Sauce, and all of the great favorites of The Italian American Table. 

Cook Sinatra’s Spaghetti & Meatballs, Italian Wedding Soup and more, and delight in the many stories and factual information written by Italian Food & Wine Writer Daniel Bellino Zwicke. This book is filled with Joy & Love, and you will get many years of both, reading, cooking and eating the dishes in SUNDAY SAUCE “When Italian-Americans Eat”.Do you Love Goodfellas, The Godfather, and Italian Food? Of course you do. Learn How to make Clemenza’s Brooklyn Mob War Sauce for 20 people some day. Remember that scene in Francis Ford Coppola, Mario Puzo classic Film Trilogy of the Corleone Family of Sicily and Brooklyn, New York. Recipes in Italian-American New York Author Daniel Bellino Zwicke’s Best Selling Cookbook (2 Years Amazon Kindle) 

SUNDAY SAUCE includes ; Frank Sinatra Sunday Sauce, Dolly Sinatra’s Spaghetti Meatballs, Joe DiMaggio ‘s mom’s Sunday Gravy, and Charlie Scorsese making Sauce in Prison in Martin Scorsese’s GOODFELLAS – starring; Robert DeNiro, Joe Pesce, and Ray Liotta making Veal & Peppers and Sunday Sauce. And by-the-way, Joe Pesci and Liotta are both Italians from New Jersey, so they know their stuff when it comes to Italian Food and all things Italian (Mafia speak and so-forth). 




SUNDAY SAUCE

The Unofficial GODFATHER COOKBOOK

AVAILABLE on AMAZON.com





WATCH The VIDEO


CLEMENZA (Richard Castellano) Teaches MICHAEL (Al Pacino)

HOW to MAKE SUNDAY SAUCE








SUNDAY SAUCE


alla CLEMENZA

LEARN HOW to MAKE IT
SUNDAY SAUCE

The Unofficial GODFATHER COOKBOOK

ITALIAN-AMERICAN GRAVY

PASTA – MEATBALLS and Much More




FLIGHTS & HOTELS

WORLDWIDE

FLY with EXPEDIA

Philly Cheesesteak Sandwich Recipe Philadelphia Pennsylvania PA

 

PHILLY CHEESESTEAK

With PROVOLONE

MAKE at HOME !!!


PHILLY CHEESESTEAK – RECIPE

Ingredients

  • 1 pound
    Ribeye Steak (trimmed and thinly sliced)
  • ½ teaspoon
    Sea Salt (or to taste)
  • ½ teaspoon
    Black Pepper (or to taste)
  • 1
    Sweet Onion (large, diced)
  • 8 slices
    Provolone Cheese (mild, not aged provolone)
  • 4
    Hoagie Rolls (sliced 3/4 through)
  • 2 tablespoons
    Unsalted Butter (softened)
  • 1
    Garlic Clove (pressed)
  • 4-tablespoon
    Mayonnaise (or to taste)

CHEESE STEAK

INGREDIENTS


Directions

  • Take hoagie rolls, split them lengthwise.
  • Take a working bowl, add butter and garlic to it and mix. Spread the mix in the rolls.
  • Set an air fryer basket in an instant pot. Place rolls in it. Close the lid and bake at 400F for 3 minutes.
  • Dish out the rolls and set them aside.
  • Now, add melted butter, diced onions to a clean Instant Pot. Saute at high for 5 minutes. Stir it a bit.
  • Add ribeye steak, salt, black pepper, and chili flakes to it. Keep stirring until meat changes its color.
  • Finally, add the shredded provolone cheese to it. Mix it up and wait until the cheese melts.
  • Dish out the cheesy steaks, divide them over baked buns, and serve it with the dip you love!








The BIG LEBOWSKI COOKBOOK

aka “GOT ANY KAHLUA” ???

The COLLECTED RECIPES of The DUDE

“ABIDE in IT” !!!

A BRIEF HISTORY of The PHILLY CHEESE STEAK

The story of the Philly cheesesteak begins in the heart of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the early 20th century. Legend has it that Pat Olivieri, a hot dog vendor, decided to try something new by grilling some thinly sliced beef on his grill for his own lunch. The aroma wafted through the air, enticing passersby with its irresistible sizzle. A taxi driver, drawn by the aroma, asked Pat to make him a sandwich with the mouthwatering meat. And just like that, the Philly cheesesteak was born. Sort of. The original sandwich made by Pat only had chopped beef and onions, no cheese.

As the popularity of this delectable creation spread, Pat Olivieri’s humble hot dog stand transformed into a bustling destination for locals and tourists alike. With each satisfied customer, the fame of the Philly cheesesteak grew, solidifying its status as a true culinary icon.

While sauteed onions have long been the traditional topping, the inclusion of peppers became popular as a customization among the newer vendors and restaurants offering the sandwich, adding a bit of Italian flair.

When you’re considering the true moment of the philly cheesesteak origin, you need to look at when someone added the cheese. The cheese wasn’t added until the 1940s when restaurant manager, “Cocky Joe” Lorenza at Pat’s King of Steaks added some provolone to the mix.

The key to an authentic Philly cheesesteak lies in the meat. Traditionally, thinly sliced rib-eye steak is used, known for its tender texture and rich flavor. The steak is cooked on a hot griddle, sizzling to perfection. The result is a juicy, flavorful filling that becomes the star of the sandwich. Today, the Philly cheesesteak meat can be found in various cuts and even chicken or vegetarian options, but the original recipe still holds a special place in the hearts of cheesesteak connoisseurs.



The ORIGINAL !!!

PAT’S KING of STEAKS
The ORIGINAL PHILLY CHEESESTEAK
Created by Pat Oliveri in 1933

GINO’S STEAKS
Down The Block from PAT’S
GINO’S STEAKS is One of PHILLY’S BEST
WHAT is a CHEESESTEAK

Meat


The meat traditionally used is thinly sliced Rib-Eye or top round, although other cuts of beef are also used. On a lightly oiled griddle at medium temperature, the steak slices are quickly browned and then scrambled into smaller pieces with a flat spatula. Slices of cheese are then placed over the meat, letting it melt, and then the roll is placed on top of the cheese. The mixture is then scooped up with a spatula and pressed into the roll, which is then cut in half.


Bread

In Philadelphia, cheesesteaks are invariably served on hoagie rolls. Among several brands, perhaps the most famous are Amoroso rolls; these rolls are long, soft, and slightly salted. One source writes that “a proper cheesesteak consists of provolone or Cheez Whiz slathered on an Amoroso roll and stuffed with thinly shaved grilled meat,”  while a reader’s letter to an Indianapolis magazine, lamenting the unavailability of good cheesesteaks, wrote that “the mention of the Amoroso roll brought tears to my eyes.”  After commenting on the debates over types of cheese and “chopped steak or sliced”, Risk and Insurance magazine declared, “The only thing nearly everybody can agree on is that it all has to be piled onto a fresh, locally baked Amoroso roll.


Cheese

American cheese, provolone, and Cheez Whiz are the most commonly used cheeses or cheese products put on to the Philly cheesesteak.

White American cheese, along with provolone cheese, are the favorites due to their mild flavor and medium consistency. Some establishments melt the American cheese to achieve the creamy consistency, while others place slices over the meat, letting them melt slightly under the heat. Philadelphia Inquirer restaurant critic Craig LaBan says, “Provolone is for aficionados, extra-sharp for the most discriminating among them,” although LaBan was at the time new to the Philadelphia area, and sharp provolone is rarely found in cheesesteak shops, while mild provolone is common. Geno’s owner, Joey Vento, said, “We always recommend the Provolone. That’s the real cheese.”

Cheez Whiz, first marketed in 1952, was not yet available for the original 1930 version, but has spread in popularity. A 1986 New York Times article called Cheez Whiz “the sine qua non of cheesesteak connoisseurs.” In a 1985 interview, Pat Olivieri’s nephew Frank Olivieri said that he uses “the processed cheese spread familiar to millions of parents who prize speed and ease in fixing the children’s lunch for the same reason, because it is fast.” Cheez Whiz is “overwhelmingly the favorite” at Pat’s, outselling runner-up American by a ratio of eight or ten to one, while Geno’s claims to go through eight to ten cases of Cheez Whiz a day. 





PAT’S KING of STEAKS
The PHILLY CHEESESTEAK was INVENTED HERE
by PAT OLIVERI – 1933

AMERICA’S FAVORITE DISHES
And SECRET RECIPES