eat. shop. love. nyc.


2nd annual Taste of 7th St returns

Last year, Scoop Street kicked off its inaugural Taste of 7th Street Festival with Luke’s Lobster, Butter Lane, Caracas Arepa Bar, Porchetta, and Xoom Smoothies. The weekend-long festival brought with it long lines and general foodie mayhem, but the eats were worth braving the crowds.

This year from April 20th to 22nd, the Taste of 7th Street Festival moves from weekend to weekday/weeknight  and is spread across three days instead of two (probably so it’s not as crazy as last year). For $18, you get to sample signature dishes from Luke’s and Butter Lane (2nd year veterans of the festival), and Scoop Street has added Wechsler’s Currywurst, Dumpling Man, and Cowgirl’s Baking to the lineup. No more Porchetta or Caracas Arepas – I suspect it’s because the lines got CRAZY long last year and it was kind of a nightmare. It looks like they’ve taken steps to smooth out the logistics, and I look forward to another fun and tasty food crawl – now with drink specials at Jimmy’s No. 43, Burp Castle, and Standings Bar.

Buy your tickets here!

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New York loves Japan Punch Party

Tonight, the New York Loves Japan Punch Party is going down at Summit Bar in the East Village/Alphabet City from 7 pm to 11 pm. Sample some tasty boozy punches and whilst listening to the grooves of DJ Kimiko Masuda and supporting Japanese disaster relief efforts. A $20 donation gets you unlimited open bar servings of six Japanese-inspired punch cocktails, and all proceeds benefit the Japan Society’s Earthquake Relief Fund.

Sponsors include Beefeater Gin, Pernod Absinthe, Tequila Corazón, Leblon Cachaça, Belvedere, Sailor Jerry Rum, The Tippling Bros. & Classic & Vintage Artisanal Spirits Portfolio.

Drink: The Summit Bar (East Village/Alphabet City) 133 Avenue C (between 8th and 9th). New York Loves Japan Punch Party from 7 pm to 11 pm today, Monday, April 11, 2011.



Sunday Funday at Manitoba
April 10, 2011, 3:51 pm
Filed under: Drink | Tags: , , , , , ,

Not just Sunday. Happy hour from 2 to 8 daily: $2 domestic bottles, $3 imported bottles and well drinks, $3 drafts.image

Air hockey and bubble hockey tables downstairs. Hardcore cider on tap.

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Citywide happy hour all week!
April 4, 2011, 1:27 pm
Filed under: Drink | Tags: , , ,

It’s Yelp Drinks Week! April 4th through 10th, participating bars are offering select alcoholic beverages at half price. And you don’t have to leave work early to try and guzzle 2 happy hour drinks by 7 pm. It’s all week long at these participating bars.

I’ll be checking out some combination of The Immigrant, Idle Hands, Raines Law Room, Dorian Gray, Ward III, and Hotel Chantelle.

MANHATTAN:

The Immigrant – http://www.yelp.com/bi…
- Sancerre $7 (reg $14)
- Malbec $5 (reg $10)
- Cava $5 (reg $10)

Raines Law Room – http://www.yelp.com/bi…
- Airmail $6.50 (reg $13)
- Gold Rush $6.50 (reg $13)
- American Trilogy $6.50 (reg $13)

Idle Hands – http://www.yelp.com/bi…
- Any Draft Beer $3.50 (reg $7)
- Any Well Drink $3.50 (reg $7)
- Dram of Maker’s Mark $4 (reg $8)

Ward III – http://www.yelp.com/bi…
- Ward III: $6 (reg $12)
- Hell Bent For Leather: $6 (reg $12)
- NY Sour: $6 (reg $12)

Hotel Chantelle – http://www.yelp.com/bi…
- Bramble $6.50 (reg $13)
- Oscar Mike $6.50 (reg $13)
- Toussaint Rouge $6.50 (reg $13)

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Popshop at Tammany Hall
April 1, 2011, 10:43 am
Filed under: Drink, Go, Listen | Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

On the first Thursday of every month, LES nightlife newcomer Tammany Hall hosts three floors of rotating musical guests, dancing, and general debauchery with its monthly Popshop party. Next Thursday, April 7th, Walk the Moon, Savoir Adore, and ANR will be playing live with Lightwaves rocking the DJ booth all night. Free after midnight.

THURSDAY, APRIL 7TH
Entire Venue

Popshop is back at Tammany Hall. This month, SXSW darlings Walk the Moon headline with help from Brooklyn indie poppers Savoir Adore and Miami psych kids ANR playing live. Lightwaves is back and will be spinning all night long. Like every past Popshop, this event is expected to sell out, so get your tickets NOW!
Doors are at 8pm. Advance Tickets are available here

If you show up early, you might even catch happy hour. $3 beers, $4 cocktails, $5 wines.

Drink-Dance-Listen: Tammany Hall (LES) 152 Orchard Street between Stanton and Rivington. (212) 982-7767. Follow Tammany Hall and Popshop on Twitter.



Skee ball, darts, and pool at Ace Bar
March 22, 2011, 10:37 am
Filed under: Do, Drink | Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Sometimes it’s just not enough to walk into a bar and order a drink. Sometimes you just want something more. Maybe it’s an early in the game date and you’re not sure if you’re going to have anything to talk about with said date. Maybe you go out every night and the thought of another bottle of wine and another drawn out conversation about life is making you nauseous. Maybe you just feel like being a little more active than sitting on a barstool, but you don’t feel like dancing or yelling over crowds of people. Maybe you just like winning, and you feel like kicking ass and taking names.

Enter Ace Bar in East Village/Alphabet City. You’ll walk into what is a rather expansive space for a bar in the EV. Bar to your left, arcade games and booths to your right. Sidle up to the bar and order a drink. For a $10 deposit, you’ll be handed a set of darts, and as long as you don’t lose them, you’ll get to play for free.

In the back room, there are two dartboards, two skee ball machines, and two pool tables. Skee ball is $1 a game. Just remember that it’s easy to blow through a game in 30 seconds, so bring lots of dollar bills. If you can hit certain scores, you can win free beers. I think it’s MGD or something like that, but you’re playing for victory, not for microbrews.

I don’t remember how much pool is, but I think you pay per game rather than per hour (I could be wrong).

Drink: Ace Bar (East Village/Alphabet City) 531 East 5th Street between A and B. New York, NY 10009. (212) 979-8476.



Colt & Gray’s San Francisco Handshake
March 18, 2011, 11:54 pm
Filed under: Drink | Tags: , , , , , , , ,

One of the best drinks I’ve had in a while. Thank you, Kevin.

Drink: Colt and Gray (Platte) 553 Platte Street #120. Denver, CO 80202. Happy hour 4:30 to 6:30 pm weekdays.



Delhi Palace veg thali, falooda, Tandoor grill
March 17, 2011, 10:16 am
Filed under: Drink, Eat | Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

A former co-worker of mine goes to Jackson Heights to do grocery shopping in Indiatown every few weeks, and when I’m lucky, I get invited to tag along. These trips to Jackson Heights are a joy for me because they always result in two things: a full refrigerator and a full belly. After we pick up a few essentials (giant bags of spices, frozen paratha and samosas, etc.), we like to grab a bite at Delhi Palace. They start you off with some crispy pappadam and a chutney trio: pickled onions, cilantro, and sweet tamarind.

The vegetarian thali (a thali is an assortment of several dishes usually served in small bowls on a tray) is $13.95, and you end up with more food than you can actually know what to do with. At Delhi Palace, it’s chef’s choice, so whatever they have on hand that day. Usually, it includes three chef’s choice vegetable curries or roasted vegetables, dal, raita, papad and pickle served with rice, naan/poori, choice of dessert. Pictured below is the dal and the roasted cauliflower. Not much to look at, but quite tasty.


We also ordered the Tandoori Special ($17.95) which is definitely enough meat to feed three people comfortably. There’s Tandoori chicken, chicken tikka, seekh kabab, bihari kabab, Tandoori shrimp, and it’s served with navaratthan korma, dal, rice, naan, choice of dessert.

Sorry for the crappy shot. Couldn’t get anything better because the plate comes out sizzling and steaming.

One of the reasons we always go to Delhi Palace instead of going to any of the other establishments around the neighborhood is because Delhi Palace has the bomb falooda.

Falooda ($4.50) is a rose milk drink made with tukmaria, rice vermicelli, and rose ice cream. The fish egg-looking things are actually tukmaria, or soaked and expanded basil seeds. It is a really interesting dessert drink, this sort of floral milkshake, and definitely worth the visit to DP.

Eat: Delhi Palace (Jackson Heights, Queens) 3733 74th St. (1.5 blocks north of 74th St-Roosevelt Ave. subway station – 7, E, F, V, G, R - Queens, NY 11372. (718) 507-0666.



Sake Bar Decibel
March 7, 2011, 10:00 am
Filed under: Drink | Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Outside Sake Bar Decibel, an ON AIR sign surreptitiously marks the entrance down the stairs to this graffiti-covered izakaya on a quiet strip of E. 9th St. between 2nd and 3rd Aves. in the East Village. This sake and small plates joint is better suited for a date or intimate outing with a couple of of friends. It’s certainly not quiet, but it’s a cool place to go when you actually want to be able to hear the people you’re with. If Yakitori Taisho & Oh Taisho on St. Marks are izakayas for rowdy college kids and Village Yokocho is a step up from that, then Decibel is the hipper, tattooed cousin of Village Yokocho.

Once inside, you might notice the black wood, the graffiti-covered walls, and servers that look like they may have stepped off the pages of some Japanese manga – one of the servers when I went had half of his head shaved with the remaining long, straight hair pulled into a ponytail and looked like some punk rock samurai from the future. The dining area in the back is outfitted with the requisite red izakaya lantern and cat figurine but is otherwise dark, save for the light reflecting off of sake bottles from a few tea light candles.

The food itself is not exceptional, but it’s solid and makes for good snacking. The okonomiyaki with its billowing bonito flakes makes for a good stomach liner (even if the one at the takeout place Otafuku a block away is better). The raw squid was very wasabi-y and a little crunchier than I had expected – I would have gone with a thinner cute rather than little chunks, but it was still pretty good. The broiled dried sting ray is served in strips and tastes like a sweeter, slightly fishier version of the dried squid served in Korean drinking establishments, and it is served with a generous dollop of mayo for dipping – this was my favorite dish of the evening. We also tried the hamachi, which I didn’t care for as I felt the fish wasn’t terribly fresh. The Decibel tofu was nice, though fairly standard. I tried the sesame chicken and it was so gamey that I actually spit it out.

Still, I’d say it’s a good place to go and have some sake or shochu or beer while chatting with friends, but the strongest draw here is the atmosphere and the booze, and not so much the food. As long as you remember that, you’ll have an awesome time.

Drink: Sake Bar Decibel (East Village) 240 E. 9th St. between 2nd and 3rd Aves. (212) 979-2733. Open Monday – Saturday 6:00 pm – 2:50 am, Sunday 6:00pm-12:50 am.



Maritime Parc Winter Menu

A friend of mine asked me if I might be interested in checking out a place out in Jersey City for dinner. Initially, I scoffed. Jersey City? Do I need a passport? How does one even get to/from Jersey without a car? Does it cost a million dollars to take a taxi? We ended up sharing a car between four people, and it was more than well worth the trip to check out the winter menu at Maritime Parc.

The restaurant is spacious, warm, and modern. It’s the kind of place you can go for a special occasion, but without any stuffiness or discomfort.

Maritime Parc’s executive chef and owner is Chris Siversen, a man who exudes an almost palpable humility and genuineness. His eyes twinkled as he chatted animatedly about his daughter and how she loves to help him out in the kitchen every time she comes to work with him. His food philosophy is one dedicated to seasonal local ingredients, elegant simplicity, and cooking food that is accessible and familiar, but executed exceptionally well in his open kitchen and with a smile on his face.

The cocktail menu at Maritime Parc was designed by Greg Seider of Alphabet City cocktail den Summit Bar.

Named for famous Jersey shipwrecks, the cocktails are inventive, restrained, and mighty tasty.

We started the evening with a bread basket served with a plate of pickled red onions, pickled apples, pickled feta cheese. The mix was pleasantly vinegary with a touch of sweetness, and the crunch of the pickled apples and onions was offset nicely by the give of the feta.

Next up was an appetizer of grilled oysters topped with bacon leek cream sauce, an upscale take on the more traditional Oysters Rockefeller. But really, can you ever go wrong when you combine oysters, bacon, and cream? I think not.

We had a nice bottle of Concerto Gruner Veltliner from Wolfgang Vineyards in Burgenland Austria.

It was a great winter white – full bodied with nice acid, and it did well to cut the heaviness of the cream of the oysters and the cheese in our next dish, an apple chestnut risotto. For me, this dish epitomized winter comfort food. It wasn’t the most beautifully presented dish of the bunch, but I liked the combination of the sweet apple and earthy chestnuts in the rich and creamy risotto.

Then came the lobster with spinach and ricotta gnocchi. Technically, it’s a gnudi and not a gnocchi because there is no potato so the gnudi are very light and pillowy, and they don’t overpower the delicate lobster meat and they don’t need a heavy sauce. This wasn’t my favorite dish of the tasting as I felt like the sauce could have been a little brothier and packed a bigger lobster taste, but that small criticism aside, it was still delicious.

The second fish course was a perfectly cooked fillet of pink snapper with crispy skin, pickled onion, pink grapefruit, lemon, basil, and olive oil. I’m partial to seafood as it is, and I’m a sucker to crispy skinned-anything, so this was easily my favorite dish of the evening.

The pink snapper was served with two hearty family-style sides of roasted brussel sprouts cooked in bacon walnut butter and fried mashed potato rings (donuts) served with a grainy mustard fondue. I got so excited about eating that I forgot to take pics until after we’d already demolished these. Woops. My bad.

The meat course was a venison loin in a juniper reduction, served alongside red cabbage and barley braised in red wine and red vinegar atop a parsnip puree. The parsnip puree was a nice departure from mashed potatoes, lending a slightly sweet dimension to the plate. At this point, I thought my stomach might quite literally explode. This is a very meaty, very filling dish, and while I am possessed of impressive eating faculties, I do have my limits. If you’re really hungry, this would be a great choice. The portion isn’t huge, but it’s so rich that it feels like more food than it is.

The venison was served with a mushroom cassoulet – homnjimeji, king oyster, oyster, and cremini mushrooms combined with mirapois, stock herbs, aromatics, and sauteed with garlic and shallot – and a creamy baked polenta with a crispy parmesan cheese top finished with a dash of truffle oil. If these dishes don’t make you feel warm and fuzzy inside, you might want to check your pulse.

The lovely Michelle Park, NY1′s food and lifestyle reporter and, happily, a longtime friend of mine, asked Chris about where he gets his ingredients. Chris sources his ingredients from a distribution company called Zone 7 that sends him an updated product list every week of seasonal offerings from local farms. He likes to drive out to the farms from time to time, but Zone 7 makes his life easier by consolidating all of the information for the various potential suppliers in one place.

When the servers brought out the desserts, I was torn. On one hand, I was giddy with anticipation. On the other hand, I was cursing the lack of available space in my stomach. But I have discovered that I might have a separate stomach or some small reserve designated for desserts only, and I happily tried a bit of all of the desserts that came out (in order of appearance below): powdered sugar munchkins (not on the menu, served warm and impossibly moist – if Dunkin’ Donuts ever got a hold of this recipe, they might take over the world), the “Poppy-Sicle” (orange poppyseed cake topped with a tangerine creamsicle tube and lemon-yuzu foam), the chocolate tasting trio (milk chocolate pecan pie, dark chocolate brioche pudding, and white hot chocolate), and the deep dish apple pie served a la mode with butterscotch ice cream and a crispy apple cracker.




Woohoo! I love grown-up desserts.

Side note: in the summer, you can actually just take a ferry to the dock and there’s a huge outdoor space right on the water. If you want some primo seats to the Red Bull Air Race, this is the place to grab lunch and hang out all day. While we had a fancypants dinner, there’s also a great bar menu featuring burgers and salads and the like, and in nice weather, Chris fires up the grill on the deck. While I really enjoyed the winter menu, I think this would be even more amazing in summer when you can sit out on the deck and eat lunch and drink beer overlooking the water and the lower Manhattan skyline, make a day of it, yanno?

Eat: Maritime Parc (Jersey City, NJ) 84 Audrey Zapp Drive, Liberty State Park, Jersey City, NJ 07305. (201) 413-0050. Click here to make reservations.




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