A Sicilian Feast at I Trulli

March 3, 2010

The origins of La Festa di San Giuseppe date back to the middle ages, when at the end of a severe drought Sicilians prepared a lavish feast in honor of their patron saint. A San Giuseppe banquet is still enjoyed today by Sicilians, Italian-Americans and lovers of Italian food and heritage.

As a child in Puglia, I Trulli owner Nicola Marzovilla grew up with two uncles named Giuseppe, with whom he would enjoy typical fried zeppole and other specialties on this popular holiday. Who better to host his own San Giuseppe celebration?

Join us on Thursday, March 18, as we explore the culinary and cultural traditions of San Giuseppe. Chef Patti Jackson‘s delicious menu will feature some of the Marzovilla family’s favorite San Giuseppe dishes, paired with Sicily’s classic local wines. And in true San Giuseppe style, we’ll even be presenting our own tavola di San Giuseppe, a decorative altar featuring a bounteous spread of typical breads and cakes!

La Festa di SAN GIUSEPPE
Thursday, March 18
7:30pm
$75 plus tax and gratuity

Book now!

For more information and reservations please visit our website, contact 212-481-7372 or email reservations@itrulli.com. We look forward to seeing you soon!


Carnevale!

February 9, 2010

Celebrate in style at I Trulli (masks optional…)

Since the 17th century visitors in costume dress have descended upon the Venetian capital for what is today Europe’s most famous and extravagant carnival. This year carnival fever has reached I Trulli, where on February 24 we’ll be hosting an exclusive Venetian dinner celebrating all the magic and mystique of this lavish event.

Chef Patti Jackson‘s Venetian menu features some of Venice’s favorite dishes and delicate specialties which capture the exotic essence of this unique city. If you couldn’t make it to Venice this year here’s a chance to don your mask and bask in the masquerade of Carnevale at I Trulli.

And in the spirit of this festive season, Astrid and Nicola Marzovilla will generously match a suggested $20 (per person) donation to Buddha’s Smile School, a not-for-profit school in northern India that teaches and nurtures some of the poorest and most disadvantaged children in the world.

CARNEVALE
Wednesday, February 24
7pm Cocktail Buffet
8pm Dinner
$85
plus tax and gratuity

Book now!

For more information and reservations please visit our website or contact 212-481-7372 or email reservations@itrulli.com. We look forward to seeing you soon at I Trulli!

BUDDHA’S SMILE SCHOOL
Buddha’s Smile School is a non-denominational, not-for-profit school located in Varanasi, India. Its mission is to teach and nurture hope for some of the world’s poorest and most disadvantaged children. Since 2003 Buddha’s Smile School has served children from local slums and villages in north India, delivering primary education with love, care, and motivation. Astrid and Nicola Marzovilla’s son, Domenico, spent time at working with students at the school last year. A suggested $20 (per person) donation to Buddha’s Smile School will be generously matched by the Marzovilla family.


Vino 2010: Puglia Tasting

February 1, 2010

Friday, February 5, 5:30-7:30pm

As part of our promotion for Vino 2010: Italian Wine Week, Vino is featuring some the wines from Puglia. Try them this Friday, February 5 from 5:30pm as we pour a selection of these southern favorites!

Bombino Bianco Marese 2008 Rivera
Primitivo Il Cantico 2008 Fossalta
Neprica 2008 Tormaresca
Rupicolo 2007 Rivera
Daunia Fortuita 2007 Paolo Petrilli
Nardò Roccamora 2006 Schola Sarmenti
Salice Salentino 2006 Rivera
Primitivo Terrarossa 2006 Pichierri
Squinzano 2005 Vinicola Resta
Il Falcone 2004 Rivera

For more information call 212-725-6516 or email contact@vinosite.com.


Vino 2010: Italian Wine Week

January 23, 2010

Italian Wine Week starts next week! Organized by the Italian Trade Commission, Vino 2010: Italian Wine Week is the biggest Italian wine event ever held outside of Italy. Vino is excited to be a part of this year’s event, for which we are featuring a special selection of wines from Puglia.

We will be tasting a selection of our favorite wines from Puglia at our free tasting next Friday, February 5. Before that, we are also hosting a special Puglia-themed class on Wednesday, January 27. Check back for more details coming soon!


Happy hour, Italian style

November 20, 2009

If you’ve ever spent any time in Italy, you’ll be familiar with the perfectly time-honored tradition that is aperitivo. That’s when Italians, whether mid-passeggiata or just getting off work, all head to their favorite bar. But more than just a pre-dinner drink, aperitivo is a time of day and a state of mind: no longer afternoon but not quite evening, it represents that delightful moment when the working day is through and another pleasant evening of good food and company awaits.

Italy’s bustling piazze are the ideal place to people-watch and perhaps enjoy a Negroni (gin, Campari, red vermouth), one of the
country’s most popular cocktails.

This uniquely Italian ritual has its origins in Northern Italy, which saw a boom in cordial and liqueur production in the early twentieth century. By the 1920s the fashionable bars of Milan, Turin and Florence would swell each evening with thinkers and drinkers sipping Campari, Punt e Mes and Cinzano. Only in recent years has the modern aperitivo hour taken form; today bars all over Italy offer a delicious selection of free antipasti with their wine or cocktails, making it a popular choice for young and old.

Now you can enjoy aperitivo on East 27th Street! I Trulli’s Enoteca
awaits all New Yorkers seeking a little “dolce vita” this Fall.

The custom of aperitivo may seem deeply connected to the pleasurable lifestyle of Italy, but the hectic pace of Manhattan? At I Trulli, we see no reason why you should miss out on such an elegant practice — after all, even New Yorkers deserve to unwind sometimes. Join us every evening from 5:00-7:00pm for I Trulli’s aperitivo hour: choose from our brand new cocktail and sparkling wine list and enjoy complimentary small plates from Chef Patti Jackson‘s kitchen! Salute!

For more information and reservations please contact 212-481-7372 or info@itrulli.com.

I Trulli’s aperitivo launch has already captured the attention of the local press. Just check out some of these recent mentions (click on the logos):


Lambrusco & pork dumplings and more Italian-Chinese pairings in today’s New York Times

October 28, 2009

Alex Witchel combines four favorites from Vino with the flavors of the Far East

beijing

Italy and China have long since shared a common passion for eating well; today many young Chinese are excited about aspects of modern Italian culture, including fashion, football, and of course food and wine.

New Yorkers don’t have to travel half-way around the world to taste great Chinese food, yet are easily flummoxed when it comes to choosing a wine to pair with their pork dumplings or Peking duck. Though I drank only Tsingtao or Yanjing beer (or failing that, Coca-Cola) with food on a trip to Beijing earlier this year, I’ve often considered the sharp bubbles of Lini’s Lambrusco a perfect partner for all manner of classic dishes from the Far-East. Indeed, the cuisine of China and Emilia-Romagna are not so far apart: both are reliant on fresh vegetables, rich, meaty flavors, and of course, noodles.

beijing pork

Delicious meat, fish and vegetable dishes are more often paired with beer in Beijing, like at this restaurant in Bei Hai park. But what about Lambrusco?

In “What Marco Polo Knew” (published in today’s New York Times), acclaimed writer and critic Alex Witchel takes the idea one step further, and discovers — at the suggestion of Beijing Times reader and Gary Price — that the pairing of Italian wine and Chinese cuisine is not so unlikely. In her Feed Me column, Witchel admits to having “neither the patience nor the back for schlepping” to Flushing, but she did make it down to East 27th Street where she picked up four of our favorite wines from Vino, which were then taken home and paired with dishes from Shun Lee West, Wu Liang Ye and Szechuan Gourmet, three of Manhattan’s top Chinese restaurants. So how did these Italian bottles rate with Chinese take-out?

baotze and jaotze

Typical Beijing dumplings known as “jaozi” and “baozi” served at a popular student eatery near the university.

Here are some of Alex’s tasting comments:

Lambrusco Scuro NV Lini and fried pork dumplings: “A fizzy purple… a light, bright match but not quite special enough to repeat.”

Rosso di Montalcino 2005 Cerbaia and filet mignon with black peppercorn sauce: “Lovely… [but] looking for love in all the wrong places.”

Valpolicella Superiore Ripasso 2005 Le Ragose and Peking duck: “Transcendent… we all swore never to have one without the other again.”

Inzolia 2008 ERA and tofu with chili-minced pork: “Stood up to it like David to Goliath, unexpectedly heroic.”

Read the full article here.

scorpion on sticks

Italian ragazzi have their cornetto and macchiato, but for young people in Beijing, a scorpion on a stick makes for a tasty mid-morning snack.

All photography by James Taylor, Beijing, April 2009.


Alicia Lini (and Lambrusco) sparkles at I Trulli

October 20, 2009

LINI 910 producer presents an evening devoted to the classic flavors of Emilia-Romagna — and to her wines!

Lambrusco lovers converged on I Trulli on Monday night to spend an evening in the presence of Lambrusco producer Alicia Lini (above, with I Trulli owner Nicola Marzovilla). The international face of the popular brand Lini 910, Alicia was in town to further promote her wines to the local market. I Trulli could not resist hosting a dinner in her honor, for which Chef Patti Jackson created some of Emilia-Romagna‘s classic dishes. Naturally, each dish was paired with one of Lini’s delicious and elegant sparkling wines.

blog dining room

Lambrusco has enjoyed an rapid reversal of its image in the United States in recent years, in large part thanks to Lini. Alicia spoke eloquently of Lambrusco’s importance in Emilia-Romagna and its relationship to the region’s foods, as well as the wine’s impact in the United States. As a fourth-generation producer of the 100-year old Lini winery, who better to champion this often misunderstood wine than Alicia? Even I Trulli owner Nicola Marzovilla recalled the moment he realised the diversity of the wine, and its important relation to the local cuisine. At a dinner in Emilia his dining companion had insisted on opening a bottle of Amarone; a great wine perhaps, but wholly inappropriate for the region’s rich flavors. As Alicia put it: “The food in Emilia is very… not fatty, but rich,” she explained. “So that’s why we need a wine like this.”

blog menu

The evening began with a selection of spuntini emiliani, including erbazzone, grilled mortadella and chestnuts, plus a glass of Labrusca Bianco — the ideal aperitivo.

blog anguilla

The fine bubbles of Lini’s Emilian version of Champagne, a white Pinot Nero made in the metodo classico, were the perfect accompaniment for Patti’s saba-glazed eel and risotto.

blog cappellacci

Appropriately for the season, these cappellacci — called such because of their resemblance to papal hats — were filled with pumpkin, and washed down with Lini’s Lambrusco Rosé In Correggio.

blog condiments

This dazzling array of condiments were brought to the table next with the purpose of enlivening the classic bollito misto. Our table made several failed attempts to correctly identify each dish before our server Sheena helpfully revealed all.

blog bollito

Bollito Misto is a classic meat dish in Emilia, and usually comprises of several boiled meats, in this case (clockwise from top-left): veal tongue, capon, cotechino, pork and beef. For this hearty dish we required Lini’s most austere Lambrusco, Scuro In Correggio.

blog gelato

To finish, we indulged in a unique gelato mousse made from the region’s best-known cheese, Parmigiano-Reggiano, which was served with roasted figs and Lini’s very own aceto balsamico. The night ended with arguably Lini’s most gorgeous wine (and this Lambrusco fan’s personal favorite), the devastatingly opulent Metodo Classico Rosso.

It was a particularly special evening for two Lambrusco lovers: Barbara and Steve were married at I Trulli exactly twelve months ago, and chose to return on the occasion of their one-year anniversary. Here’s to many more years of sparkling marriage and a lifetime filled with Lambrusco!

All of Lini’s wines are available for purchase at Vino. For more information on the foods and wines of Emilia-Romagna, click here.


Chris Quinlan is “nonna for a day” at cavatelli class

October 19, 2009

dora and sarah mouthing offFood & Wine blog reports on I Trulli’s Puglia-themed demo and lunch

On Saturday I Trulli hosted its first cooking demonstration devoted to the food of Nicola Marzovilla‘s native Puglia. Nicola’s mother, Dora (left, with class participant Sarah Abell), and Chef Patti Jackson explained the preparation behind some of the restaurant’s best-loved dishes typical to this Southern region, including focaccia, cavatelli and everyone’s favorite, panzerotti. For Food & Wine columnist Christine Quinlan, it was a once-in-a-lifetime chance to be taught by a real Italian nonna. Read the full article from Chris’ blog, Mouthing Off, here.

Click here for recipes from the class!


Demo & Lunch: Puglia

October 8, 2009

Let Patti and Dora show you how to prepare your favorite dishes from the heel of Italy’s boot

puglia blog

Heel the world: Puglia has seen a boost in tourism in recent years, leading some travel agents even to dub it the “Tuscany of the South”.

When Nicola Marzovilla opened I Trulli in 1994, his vision was to enable New York diners to experience some of the sights and flavors he’d grown up with in the south of Italy. Particular inspiration came from Nicola’s native Puglia, the slender region which forms the heel of Italy’s boot. Today, with so many of the city’s restaurants claiming to offer “authentic” regional cuisine, I Trulli remains one of the few which can undoubtedly be called the real deal. Nicola’s mother, Dora, can be found at the restaurant each morning rolling her acclaimed fresh pasta, and with Chef Patti Jackson at the helm I Trulli continues to set new standards for “la cucina meridionale”.

trullo blog

Maxicono: I Trulli takes its name from the “trullo”, a traditional construction typical of Puglia, known for its distinctive conical-shaped roof.

Puglia has long been a region of enormous abundance and agricultural wealth, due also to its advantageous geographical position, and a strong Italo-Greek influence still survives today. Drawing heavily from the natural resources of its land, as well as the Adriatic and Ionian seas, Puglia can boast some of Italy’s best variety of fruit, vegetables and seafood, ingredients which are creatively incorporated to delightful effect in many of the region’s recipes. On Saturday, October 17, join Patti and Dora for an exclusive demonstration and lunch, as they prepare some of I Trulli’s most representative dishes inspired by this enchanting and unique region.

dora then and now

Ieri, oggi e domani: Dora Marzovilla yesterday, in her native Puglia, and today, at the pasta station at I Trulli.

DEMO & LUNCH: PUGLIA
with Dora Marzovilla and Chef Patti Jackson
Saturday, October 17
1:30-3:30pm
$75
plus tax and 18% gratuity

Check out Chef Patti Jackson’s exclusive menu!

For further information and reservations please call 212-481-7372 or email info@itrulli.com.

Trullo photograph by Katy Harrison, Puglia, August 2008.
Dora Marzovilla photographs property of Marzovilla/I Trulli.


OMG! DOCG!

October 7, 2009

Vino’s Italian wine classes continue, Wednesday, October 14

DOCG_blog

DOCG wines are identifiable by the distinctive pink label wrapped around the neck of the bottle, like on this Brunello di Montalcino.

What’s the difference between DOC and DOCG? Is a DOCG wine automatically superior? Why are some of my favorite wines classified IGT? If you’ve ever drunk Italian wine (and if you’re reading this, there’s a big chance you have) you’ve probably asked yourself these questions and others like them. As is the case with most things governmental in Italy, the system for classifying its wines can be apparently simple but deceptively complex, and can oftentimes cause a headache.

piedmont docg blog

As these maps clearly suggest, navigating Italy’s DOCs and DOCGs can be tricky. And that’s only Piedmont…

The DOC label assurance was launched in Italy in 1962, and was modeled on France’s AOC system. By 1980, the DOC list had become so crowded the DOCG was introduced to give greater importance to Italy’s top-drawer wines. Or as Italian wine expert Robert Scibelli himself once put it to me, it was the government’s way of saying “this time we really mean it.” Today there is some debate as to the number of wines which currently make up the DOCG list. With wine experts, bloggers, Wikipedia and even the Italian Ministry of Agriculture seemingly unable to settle on the same figure, estimates typically fluctuate anywhere between 32 and 45 appellations. Italian wine blog VinoWire (I like to think of it as the Reuters for Italian wine) has a pretty comprehensive and up-to-date take on the matter here.

On Wednesday, October 14 let Robert do the hard work for you as he attempts to deconstruct this ever-changing legal landscape which continues to leave Italian wine fans stumped. In what is an exciting new addition to Vino’s class schedule, Mr. Scibelli will also be presenting a world-class tasting of wines from some of Italy’s most famous DOCGs.

DOCG WINES
with Robert Scibelli, DWS
Wednesday, October 14
6:30-8:30pm
$65

For more information and reservations call 212-725-6516 or email register@vinosite.com.