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Enoteca Maria

Archive for the ‘International’ Category


Posted on August 17, 2011 - by Enoteca - Comments are off for this post

Exotic Table: Enoteca Maria

Video

Here’s the second webisode of my series Exotic Table. In it, I take a trip to an Italian restaurant in Staten Island where grandmas are chefs and create the daily menu based on specialties from their particular region of Italy. I learn a beautiful porcini mushroom pasta dish from Rosa Turano, a grandma from Vicenza. After, I recreate the dish as Porcini Macaroni Pie for a ladies lunch. Enjoy!
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Posted on October 20, 2009 - by Enoteca - 4 comments so far

Enoteca’s Carmelina Featured in Italy’s Corriere Del Mezzogiorno

CARMELINA, THE NONNA-COOK WHO CONQUERED NEW YORK
Having left Marcianise, Italy in 1961, she went from housewife to being a star in the kitchen of the Enoteca Maria.

by Franco Tontoli
Corriere Del Mezzogiorno

(English translation by Alma Benussi)

Carmelina Pica
Carmelina Pica has been cooking at Enoteca Maria in Staten Island, New York for two years.

MARCIANISE – “My sister told us about her success in New York, cooking in that restaurant she works in along with her italian friends, and what surprises us is that this success has been hitting Italy too! We’re very happy for her, Carmelina is a very modest person and she really deserves all this satisfaction after spending so many years of sacrifice being an Italian immigrant in the United States.”

Those are the words of Giovanni Tartaglione, who points out his sister in the photo taken in the kitchen of the Enoteca Maria. Carmelina and her “stepsisters” (her new family of cooks in the Staten Island restaurant) are well-known in New York thanks to all the delicacies they serve each night at the tables of the Enoteca Maria, a restaurant that didn’t reach its success through restaurant guides or reviews but with the massive passing of the word between food lovers around New York City who take the ferry from Manhattan and the other boroughs heading to the Italian Enoteca in St. George, Staten Island.

The Nonnas cook with fantasy, smiles and conviviality that give extra flavors to their dishes. Those are the main features of Italian people, very appreciated in Staten Island which has around a half million citizens with 44% of Italian origin. The team of cooks was put together by an Italian-American—Joe Scaravella—a real talent-scout who added to his wine bar a great restaurant. The restaurant, though, is still primarily an Enoteca as the sign says. Joe has been very smart in creating a team of cooks from talented Italian housewifes who turned into chefs. They all come from different Italian regions and their cuisine belongs to their regional traditions, full of echoes of their hometown.

Carmelina Pica
At a local green market, Carmelina picks fresh herbs to cook with at Enoteca Maria.

Carmelina Tartaglione, who has been married with Pasquale Pica for almost 50 years now, keeps delighting the custumers with the culinary heritage she brought from Marcianise to the USA, full of memories of smells and tastes she learned from her mother, who had to feed eight children and a husband.

“Carmelina spent a month here with us last September, her first time back in Italy after three years. She has been missing us a lot during these years and now she had the chance of spending some time with us, making up for the lost time. We are eight brothers—Francesca, Vincenzo, Michelina, Antonio, Alfonsina, Elvira, Carmelina and myself. We’re very close to each other. Carmelina left Italy at the age of twenty-two after marrying Pasquale who used to work as a sailor between Italy and America. She became American in 1961. She has three children: Mike, a  pharmacist, Tony, and Patricia. She started working for her husband’s brother Bruno in a grocery store where she started making her own fresh food to sell at the counter. Joe Scaravella got to know her and wanted her in his restaurant,” said her brother Giovanni.

Carmelina calls home every Sunday, telling her brothers and sisters about the satisfaction she gets along with all her “stepsisters.” “Carmeli­na,” Giovanni continues, “always knew how to cook our specialties, our simple dishes: pèttole and fagio­li, salsiccia and friarielli, vegetable soups, fried anguille and marina­ted ones, the pancotto, the frittelle with squash flowers, the scagliuozzi. Those simple dishes are so delicious that it’s impossible not to love them. I can see how they are important for all those Italians who live abroad.”

Carmelina Pica
Carmelina Pica (left) takes a break with fellow cook, Adelena Masana at Enoteca Maria. Photos by Glen DiCrocco

The dinners at the Staten Island restaurant are all different; the cook from Milano gives her best with risotti and cotolette alla milanese; the cook from Abruzzo with strangolapreti, stringozzi, maccheroni alla chitarra; the Sicilian cook is the queen of fish-based dishes, like her pasta with anchioves. You have eight restaurants in one, not the ordinary spaghetti with meatballs italian joint, but the most delicious and rare dishes of the old italian traditions.

“It’s true,” says her brother Giovanni, “my sister keeps repeating it: she just speaks and cooks Marcianise. And you should see how people love her!”

_____________________________________________________________

Original Italian Publication

I SUCCESSI DEI CASERTANI EMIGRATI NEGLI STATI UNITI
Carmelina, ecco la nonna-cuoca 
che spopola a New York
Partita da Marcianise nel 1961, da casalinga è diventata star della cucina all’Enoteca Maria

MARCIANISE — “Mia sorella ci ha raccontato del successo che ottiene a New York, nel ristorante in cui cu­cina con altre amiche italiane e ci stupisce questa notorietà arrivata anche in Italia. Siamo contenti, Car­melina non è tipo che si monta la testa, merita le soddisfazioni per i tanti sacrifici affrontati nella sua vi­ta da emigrata.”

Parla Giovanni Tar­taglione, pensionato della Gte, sta­bilimento un tempo fra le colonne portanti della occupazione a Marcia­nise. E indica, nella foto, la sorella con la bustina da cuoca. Carmelina e le sue sorelle, cioè quelle acquisite tra i fornelli della Enoteca Maria di Staten Island, distretto di New York, furoreggia­no per tutto quanto di buono metto­no nei piatti portati in tavola. Non c’è stata indicazione con graduato­ria fatta di simboli tipici delle guide gastronomiche ad affollare i tavoli del ristorante; è bastato il passapa­rola che s’è fatto sempre più fitto fra buone forchette, gente che a ta­vola non va per le spicce e non c’è sera alla settimana che dal traghet­to non sbarchino pattuglie di incur­sori, forchette in resta, diretti al­l’enoteca italiana a New York.

Le nonne-cuoche lavorano di fan­tasia, col sorriso e giovialità, ingre­dienti che rendono più saporite le vivande. Tutte caratteristiche, que­ste, degli italiani, qualità subito ap­prezzate nell’isola di Staten Island, quasi mezzo milione di abitanti di cui il 44% di origine italiana. A mettere insieme il gruppo è sta­to un altro italoamericano, Joe Sca­ravella, un talent scout della ristora­zione che ha così arricchito il suo lo­cale, già tipicamente italiano, tra­sformandolo da enoteca a ristoran­te. Ma, per scaramanzia, ha lasciato la vecchia insegna. Joe ha naso fino, dalla prima del­le sue cuoche, aveva saputo di un’amica di questa che ai fornelli era brava e poi di un’altra e poi di un’altra ancora e la ‘brigata di cuci­na’ s’è arricchita di otto comandan­ti. Da varie regioni provengono le cuoche ed è stato naturale assegna­re a ciascuna piena libertà di cucina­re tutte le tipicità dei rispettivi pae­si.

Carmelina Tartaglione, sposata con Pasquale Pica e quasi vicina al­le nozze d’oro, la clientela continua a deliziarla con tutto il bagaglio culi­nario che negli Stati Uniti s’era por­tata nel cuore da Marcianise, ricor­di di odori e sapori e tutto quanto aveva imparato dalla mamma, casa­linga a fronteggiare marito e otto fi­gli di robusto appetito.

Racconta Giovanni, il fratello: “Carmelina è stata da noi tutto il mese dello scorso settembre, man­cava da tre anni ed ha fatto il pieno e gli arretrati di quanto le è manca­to di noi. Otto fratelli, Francesca, Vincenzo, Michelina, Antonio, Al­fonsina, Elvira, lei ed io, sempre molto uniti. Carmelina sposò Pa­squale, un compaesano che era ma­rittimo sulle navi che facevano la spola tra l’America e l’Italia, aveva ventidue anni e dal 1961 diventò americana. Ha tre figli, Mike che è farmacista, Tony e Patricia. Per gua­dagnare qualche dollaro cominciò ad aiutare Bruno, fratello del mari­to, che gestiva una salumeria, qui cominciò a cucinare qualche pietan­za che persone che là hanno sem­pre fretta portavano a casa. La voce arrivò a Joe Scaravella e fu arruola­ta.”

Carmelina ogni domenica telefona a turno a fratelli e sorelle e fa il resoconto del­le soddisfazioni che raccoglie, insie­me alle sue ‘consorelle’. “Carmeli­na” — dice ancora il fratello — “sape­va già cucinare le nostre specialità, tutti piatti semplici: pèttole e fagio­li, salsiccia e friarielli, le zuppe di verdura, le anguille fritte e marina­te, il pancotto, le frittelle con i fiori di zucca, quelle di farina di grantur­co che noi chiamiamo ‘scagliuoz­zi’. Insomma, niente di eccezionale ma che soprattutto fra italiani al­l’estero ed anche fra i locali diventa­no piatti che fanno furore.”

Le serate, nel ristorante di Staten Island, diventano anche confronti culinari a tema, la cuoca milanese ci dà sotto con risotti e cotolette; quella abruzzese sfarina con stran­golapetri, stringozzi, maccheroni al­la chitarra; quella siciliana si sbrac­cia in pasta con le sarde e pietanze di pesce. Insomma, la formula è da otto ri­storanti in uno che non sono le soli­te spaghetterie e polpetterie. Ma piatti prelibati della migliore tradi­zione della cucina casareccia italia­na.

“E’ proprio così” — conferma Gio­vanni — mia sorella lo ripete sem­pre: io parlo e cucino solo marciani­sano. E devi vedere come sbandiera­no i tovaglioli.”


Posted on October 1, 2009 - by Enoteca - Comments are off for this post

Italy Spreads Enoteca’s International Appeal

The October 2009 issue of Io published in Milan, Italy features a recipe by Enoteca Maria’s very own Nina Picariolo and food styling and photography by Alma Benussi, also a cook at the restaurant.

io donna


Posted on April 16, 2009 - by Enoteca - Comments are off for this post

Mille Fiori Favoriti Review

Mille Fiori Favoriti

Pat from the millefiorifavoriti/blogspot writes a great review of Enoteca Maria complete with photos of the food her and her husband enjoyed. Here’s an excerpt:

No matter who is in the kitchen when you go, each meal at Enoteca Maria begins with a generous and complimentary tray of antipasto, selections vary each time. We had small tastes of broccoli rabe, roasted cauliflower and potatoes, marinated eggplant and onion focaccia.”

We were treated to another complimentary dish of a small bowl of beef stew, cooked in tomato sauce. My husband was in heaven, as it taste exactly like his mother use to make it, with big chunks of celery, carrot and potato….

Read the entire review at Mille Fiori Favoriti.


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  • Hours and Reservations

    Please Note We Are a CASH ONLY Establishment

    Open Friday, Saturday & Sunday

    Seatings at 12:30, 2:30, 5:30 and 7:30 PM. Please call for reservations.

    718-447-2777

    WhatsApp 917-803-1394

    27 Hyatt Street, Staten Island, New York 10301

    An Important Note About Timing To give everyone a beautiful, relaxed experience, each reservation includes a 2-hour seating. We kindly ask that you arrive on time so we can welcome you properly — and make space for the next guests to enjoy their time, too. Thank you for understanding and helping us keep things running smoothly — with love, from our kitchen to your table.
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