Blog

  • Nonnas in Training Cooking Classes! Open Enrollment Season!

    CLICK HERE FOR REGISTRATION PAGE

    Nonnas in Training is a new project being rolled out by Enoteca Maria. Our aim is to keep alive the passing down of technique and knowledge from one generation to another, and from one culture to another. Every day we are open (Wed.-Sun.) we have a different international Nonna cooking at Enoteca Maria, and now from 12-3, they will be teaching how they make their signature dishes in a daily FREE one on one cooking class. The only catch is you don’t get to choose the nationality of the chef you will study under. Use the registration form here on the website to let us know your availability and we will contact you with your enrollment date to come in and receive hands on training from one of our acclaimed international Nonne.

    CLICK HERE FOR REGISTRATION PAGE

  • Fox News Coverage!

    See it here: http://www.fox5ny.com/news/210324638-story

    – “Just like grandma used to make” isn’t just a clever slogan at one Staten Island restaurant. Grandmothers are using home-style recipes to keep foodies coming back for more.

    Meet Nonna May Joseph. She is making hoppers along with an egg, curry king fish, and onions — a traditional dish from her native Sri Lanka.

    “Nonna” is Italian for grandmother. But these nonnas and nonno are from all over the world. Most of them work at least once a month at Staten Island’s Enoteca Maria to cook dishes from their home countries. Owner Jody Scaravella implemented the idea at his restaurant about a year ago. He says one kitchen is always staffed by an Italian grandmother and a second kitchen rotates every night.

    Nonno Giuseppe makes the pasta. He has been cooking for over a half a century. After the pasta course, there is the main dish: roasted chicken. It’s cooked by Nonna Adelina. To say all of this food made me hungry may be an understatement. The nonnas aim to make you feel like you’re at home no matter how far away that may be. Enoteca Maria also has nonnas from Russia, Greece, Mexico, Venezuela, and Turkey.

  • Gothamist Video and Article about the Nonnas!

    Article Here: http://gothamist.com/2016/10/06/enoteca_maria_staten_island.php

    “Just like grandma used to make” is much more than a clever advertising scheme, it’s literally what’s happening at Staten Island’s Enoteca Maria, where the kitchen’s staffed not by professionally trained chefs, but by a fleet of “nonnas” from around the world. For about a decade, owner Jody Scaravella has opened his kitchens to grandmothers cooking the cuisines of their native countries. It started with just Italian grandmothers, after his own heritage, but has since expanded to include dozens of women from places like Argentina, Algeria, Syria, the Dominican Republic, Poland, Liberia, and Nigeria.

    Scaravella got his first recruits by placing an ad in an Italian newspaper seeking “Italian housewives to cook regional dishes,” but over time, his roster has grown by references and word of mouth. “I talked to everybody when somebody gets in, we talk about the concept, I always ask them if you know somebody who wants to cook,” he said. “The concept has just mushroomed.” Though some nonnas are Staten Islanders, most come from Brooklyn, with some traveling from as far as New Jersey and The Bronx to cook at the restaurant.

    While the nonnas are the big draw, the restaurant also employs one male “nonno,” Giuseppe Freya from Calabria, who makes all the pasta. “He makes the raviolis, he makes the ricotta gnocchi, he makes tagliatelle, he makes the pasta sheets for our lasagna,” Scaravella explained. “He’s fantastic.”

    There’s the old adage about too many cooks, so do the nonnas get along? “Each one of these [Italian] grandmothers feels like they’re the boss, because in their particular family unit, they’re at the top of that pyramid. So when you put all of these grandmothers that are all at the top in a room together, they all feel like they’re in charge and they’re all wondering what that other person is doing there,” Scaravella joked. “It can get dicey.”

    Friendly competition in the kitchen aside, the nonnas are a beloved fixture of the community, which hopefully can weather this development storm without too much upheaval. The restaurant even attracts customers from around the world—and they don’t need a fancy ferris wheel to do it.

    “I regularly get phone calls from Australia, from England, and from Italy to book reservations. I’m always flattered by that,” Scaravella said. “We get a lot of people who come from Manhattan, the ferry is right down the block. That’s also very flattering, because there’s a restaurant every twenty feet in Manhattan. Why are they coming here?”

    They’re coming for a home-cooked meal and an experience—grandma’s cooking—they might not be able to have with their own nonnas anymore. “Usually at the end of the day, the people will applaud the nonnas that have cooked for them,” Scaravella beamed. “They get standing ovations on a regular basis and it’s really something nice.”

  • Brendan Coyle

    Brendan Coyle

    www.coylecavern.com

    r,g,bree
    R, G, Bree

    Brendan Coyle is a multimedia and multigenre artist currently based in Richmond, VA where he went to art school prior to his 12 years living in New York. He is known in Staten Island for founding a grass roots organization that has become a time-honored tradition of monthly gallery exhibitions known as Second Saturdays. The scope of Coyle’s artwork includes narrative themes that play out as a mythology pieced together by sculptures, comics and performance art. He has done multimedia installations and experiments with video projections, but also toils over highly detailed works of sculpture in traditional materials such as wax and clay and often using modern debris as a cumulative material.

    The artwork you see on the walls of Enoteca Maria is of another experimental camp known as glitch art. They are prints that capture the erosion of a digital image. They are created by layering the effects of apps that sort the pixels of a given image in different ways, creating an array of chaotic remixes of the original image. The original images that these canvas prints come from are also other works of art: an oil-painted portrait of a muse, and a close-up of a small figurine that is self-portrait-as-comic-book-character. The images are new works, but also a conceptual look at the documentation of art, and of anything that people now choose to document and, through filters and design motifs, improve upon, crystallizing the memory of the original thing, and perhaps elevating it. The use of a glitch as such a filter refers to the entropy of the real thing as its copy takes on a new life. Evolution and its apocryphal linkage to human progress is a continuous theme in all of Coyle’s work, but the conceptual and moral quandaries addressed therein rarely compromise the artistic effort to create a new thing of beauty.  

    mustard man
    Mustard Man

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    At Enoteca Maria, we welcome artists from the North Shore and other parts of Staten Island to bring their art to our table. We’re devoting a space just for you, to feature a selection of art work each month in our virtual gallery…Enoteca Galleria.

    We invite you to submit a series of three to five images of your work: (photographs or images of your paintings, drawings, sculptures, metal work, or files of your graphic design.

    Please email (content at enotecamaria dot com) your selections, along with your name, location, and web address (if available).

    Submission guidlines: .jpg or .png, 72dpi, max width 750 pixels, max height 500 pixels.

    All images remain in the copyright of the artist and are used by permission.
    There is no fee for entry or compensation for use.
    Artists whose images are selected for the gallery will be notified by email.

  • Mariela from Vargas, Venezuela

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    Hola buenas tarde yo me llamo Mariela Vargas soy de Venezuela, La Guaira en el estado Vargas, específicamente de la región de Macuto, es muy pintoresco y turistico donde hay mar, ríos y montañas es de clima caliente y su gastronomía es muy variada pescados, mariscos, tostones, arenas y muchos mas.
  • Nonna Marita from Cuenca, Ecuador

    image1Hola mi nombre es Marita y soy de la hermosa ciudad de Cuenca/Ecuador. Una de las festividades que se celebran en mi ciudad y otras partes de Ecuador es el carnaval el cual se celebra los  tres días consecutivos antes de el miércoles de cenizas. En estos días las familias y amigos se reúnen a mojárse con bombas de agua y carioca( una espuma).
    Vivo en New York desde hace 32 años. Como siempre digo es la mejor ciudad del mundo, de la cual estoy muy orgullosa, y a la cual le estoy muy agradecida por todas las cosas y oportunidades bellas que me ha dado. Aquí he levantado y sacado adelante a mis 3 hijas junto con mi esposo. Yo Cuido niños y me encanto lo que hago. En mi vida me hubiera imaginado que yo iba a cocinar así que estoy muy emocionada espero y les guste