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Restaurants |
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Week
of June 3, 2002 |
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the underground gourmet
Supper Time
It's no surprise that Supper, the
new East Village osteria, is an instant word-of-mouth hit:
The man behind the restaurant (and the stove), wearing a T-shirt
that reads the big meatball and dodging three-foot flames,
is local hero Frank Prisinzano, chef-owner of the perpetually
packed Italian-American Frank and its five-month-old spinoff,
Lil' Frankie's. A victim of his own success, Prisinzano was
practically forced by fundamentalist Frank fans into opening
the third link in his East Village empire, which specializes
in northern-style cucina. "I'm totally in love with Italian
cooking -- southern Italian, northern Italian," says the polpette
kingpin. "But I can't change anything on Frank's menu or it
becomes a big uproar, like 'Whaddya mean you don't have that?'
" So in order to indulge his appetite for Venetian calf's
liver, bollito misto, and bagna cauda, Prisinzano renovated
an Alphabet City office, furnishing it with a weathered tile
floor, rough wooden communal tables, a bustling open kitchen,
funky old-lady light fixtures, and mismatched floral-pattern
plates that evoke Sunday supper at Grandma's house. "I want
the place to have the feeling of home," he says. The real
attraction, though, is simple, well-executed, traditional
dishes like garlic-rubbed bruschetta drizzled with olive oil
and sprinkled with sea salt; an herby minestrone Genovese;
perfectly thin veal Milanese with an irresistible golden-brown
bread-crumb crust; a luscious Piedmontese disc of chocolate-hazelnut
custard with fresh berries, all at familiar Frank prices.
Although a pasta or two might be on the far side of al dente,
no one's perfect -- not even Grandma. ROB PATRONITE
Supper
156 East 2nd Street
212-477-7600
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best of the week
Blue Crab Festival on June 8 and 9
Park Slope's Minnow is throwing
its first annual Blue Crab Festival, inspired by old-fashioned
crab boils: There'll be plenty of claws, backfin, and other
kinds of sea creatures (including fresh blue crabs boiled
in beer).
The Minnow
442 Ninth Street 718-832-5500
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takeout
Move
Over Good Humor
If the Good Humor truck doesn't jingle-jangle
its way down your block this summer, you might try your neighborhood
Godiva shop. Chocolate Eclair bars and King Cones have
nothing on the chocolate giant's new $3.50 ice-cream bar,
a superrich concoction of swirly caramel-laced ice cream in
a pecan-sprinkled milk-chocolate shell. You won't even miss
the tinny strains of "The Entertainer." (Available at most
Godiva boutiques throughout Manhattan.)
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Ask
Gael
Where are you feeling a greenhouse
effect?
I'm betting
that the low, lean, and sexy intimacy of Jimmy's Downtown
will lure heat-seeking grown-ups on the prowl to this
unlikely eastern shoal of 57th Street. Especially if there's
hope of a welcoming hug from Jimmy's Bronx Caf�'s matinee-idol
host, Jimmy
Rodriguez. Slither through the crowd in the all-white,
candlelit bar and lounge with slashes of red and a tsunami
of discreetly silent tellys. Settle into a booth out back
where amiable sally-league servers lyricize over yuca-crusted
scallops, the fine fried-artichoke salad, a huge and juicy
pork chop, and luscious grilled sturgeon on creamy avocado
mash. Early on, the kitchen was still uneven, but executive
chef Linda Japngie is hopeful, having snagged a new hand
from her Bouley days.
So if the tamarind-lobster resists the knife (a tad too
tough, but what a delicious brine), eat it with your fingers,
or settle for the crispy soft-shell crab in a tomato-caper
stew. And don't leave without indulging in lush coconut
flan.
Jimmy Downtown
400 East 57th Street
212-486-6400
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Bites & Buzz Archive
Week of May 27
A (blue) lobsterfest; Restaurant 222's $20 prix-fixe; summer restaurant week begins; Citymeals-on-Wheels salute; will Butter make Gael phat?
Week of May 20
Ice ice baby; Jimmy Rodriguez heads downtown; the new Zagat of the wine
world?; Gael finds Greeks bearing gifts
Week of May 13
Coda Caf� becomes Caf� 66; Beacon revives a nineteenth-century tradition;
The Palm gets back to its red-sauce roots.
and
more ...
Photos: From top to bottom- Carina Salvi (2); Kenneth
Chen.
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