Nick's
After nine years of flipping dough in Forest Hills and
Rockville Centre, Nick Angelis, the “Nick”
in Nick’s Pizza and one uncompromising pieman
who really deserves a “Famous” and an
“Original” before his name, has entered
the Manhattan pizza fray. Supplementing the expertly
charred pies and calzones at the new Upper East Side
Nick’s is a full menu of well-executed
pastas and entrées, like orecchiette with sausage
and broccoli rabe, chicken pizzaiola, and an estimable
eggplant Parmigiana. Not to be missed are Nick’s
cannoli—an ethereally light, delicious weapon in
the raging pizza wars.
1814 Second Avenue, at 94th
Street
212-987-5700
Morrells Restaurant
The Morrell Wine Bar & Café only whetted the
appetites of its ambitious owners, who’ve taken
their wine-and-food obsession to the next
level—the 146-seat Morrells Restaurant,
opening April 24 within spitting distance (so to
speak) of Veritas’s stellar cellar. Like its
Rockefeller Center sibling, the new Morrells offers
150 wines by the glass, cheese plates at the bar, and
the wine-rich cooking of chef Michael Haimowitz.
There’s Zinfandel ketchup on the burger, Pinot
Noir syrup on the herb crêpes, and Riesling in
the coq au vin, not to mention a flight of wine ice
creams for dessert. There’s also a boutique
stocked with corkscrews and other accessories, for the
budding oenophile in all of us.
900 Broadway, near
20th Street
212-253-0900
Nice Matin
Last seen recasting Arizona 206 as the Pan-Latino
Bolivar, veteran chef Andy (Sign of the Dove)
D’Amico reemerges on the Upper West Side this
week at Nice Matin, named for the
Provençal newspaper. (Partner Simon Oren, who
owns Marseille in Hell’s Kitchen, seems to be
cornering the coastal-French market.)
D’Amico’s menu is well-priced for the
neighborhood and the times, featuring a multitude of
Riviera-inspired hors d’oeuvre like
pissaladière and panisses. He continues the bold,
garlic-imbued theme with soupe au pistou, fennel-cured
mackerel, and roast cod with ratatouille niçoise
and anchoïade.
201 West 79th Street
212-873-6423
Chubo
At Chubo, which means “professional
kitchen” in Japanese, chef-owner Claude
Chassagne takes a page from Charlie Palmer's menu
book: He's brought the fifteen-item, budget-conscious
prix-fixe formula Palmer popularized at Kitchen 22
down to Clinton Street. But Chassagne, who most
recently worked at the Korean-inspired Remedy, gives
his repertoire of five appetizers, five entrées,
and five desserts more of a global spin. Duck strudel
cloaked in phyllo comes with bok choy and umé
sauce, and grilled kingfish swims in a
Vietnamese-style broth. Wine and beer suggestions are
listed next to the entrées, and, this being the
Lower East Side, Chassagne undercuts Kitchen
22’s $25 tab by a dollar—or by $5, if you
skip dessert.
6 Clinton Street
212-674-6300
Azáza
The new East Side Chinese restaurant Azáza
might not be the first place of its kind to offer a
complimentary Internet hookup with your meal. Nor is
it the first to screen movies or, if all goes
according to plan, entertain guests with weekly samba
singing. It’s probably the first to daringly
combine all three diversions, however, along with the
moderately priced Cantonese cooking of chef Li,
formerly of Dish of Salt. And in a true departure from
Chinese-restaurant convention, Azáza has
collaborated with downtown’s Original New York
Milkshake Co. on a liquid dessert menu sure to beat
canned litchis and stale fortune cookies.
891 First
Avenue, at 50th Street
212-751-0700
Franchia
It’s no wonder that the teahouse Franchia
fancies itself an oasis of calm in a turbulent world:
it’s an offshoot of Hangawi, the serene Korean
vegetarian spot whose owners have been nourishing
bodies and soothing nerves for years. Their elegant
new Murray Hill “shrine” is equipped with
a tea bar; a vegetarian kitchen specializing in
green-tea-flavored pancakes, noodles, and bread; and a
mountain-temple-style traditional tearoom. If you
manage to achieve enlightenment, you can take a little
bit home with you—everything’s for sale,
from the poetry-inscribed ceramic cups to the house
wild green tea.
12 Park Avenue, near 34th Street
212-213-1001
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In the Archives
April 14, 2003
Chennai Garden, Barking Dog, Kitchen 82; dessert tasting at Blue Hill; feastable lemon-meringue; Chef Rebecca Charles's new book; Patroon gets another wake-up call.
March 31, 2003
The Mermaid Inn, Ten Sushi, Rice to Riches, Scopello; backstage access at The Restaurant at Spotlight Studios; Dos Caminos Soho and Le Zoccole debut soon; grand dining at Capitale.
March 24, 2003
Pampano, Mexican Sandwich Company, Hacienda de Argentina, Heartland Brewery; Grace foods go to Brooklyn; Rocco DiSpirito's new Tuscan.
More Openings & Buzz
Photos: Tina Rupp (1, 3), Carina Salvi (2, 4, 6), Patrik Rytikangas (5), Kenneth Chen (7).
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