13 Eats in 3 and 1/2 Days

Did you over eat, over indulge, over do during the holidays?

Well, good for you! But we think you got off easy!

Our Over-The -Top list started way back in October during a trip to Manhattan,where we visited 13 food establishments in 3 and 1/2 days. We don’t mean just visited, we ate, we salivated and we lusted.We didn’t just snack ,we devoured, we savored, we cleaned our plates and exhausted our palates (and ourselves).

So what make us do such gluttonous dining? Memories… memories of our mother and father buying a new Italian imported cheese, stuffing razor clams, roasting red peppers , taking us to a seafood restaurant and placing a 2 lb lobster in front of us as toddlers – or something as simple as biting into a ripe tomato while still standing in the garden, salt shaker in hand. The simplicity of the taste, the beauty of the preparation, the experience of a new flavor. Manhattan is bursting with the opportunity for all of this to happen.

Since we cook Italian food, you’re probably wondering if we have any prejudices in what we like to eat. We Do! Fresh, clean, clear taste. It doesn’t matter if it’s Italian, French, Asian, American Greek or Middle Eastern. We love it all and want to consume as much as we can.

Our first thought in Manhattan was a trip to Torrisi Italian Specialties. Christine hesitated (actually moaned and groaned) to do this because it required standing in line at 5:00pm to snatch a table for any of the 3 seating’s in the small 25 seat dining room. Torrisi by day, is an Italian/American Deli offering the usual thought of sandwiches of Eggplant and Chicken Parmigiano. By night it features a $50 prix fixe menu. Still serving Italian food but with the chefs detail to authentic Italian product and their talent to keep things simple. This little gem takes us by surprise with it’s tiny but amazing bites. Homemade Mozzarella, Linguini with Little Neck Clams, Monkfish on Raw Marinara, and Tomato Braised Short Ribs.

On to the Spotted Pig, walking through the numbers on the street signs, burning the fullness from the last meal off, in order to indulge in the next.

If there is one dish that you always remember throughout the dinners of your life, the Ricotta Gnudi at the Spotted Pig would definitely be in the running. Gnocchi, Gnudi, Dumplings, we’ve eaten them all but nothing compares to the taste of these pillows of ricotta rolled in Semolina, cooked in brown butter and topped with sage pesto.

We can go on and on describing the food at every bakery, restaurant, gelatoria, and food shop we visited, every menu we read, every dish we didn’t have time to order because we needed to move on. Time was short, but 13 in 3 and 1/2 days… we’d say we did pretty well! Of all the food we ate, some was ordinary and some was extraordinary, but we wouldn’t have wanted to miss one morsel!

Here is our list of suggestions:

Torrisi Italian Specialties
Spotted Pig
Prune Restaurant
The Little Owl
ABC Kitchen
Porchetta
Eataly
Spice Market
Osteria Morini
Scarpetta
Il Laboratorio del Gelato
Amorino Gelato
Standard Kitchen (breakfast)

Welcome Bruins Fans!

The Stanley Cup Comes to Nebo.

It’s a brand new NHL season and we’re coming back as reigning Stanley Cup champions. How amazing is that? We’re so excited to welcome Bruins’ fans to Nebo tonight for the home opening game. Will you be there? We’d absolutely love to see you for dinner- but if you can’t make it in before you head to the Garden, you can stop in after (hopefully with a huge smile on your face!) since we’re open late-night. Check out our menu ahead of time if you’d like.

And don’t forget, if you couldn’t snag tickets to the game, you can always watch the game
right from Nebo while you nibble on some delicious eats.

We hope to see you soon. GO BRUINS!

 

 

 

Irene Couldn’t Stop Saint Anthony’s!

For the past 92 years, three generations of Italian Americans have been celebrating the Feast of Saint Anthony on the last weekend of summer.

This year would have been no exception if it wasn’t for Hurricane Irene. Food stands, demo kitchens, decorative lights and a bandstand were assembled and ready to go but Irene won out before she even showed up.

Guest Chef Giada De Laurentis left in a hurry to return to New York, leaving the demo kitchen empty and Saint Anthony’s Association scrambling to find a substitute celebrity chef. 50 guests of Giada’s showed up for a book signing and lunch at Nebo and since Giada didn’t come, the guest asked us to sign her books! “That was easy!” Our first book signing and we didn’t even have to write it!

In the middle of the day, the rain came pouring down and the crowds never appeared. Mayor Menino announced the city was closing and the decorations had to be dismantled immediately. Lights, band stands and chapel all had to be stored away. Bus loads of tourist turned away!

Nebo's Arancini

So you think this was a disaster? Actually, there are some things that Hurricane Irene just couldn’t take away from us. Dozens of neighbors and friends gathered at Nebo for the “street foods” that are traditional to the feast, Zeppole, Arancini and Arrosticini. The feast might have been cancelled but the traditions passed down to us just couldn’t be washed away by a hurricane.

Scene Magazine: Pizza

Nebo Pizza Review

Nebo serves authentic Italian cuisine, from appetizers and pastas, to pizzas and desserts. The menu is based from the Puglia region of Italy. “Our restaurant was based on my mother and grandmother’s food. It’s the style of eating we did, where we had seven or eight different things on the table and tried a little of everything instead of having an appetizer, an entrée and a dessert…very typical of what you do in Italy” said Chef and Co-owner, Carla Pallotta. Pallotta and her sister, Christine, opened the restaurant because they wanted to eat like they ate at home. The restaurant is known for its famous pizzas, as it offers thirty different options, and customers can create their own as well. Its most popular pizza is the “Nebo,” which features traditional sauce, mozzarella and two over easy eggs. Besides the regular menu, Nebo offers a full gluten free menu. Nebo is located at 90 North Washington St. www.neborestaurant.com

Boston Pizza Article

Recipe: Strufoli and Ribbons

nebo holiday recipe

INGREDIENTS

* 12 cups all purpose flour, plus extra for rolling
* 4 tablespoons baking powder
* 20 eggs

PREPARATION

On a wooden board make a pile with flour and form a well. Add baking powder evenly over flour. Crack each egg into a small bowl adding one at a time to the flour. After half of the eggs are in the center of the well, start folding the flour into the eggs. Continue to add a few of eggs at a time, mixing into the flour until all the eggs have been added. Knead dough until smooth. Cut a hand-sized piece of dough, and then cut into eighths. Roll each piece into long ropes. Cut into ¼ inch pieces and set aside. Continue until 3/4 of the dough is used.

With a rolling pin, roll out the remaining dough to ¼ inch thickness. Using a serrated pastry cutter, cut rolled out dough into ½ inch strips. Curl into an “S” shape, then form loose circles around the “S”, pinching every inch or so to form a cluster.

In a large saucepan, heat 4 inches of vegetable oil. Place 1 cup of strufoli at a time into oil. Cook until golden brown, remove and place on paper towel. Now try the ribbons using the same method.

Place some strufoli into a saucepan and cover lightly with honey. Remove and set on a plate and dust with candy sprinkles.

Photographed by Jazz Martin