Spring has sprung!

April 26, 2010

Spring has officially sprung, and at I Trulli that can only mean one thing: the return of our Spring Garden Parties!

Since 1994, I Trulli has been a favorite among New York diners not just for its delicious pugliese-inspired dishes and famed all-Italian wine-list, but also for its lush back garden, one of Manhattan’s most unique and secluded outdoor restaurant spaces.

Each week our Spring Garden Party will be themed around a particular region of Italy, giving you the chance to savor local wines and foods as they were meant to be enjoyed. The series begins next Tuesday, May 4, with a celebration of the distinctive flavors of Emilia-Romagna.

Prosciutto di Parma, Parmigiano-Reggiano, Mortadella, Aceto Balsamico: some of Italy’s most exported products hail from this culinary heartland. Such strong specialties require a wine to match, which is where Emilia’s refreshing sparkling wine, Lambrusco, delivers. Yet this oft-overlooked wine region also produces some of the country’s most interesting blends. Sample some of our favorites at I Trulli next Tuesday, each paired with Chef Patti Jackson‘s special selection of classic Emilian antipasti!

Wines:
Lambrusco Labrusca Bianco NV Lini
Lambrusco In Correggio Rosé NV Lini
Lambrusco In Correggio Scuro NV Lini
Lambrusco Metodo Classico 2003 Lini
Ageno 2004 La Stoppa
Macchiona 2003 La Stoppa

Chef Patti Jackson’s Antipasto Table:
Grilled Mortadella
Erbazzone
Chicken Liver Pâté
Parmigiano-Reggiano
Piadine with Spring Vegetables
Asparagus wrapped in Prosciutto di Parma

SPRING GARDEN PARTY
at I Trulli
Tuesday, May 4
6-8pm
$35*
(plus tax and 18% gratuity)

Upcoming Parties:
May 11: LAZIO
May 18: PUGLIA
May 25: PIEMONTE
June 1: TOSCANA

For more information and reservations please contact 212-481-7372 or email reservations@itrulli.com. We look forward to seeing you soon!


Buy wine at Vino, drink it at I Trulli!

April 23, 2010

For over fifteen years I Trulli has offered New Yorkers some of Italy’s finest wines from an award-winning, all-Italian wine-list. Thanks to Nicola Marzovilla‘s meticulous selection process and a sixth sense for the next big thing, we’ve helped turn some of Italy’s lesser-known wines and most obscure grape varieties into household names.

Now you can enjoy these wines at retail cost! Every weekend lunchtime you can purchase wine from our retail store, Vino, located directly opposite the restaurant on 27th Street, and open it at I Trulli! Vino is home to many of the Italian wines featured on I Trulli’s list, while its recent international expansion means its global selection is broader and better than ever before. Savor world-class wines at retail cost in one of the city’s top dining destinations!

BYOB
Buy wine at Vino, drink it at I Trulli
Saturday-Sunday, 12-3pm
No corkage fee!

Maximum two bottles per table. Reservations of up to six people.
For more information please call 212-481-7372 or email info@itrulli.com.


French wines in a nutshell

April 22, 2010

Charles de Gaulle once asked, “How can you govern a country which has two hundred and forty-six varieties of cheese?” It’s even more difficult to wrap one’s head around the country’s various wines (of which there are over 300 distinct appellations). This class introduces some of France’s best known exports: Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot Noir and Syrah. Participants will taste representations of these grapes as they manifest themselves in some of their finest growing regions. Participants will learn about basic winemaking techniques, French wine laws and appellations including: Bordeaux, Champagne, Burgundy, and the Loire and Rhone Valleys.

FRENCH WINES IN A NUTSHELL
with Scott Rosenbaum, DWS
Tuesday, April 27

$45

For more information and reservations please call 212-725-6516 or email register@vinosite.com.


International Bright Young Things

April 21, 2010

Vino continues to fly the flag for international harmony with another free tasting showcasing our growing selection of wines from the best winemaking areas of the world. This Friday join Mike from Bayfield Importing as he pours Bordeaux Blanc, Albariño from the Galicia region of Spain and a Californian Zinfandel from Amador County.

Bordeaux Blanc 2009 Château Lamother de Haux
$13

Rias Baixas Albariño 2008 Bodegas del Palacio de Fefiñanes
$23

Amador County Zinfandel Rocky Top 2006 Sabon Estate
$18

FREE TASTING
Friday, April 23
5:30-7:30pm

For more information please call 212-725-6516 or email contact@vinosite.com.

And now time for a little early-’90s nostalgia…



L’heure verte comes to Vino

April 21, 2010

Celebrating the return of Absinthe, this Friday

Edgar Dégas, “L’Absinthe”, 1876, Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

This week Vino’s cocktail hour celebrates one of the world’s most celebrated and controversial spirits, Absinthe, the popularity and notoriety of which have inspired writers and artists for generations. Its apparently addictive qualities and subsequent ban have only served to enhance its mystique.

Though originating in Neuchatel, Switzerland, this green, anise-flavored herbal spirit reached the peak of its popularity in turn-of-the-century Paris, where it rapidly became the tipple of choice among painters and literary-types basking in la vie bôhème. From the bourgeoisie to the working classes, at its height Absinthe was so popular in France that 5 o’clock in the afternoon became affectionately known as “l’heure verte” or “The Green Hour”.

Edouard Manet, “The Absinthe Drinker”, 1858-59,
Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen.

Absinthe also became known as “la fée verte” (“Green Fairy”), an allusion to its supposed drug-like properties. Critics claimed it was a potentially dangerous hallucinogenic and psychoactive drug, associating it with crime and social unrest. By 1915, Absinthe had been prohibited in France and most other European countries and the United States, after which demand fell sharply.

Pablo Picasso, “The Absinthe Drinker”, 1901,
The Hermitage, St. Petersburg.

Despite Absinthe’s continued availability in Spain and the UK, it was decades before a resurgence in interest occurred. After an independent push to have the laws adjusted, in 2000 the first French-made Absinthe was made available in France since 1914. In 2007, after a 95-year absence, Absinthe was imported into the United States.

Now Absinthe has found its way to Vino! Join us tomorrow afternoon as we pour Vieux Ponterlier Absinthe Française Supérieure by Èmile Pernot. Carefully crafted in small batches using alambic stills that were specifically designed to make absinthe, this top quality French Absinthe is distilled using locally grown wormwood (Artemisia absinthium), which is considered the finest in the world, along with green anise seed, Provençal fennel seed and a variety of additional aromatic herbs and spices. Faithful to Absinthe’s original formulations, there is no sweetening added of any kind — its refreshing taste is obtained entirely from the combination of plants and the distiller’s skills.

FREE ABSINTHE TASTING
Thursday, April 22
5:30-7:30pm

For more information please call 212-725-6516 or email contact@vinosite.com.


Taste these three wines this Friday!

April 14, 2010

Join us this Friday when Hadley Foss from David Bowler Wine will be pouring these three awesome and diverse reds from 5:30pm:

Gamay Noir Bone Jolly 2008 Edmunds St. John
$19

Inspired by Beaujolais wines, maverick California winemaker Steve Edmunds set about creating the kind of wine the French would call “alimentaire.” Made from fruit sourced from Witter’s Vineyard, some 3,400 feet above Camino in El Dorado county, this bright and juicy screw-cap is the perfect choice for a spring picnic!

Bobal Utiel-Requena 2008 Vera de Estenas P.G.
$13

While not commonly cultivated in the rest of Spain, the Bobal grape is the most widespread variety in the Utiel-Requena DO in the province of Valencia, accounting for almost 80% of production. Vera de Estenas is one of the region’s top producers, whose Casa Don Angel estate comprises — in addition to agricultural land — an Art Nouveau mansion, bottling plants, aging cellar and a museum!

Squinzano Rosso 2005 Vinicola Resta
$16

Salento’s mild climate is ideal for vine growing. This south-eastern extremity of Puglia — comprising the provinces of Lecce, Brindisi and Taranto — is a hotbed (literally) for Negroamaro. Dr. Luigi Resta‘s is made from a spicy blend of 95% Negroamaro and 5% Black Malvasia.

FREE TASTING
Friday, April 16
5:30-7:30pm

For more information please call 212-725-6516 or email contact@vinosite.com.


Havana good time!

April 12, 2010

“Drinking is a way of ending the day.” –Ernest Hemingway

We can’t bring Cuba’s swaying palms to 27th Street, but you can enjoy a taste of Havana at Vino tomorrow evening, when we’ll be mixing daiquirìs! Traditionally made from rum, lime juice and sugar, this quintessential Cuban cocktail is said to have been invented around 1800 by a group of American mining engineers working at the Daiquirì iron mine near Santiago. It was Jennings Cox, General Manager of the Spanish American Iron Co., who is credited with creating the drink at the Venus bar, not far from Daiquirì beach. Some believe Cox accidentally came up with the Daiquirì after he ran out of gin.

The daiquirì remained a local favorite until the early twentieth century, when Admiral Lucius W. Johnson, a U.S. Navy medical officer, introduced the drink to the Army and Navy Club in Washington, D.C. By the 1940s, as Latin America’s cultural appeal increased, the cocktail began to obtain international status thanks to those served at Havana’s El Floridita bar (above), seeping its way into popular culture thanks to famous daiquirì drinkers such as Ernest Hemingway, JFK and, er, Fredo Corleone.

Today the El Floridita is content to mine its past as a hangout for Cuban exiles such as Hemingway, whose statue props up the bar, while his hand-written message of affection rests appended to the wall: “My mojito in La Bodeguita, my daiquirì in El Floridita.”

Join Vino’s Scott Rosenbaum tomorrow from 5:30pm as he prepares this Caribbean classic, using Luxardo Triplum Triple Sec and Wray & Nephew Overproof Rum. What better way to end the day?

FREE DAIQUIRÌ TASTING
Thursday, April 15
5:30-7:30pm

FREE
(cigars not included)

For more information please call 212-725-6516 or email contact@vinosite.com.


Spring classes are back: Wines of Tuscany, April 21

April 9, 2010

Tuscany. Say it. “Tuscany.” I’ve seen grown adults go weak at the knees with the very mention of the word. That’s because nowhere evokes the magic of Italy more than this famed region: its rolling hills, picturesque towns and stunning artistic heritage have captivated for centuries and continue to attract millions of visitors every year. So familiar is Tuscany — and its celebrated wines — that in recent years wine enthusiasts in this country have begun to pass up a Brunello or a Vino Nobile in favor of something new. While we love Tuscany’s classic appellations, we also strongly promote the discovery of Italy’s lesser-known wines. This exclusive tasting class will remind you there is much more to Tuscan wine than the cliché of the straw Chianti flask on a checkered tablecloth. From the famous Sangiovese-based appellations to the law-bending Super Tuscans and an array of top-flight whites, Tuscany is home to some of the world’s finest wines. Taste some of our favorites with Vino’s Jim Hutchinson!

WINES OF TUSCANY
with Jim Hutchinson, DWS
Wednesday, April 21
6:30-8:30pm
$65

For more information and reservations please call 212-725-6516 or email reservations@vinosite.com.


Vino goes East!

April 7, 2010

When Vino recently began to embrace international wines, our followers became giddy at the prospect of finding bottles from Bordeaux and Rioja on our shelves. But Romania? It may not be the first winemaking region on your lips but the Eastern European country is in fact the twelfth largest wine producer in the world, producing 545, 700 tons of wine in 2003. Due to the affordability of its vineyards, Romania has become a popular choice for winemakers from more recognized wine nations such as France, Italy and Germany. This 2005 Pinot Noir by Fruvimed Medgidia comes from Romania’s Murfatlar wine region, just off the coast of the Black Sea.

We’ll also be pouring the refreshing white Nosiola 2008 by Endrizzi, a top-class producer of indigenous monovarietals in Trentino. Elegant and clean, this perfect Spring wine has been recognized in L’Espresso and Guida al Vino Quotidiano Slow Food, and by Vini di Veronelli and Vini Buoni d’Italia.

FREE TASTING
Friday, April 9
5:30-7:30pm

For more information or reservations please call 212-725-6516 or email contact@vinosite.com.


First in flight!

April 5, 2010

Vino’s goes airborne this Thursday as we taste Aviation cocktails! Join Carl from Winebow as he mixes and pours this classic New York drink. The Aviation was originally created by Hugo Ensslin, an innovative bartender at New York’s Hotel Wallick (located at Broadway and 43rd Street — see period postcard below). Ensslin included the cocktail in his Recipes for Mixed Drinks in 1916. Considered by some a variation on the Gin Sour, the Aviation is made from Gin, maraschino liqueur and lemon juice. Some recipes call for a dash of Crème de Violette, although this was habitually omitted due to the ingredient’s scarcity.

Tomorrow evening our guest-mixologist will be using Junipero Gin, Luxardo Maraschino liqueur and Crème de Violette to create this tasty and streamlined ode to twentieth century pioneering spirit.

Aviation
2 oz Junipero Gin
1 oz fresh lemon
1/2 oz Luxardo Maraschino
1/2 oz simple syrup
1/4 oz Crème de Violette

Shake all ingredients over ice and strain into a Martini glass. Garnish with a lemon twist or Marasca cherry.

COCKTAIL HOUR: AVIATION TASTING
Thursday, April 8
5:30-7:30pm

For more information please call 212-725-6516 or email contact@vinosite.com.


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