DANIEL BELLINO ZWICKE

Sinatra Spaghetti Meatballs Recipe Tomato Sauce alla Frank

.
.
.
 
FRANK SINATRA SPAGHETTI SAUCE
 
And MEATBALLS
.
.
.
FRANK SINATRA Shows DINAH SHORE
HOW to MAKE SPAGHETTI SAUCE
alla SINATRA
.
.

FRANK SINATRA tells Sid Mark, step-by-step HOW He Makes TOMATO SAUCE

“You begin with a skillet and you use a light kind of olive oil and put in about 2 tbsp. full and put in 3 whole cloves of garlic. I usually puncture the cloves with a fork so it will exude the flavor I want. When the garlic is tanned or light brown take it out of the oil and throw it away. Keep the oil.” “For 4 people you can take 2 cans of the oval shaped tomato and you put each can in a blender and count about a “slow four” to grind it up and put it in a saucepan…do that with both cans. Add a pinch of salt and a little bit of black pepper and little bit of oregano…maybe ½ tsp. full. Add the oil. I used to watch my dad do it. He’d just take his fingers and he’d take so much and throw it in the pot. And you let it simmer.” … “Now…VERY IMPORTANT because this is what you don’t find in restaurants because they can’t take the time to do it. You take a good sized tsbp. And whatever oil or foreign matter that comes to the top; just keep skimming it until you have a pure red sauce. Low flame and cook for about ½ hr. and just let it sit there until you are ready to turn on your water for your pasta.” “You want to put a couple of bay leaves and fresh basil is wonderful…at the last minute.” “So you’ve got in the sauce olive oil, garlic, pepper, salt, oregano, a couple of basil leaves and, if you wish, a teaspoon – tablespoon. Of finely chopped parsley and that’s the way to make a simple pasta sauce.”
 
 

“Basta!”

Screenshot 2024-02-04 155350

FRANK & AVA

 

 

FRANK SINATRA’S SPAGHETTI SAUCE

Recipe :

  • 1/2 of a cup of Olive Oil
  • 1 medium Onion finely diced
  • 4 cloves of Garlic minced
  • 1-28-ounce can Italian style tomatoes
  • 1-28-ounce can of tomato purée
  • 2 tablespoons of fresh parsley chopped
  • 2 teaspoons of  dried thyme
  • 1 teaspoon each of Slat & Black Pepper
  • black pepper
  • 1 pound of dried pasta
  • Extra chopped parsley for serving
  • red pepper flakes for serving, optional
  • Italian grated cheese blend, optional
Place the Olive Oil and diced Onions in a medium sized Pot. Cook on low heat for 5 minutes,
 
Add the Garlic and cook for 2 minutes on low heat as you stir with a wooden spoon.
 
Add the Salt, Black Pepper & Thyme and cook for 2 minutes, low heat.
 
Add all the Tomatoes and chopped fresh Parsley. Turn heat to high and cook until the sauce starts to bubble. 
 
Turn the heat down to low, and let simmer for 40 minutes. Be sure to stir the Sauce with a wooden spoon as the sauce cooks, scrapping the bottom of the pot so the sauce doesn’t stick or burn. 
 
After 40 minutes, turn the heat off.
 
Serve this Tomato Sauce with your favorite pasta.
 
Note : To make Pasta with Meatballs, make the Meatball recipe below.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
SINATRA MEATBALLS Recipe
 
 
  • 1 – pound of ground Beef
  • 1 – of a pound ground Pork
  • 1 cup of Italian Bread Crumbs
  • 1/3 of a cup each grated Parmesan& Pecorino Romano Cheese
  • 4 teaspoon of chopped Parsley
  • 1 clove of Garlic, minced
  • 3 large Eggs
  • 1/2 teaspoon Salt & 1 teaspoon Black Pepper
Mix all the ingredients together in a large bowl.
 
Form the meat mixture into 3 inch in diameter Meatballs.
 
Place in a 375  degree oven for 12 minutes. 
 
Remove the Meatballs from the oven and place in above Tomato Sauce, at the point when you have just put the Tomatoes in the pot.
 
On high-heat cook until the Sauce starts to boil (bubble). Low heat to low and cook for 40 to 45 minutes on low heat.
 
After 45 minutes turn heat off.
 
Cook Spaghetti, Rigatoni, or whatever pasta you like.
 
Drain the pasta in a colander. Place the pasta back into the pot it cooked in. Add some Tomato Sauce and mix.
 
Place some pasta on each persons plate. Add 2 or 3 Meatballs to the place. Add some Tomato Sauce over the Pasta and Meatballs and serve.
 
Place grated Pecorino, and or grated Parmigiano Cheese on the table.
 
Eat & Enjoy !!!
 
 
 
 
.
SUNDAY SAUCE
.
alla SINATRA RECIPE
MEATBALLS & SUNDAY SAUCE
alla BELLINO alla PACINO
alla SINATRA
.
.
.
.
GIANTS !!!
PAVAROTTI & SINATRA !!!
.
.
.
NONNA BELLINO’S COOKBOOK
aka The SINATRA COOKBOOK
JOSEPHINA SALEMI BELLINO
BORN in LERCARA FRIDDI SICILY
The Same Town FRANK SINATRA’S FATHER MARTY
Was BORN 
LUCKY LUCIANO as WELL
.

Remembering Vinnys La Focacceria Sicilian Specialties in New York


The BEST VASTEDDI EVER !!!

Sadly, They are No More




My Old Pal VINNY

Don’t Know who the Guy is on the Left

But I’m glad he took this picture.

I wish I would have taken one with Vinny

For the many times I ate there, and Vinny made me so many

tasty VASTEDDI Sandwiches … Mis then both. Vinny and the Vasteddi


 


La Foccaceria? Oh where have you gone? Well, I do know actually. After more than 90 years in business, it was time to close the doors. And a sad day it was for thousands, including me. I first moved into the East Village in November 1982 .. I was working in another famed old New York Italian institution in The East Village, in John’s (Since 1908) on East 12th Street right around the block from La Foccaceria. La Foccaceria was a great little Sicilian Specialties restaurant on 1st Avenue between East 11th and East 12th Streets on the east side of First Avenue .. That was  the first spot where Vinny’s father opened the doors in 1914 … I’m sorry to say, I never went to that one but to it’s (La Foccaceria) 2nd location a couple blocks south on 1st Avenue between East 7th Street and St.  Marks Place (E. 8th Street) on the east side of the avenue. The new La Foccaceria, run by one Vinny Bondi was just one block from my apartment at the corner of Avenue A and St. Marks Place. In 1982 the East Village was on an up-swing in popularity and improvement from a sort of sub-ghetto of The Lower East Side. the neighborhood which was strongly Eastern European; Ukranian and Polish, mixed with Hispanics, Italians, and people of Jewish persuasion. When Mr. Bondi opened the doors almost 100 years before when the neighborhood was largely made up of Sicilian immigrants which included one Charles “Luck” Luciano whose parents moved to East 10th Street when Luciano was just 9 years old. In the early 80s when i first moved into East Village it was a low-rent neighborhood with apartments that were relatively cheap for the city, thus attracting artists, so-called wannabe actors and musicians and young people who wanted to live in Manhattan. In the East Village they could find an apartment (though not the best physically) at reasonable rates for the time, I did. Through a friend I was able to procure a 2 bedroom apartment for a mere $400 a month. Quite a bargain. I shared the apartment with my good friend jay F. for the first year in that apartment. Once he moved out, I kept the apartment for myself.

   Hey, I’m getting off the beaten track. Yes back in 82 the East Village was an exciting and changing neighborhood, perfect for me and other young people just starting out in this great city of ours.

    I was only paying $400 rent and had money to spend eating out. I used to eat at a Ukrainian Diner Odessa on Avenue A and Lesko’s as well, two doors down from Odessa. There I could get plates of home-made Perogis, fresh Keilbasi and other solid food for cheap. In the East Village there were a few old-school Italian holdovers like; John’s were I was working as a waiter & bartender at the time, Lanza’s (now over 100 Years old), De Roberta’s Italian Pastry (over 100 years old) Brunetta a great little Italian restaurant I used to go to which was on the same block as the original La Foccaceria and there was the current La Foccaceria on 1st Ave near Saint Marks Place .. I went in to La Foccaceria one  day, I met Vinny and I loved it from the very start. Vinny’s father and mother had started the place way back in 1914 … Vinny, I never asked his age, but he must have been in his late 60’s at the time (1983). La Foccaceria served an array of wonderful dishes; all the usual pastas like; Lasagna, Spaghetti & Meatballs, Spaghetti Vongole (Clam Sauce), and Sicilian Maccheroni, like Pasta con Sardi and Lasagna Coccati, broken pieces of lasagna pasta baked with sausage,peas, tomato, and mozzarella. Vinny had great soups like Pasta Fagioli and the best Lentil & Escarole Soup around. He sold sandwiches like Chicken Parmigiano, Meatball Parm, Sausage & Peppers, and his most famous dish of all, the famed Vastedda Sandwich of Palermo. A Vastedda (Vastedde) Sandwich as we’ve said is a very famous sandwich that is a specialty in Palermo, is made with Beef Spleen (or Veal) with Ricotta and Cacciocavallo Cheese on a small Sesame Seeded Bun. It is quite wonderful and was a specialty of the house at Vinny’s La Foccaceria. I just loved it, and at $1.60 per, even in 1982 it was one of New York’s great prepared food bargains. The average price of most sandwiches  back then was about $5.00 around town, so  a Vasteddeat $1.60 per? Wow, what a Bargain?

I had tried most of the dishes at La Foccaceria in my first year eating there, but there was one that I loved by far most of all. Yes, the Vastedde. Most times I would have a Vastedde and a bowl of Vinny’s wonderful Lentil & Escarole Soup, the best I have ever had. If it was Thursday or Saturday, the days that Vinny made Arancini (Sicilian Rice Balls) and Sfingione (True Sicilian Pizza), I might get a piece of Sfingione and Lentil & Escarole Soup, or Sfingione, a Vastedde, and Soup. Yeah! 

I often ate at Vinny’s on Thursdays and Saturdays, as they were the two days in the week when Vinny made Sfingione, which is real Sicilian Pizza, that comes from Palermo. This type of pizza is made in a pan and is thick just like what is know as Sicilian Pizza all over America, and has tomato and Mozzarella Cheese baked on top. Sfingione on the other had doesn’t have tomato or mozzarella, but minced Anchovies that are suteed with onions and breadcrumbs. This breadcrumb mixture covers the dough and then is backed in the oven, and “Voila,” you’ve got the true Sicilian Pizza known to Sicilians and Sicilian-Americans alike as Sfingione. 

Very made a great version of Sfingione, and I’d get a piece of it every week for the 11 years before I moved over to the west side in Greenwich Village. Saturdays was a very special day at La Focacceria as that the day that all the old guys who grew up in this neighborhood, but later bought homes outside of Manhattan, Saturday was the day many of these guys would take a ride into the hood to get a Vastedde, see Vinny and habg out with old friends, one coming from Staten Island, one from Brooklyn, one from Jersey, etc., etc., and they’d all meat up at Vinny’s for a nice lunch together and remember their old times in this old Sicilian Neighborhood.

Boy did I love Vinny’s. There was nothing like those Vastedde and Vinny making them. Vinny had a special stattion at a counter up front of the place where he cut the cooked Beef Spleen, fry it in lard, cut the bun, cut some Cacciocavallo, he’d lay the spleen on the bun, add some Ricotta, and sprinkle the cut Cacciocavallo Cheese over the top. Yumm! And I’d have a little chat with Vinny as he made my Vastedde right before my eyes. When i ordered it, all I had to say to Vinny, was, “One with everything.” That meant everything; the spleen, Ricotta and Cacciocavallo. Some people would order them minus the spleen. Why? Amateurs.

Sadly, Vinny closed his Foccaceria a few years ago. it was a sad day for me, no more Vinny, no more La Foccaceria, no more Vastedde.

Ode to La Foccaceria

Ode to My Pal Vinny

Ode to My Beloved Vasteddi

I Will Miss You All So

 

Daniel Bellino-Zwicke





La VASTEDDA

A Beef Spleen Ricotta & Caciocavalo Cheese Sandwich

This Sicilian Specialty from Palermo is called Pane Muesa

in Palermo (Palermitana Dialect). It is also called Pane Milza

Both names translate to Bread and Spleen.

In Bew York, Sicilian New Yorkers named these sandwiches after the Bread,

thus the name Vastedda (Singular), and Vasteddi for mor than one Sandwich.



SFINCIONE

This is real SICILIAN PIZZA. Vinny made it on Thursdays and Saturdays and all the guys that used to live in the neighborhood but bought homes in Brooklyn, Staten Island or where ever, they’d come in to La Focacceria every Saturday for a VASTEDDA and some SFINCIONE and ARANCINI. It was quite a place.




“One of the Saddest days of my life”

…  Author Daniel Bellino Zwicke, on the closing of La Focacceria …





The following is from The New York Times, 1996


When the authors reviewed LA FOCACCERIA, a bright little restaurant, it was already 50 years old, having opened in 1914. It has moved from its old address, 195 First Avenue, but judging from the old review, not much else has changed.

One of its unusual specialties is still the vasteddi ($1.50), described in the book as ”a bizarre Sicilian sandwich.” It is made of slices of calf’s spleen, layered with ricotta cheese and shavings of Parmesan and served on a little bun. The authors describe it as ”mild and quite tasty,” which holds true.

The words al dente may never have been uttered here, and wine is poured from big jugs into carafes. The regulars look as if they have been coming here for years, and food is plentiful and cheap.

A bowl of white bean, pasta and pumpkin soup ($2.95) is earthy and filling. Fusilli is overcooked, but comes in a tomato sauce with slivers of pork subtly flavored with garlic ($6.50). Veal stew ($7.95), tender chunks of veal with potatoes and beans in a simple gravy, is excellent.

Best Ever Pasta With Ragu Bolognese Recipe by Bellino

GINO D’ACAMPO
 
And His RAGU BOLOGNESE
.
.
 
Northern Italy
 
BOLOGNA GENOA VENICE
.
.

 
RAGU BOLOGNESE 
 
Perfect Recipe
 
 
 
 
 
Anna Maria & Gino eat her Pasta with Ragu Bolognese
 
 
Two great Recipes for Ragu Bolognese. Anna Maria Mannari at Trattoria Anna Maria. Anna Maria is 
The Ragu Queen of Bologna. Her recipe starts at minute 1:45 of this video.
 
Gino’s Recipe starts at minute 7:00 …
and Gino’s recipe that he was taught to by his grandfather.
 
 
 
 
GINO Makes TAGLIATELLE BOLOGNESE
 
RECIPE From His NONNO
 
 
 
 
The RAGU BOLGONESE COOKBOOK
 
SECRET RECIPE
 
The WORLDS BEST BOLGONESE
 
Daniel Bellino “Z” is considered The King of Bolognese in America. His famous
Ragu alla Bolognese was Voted The Best in America from The Journal of Italian Food Wine
and Travel Magazine in 1998. Hundreds of Thousands of adoring fans have eaten Daniel’s famed
Pasta with Bolgonese Sauce. And now you can eat it too.
 
For years Daniel kept his Recipe a Secret. But now, Daniel decided to share this amazing recipe with all the people of the World, with his publication of The Ragu Bolognese Cookbook – Secret Recipe, and more, by Daniel Bellino “Z” aka “Danny Bolognese” There are many other wonderful recipes and stories by Daniel, and of course his famous recipe for Pasta w/ Ragu Bolognese, considered on of the Tastiest Dishes in the World. Daniel says, it’s very easy to make, all you need is a great recipe (like his), use the best ingredients, follow and execute the directions, and you can make it too. It’s a great thing to know, as it taste oh so good. And when you make it for friends and family, they will love you all the more, for making it for them. 

Pasta with Ragu Bolognese all Danny, “The Tastiets Dish in The World” !!!  Make it!

 

 

 

 

Italian Chicken Cacciatore Recipe

 

POLLO alla CACCITORE

An ITALIA-AMERICAN FAVORITE

Pollo alla Cacciatore is quite popular all over Italy, from Piedmonte in the North West of Italy, down to Campania and Naples, and even into Sicily. The dish is especially popular in Tuscan and the Umbria region of Central Italy. Chicken Cacciatore is hugely popular with the Italian-American Enclave, as it is tasty, easy to prpepare, and has inexpensive ingredients, and the dish holds well when left in the refrigerator and is reheated for multiple meals. This being said, you can make larger batches by doubling and even tripling the following recipe.

There is no one sigle recipe for Pollo Cacciatore which means hunters chicken. The dish was originally made by hunters, using rabbits, which you can subsitute one or two rabbits for the chicken in the recipe that follows. 

As the original dish was made by hunter, who besided shooting rabbits and other wild game, and also coming across wild mushrooms in the woods, the hunters made their Cacciatore with Muschrroms. If you don’t like msuhrooms, as many people do not, they may be omitted from the recipe. If you don’t like Peppers, you can omit them as well, as long as you have the base sauce recipe, of the tomatoes and wine, and the aromatic vegetables, especially the garlic, and onoins. You can also add Olives to the dish, if you so choose. Experiment, and make the recipe you own., just Enjoy.




Italian POLLO alla CACCIATORE – Recipe


INGREDIENTS :


  • 2 pounds Chicken Thighs
  • 1 pound of Whole San Marzano Tomatoes (crushed)
  • One carrot
  • One garlic clove
  • 1/2 cup Red Wine
  • One celery stalk
  • Salt to taste
  • A sprig of rosemary
  • Pepper to taste
  • 12 ounces Mushrooms (washed and sliced)
  • 1 Sweet Red Bell Pepper, cored and sliced
  • I large Onion, peeled and diced
  • 2 bay leaves
  • Italian Olive Oil

Wash the carrot and celery under running water and chop them coarsely.

Pat dry the Chicken with paper towels. Season both sides of the chicken with Salt & Black Ground Pepper.

Take a frying pan and put the olive oil in it and heat it well.

Add the Chicken to pan with the olive oil and cook on medium heat, until the chicken is nicely browned on all sides, cooking over medium heat for 4-5 minutes on each side.

Remove the Chciken from the pan, and set aside on a plate to rest.

Add the Red Bell Peppers and cook on low heat for 6 minutes.

Add the Mushrooms to pan, and add the Salt & Black Pepper to the peppers and mushrooms. Cook on medium heat for 5 minutes. 

Add th onion and cook on low heat for 3 minutes.

Then add the chopped garlic and the bay leaves. Cook on low heat for 3 minutes.

Add the chicken back to the pan. Turn heat on high.

Add the Red Wine to pan and cook on jigh heat until the wine is reduced by half its original volume. About 4-5 minutes.

Add the Tomatoes, Carrots, and Celery to the pan.

Turn heat to high and cook until the contents strarts to bubble and boil.

Turn the heat to a low simmer, and let everything cook until the chicken is tender.
About 25 minutes.

Turn the jheat off and let the Chicken rest.

Serve 3 pieces of Chicken with the vegetables and sauce to each person. 

You can serve this with boiled or raost potatoes, or over any pasta or egg noodles that you choose.

Enjoy !!!





FAVORITE ITALIAN DISHES

And SECRET RECIPES

SOUPS PASTA LASAGNA

CHICKEN CACCIATORE

And MUCH More …