Archive for February, 2010

February 26th, 2010 Specials

Friday, February 26th, 2010

Testaccio’s specials:

Sformato di spinaci

Spinach & ricotta flan with tomato sauce & parmesan

13

Risotto ai funghi e tartufo

risotto with wild mushrooms, black truffle & crispy prosciutto

18

Paccheri con la coda

Large rigatoni with oxtail ragu’

18

Costoletta di cervo al caffe’

Coffee rubbed venison chops with scallions mashed potatoes & spinach

26

Salmone all’arancio e balsamico

Broiled salmon fillet with orange & balsamic sauce, roasted potatoes & zucchine

24

Pizza capricciosa

Tomato, mozzarella, artichokes, mushrooms, ham & egg

14

February Featured Wine & Recipe

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

MASI CAMPOFIORIN

Veneto, Italy

Masi Campofiorin 2006 Rosso del Veronese IGT

Deep ruby red color with violet tinges on the edges; a complex bouquet filled with hints of ripe berries, baked plums, bitter cherries, and blackcurrants. On the palate, this wine is full, well balanced and velvety, a nice aftertaste with a hint of walnut. Created in 1964, Campofiorin is, with its unique personality, the first among equals of “Supervenetian reds.”

Pairs well with rich sauces (based on meat or mushrooms), such as a Coda alla Vaccinara.

70% Corvina, 25% Rondinella, 5% Molinara

 

Masi bottle

 

RECIPE OF THE MONTH

Coda alla vaccinara / Braised Oxtail, Roman style

CODA

 

Ingredients

Serves 4-6 people.

•            3 lbs oxtails with separated joints

•            2 spanish onion, chopped

•            1/2 celery stalk, chopped

•            2 large carrot, chopped

•            3 pints chicken stock

•            1/2 bottle of red wine

•            2 cans of peeled tomatoes

•            3 whole cloves garlic, unpeeled

•            One bay leaf

•            1 rosemary sprig

Instructions

1 – Preheat oven to 350°F. Sprinkle the oxtail with salt and pepper. Start searing the oxtail in very hot oil, careful to brown it on both sides. Take it out of the pan and let it dry on a piece of paper towel.

2 – Degrease the same pan, add the chopped onion, carrot, and celery. Cook for a few minutes until the vegetables are golden. Add the oxtails back to the pan. Add the whole garlic clove, the wine and cook it off. Add bay leaf, tomato, broth and half a teaspoon of salt. Bring to simmer. Cover and cook in the oven for about 2 hours or until the meat is tender to the fork.

3 – If you plan to enjoy it the day after, separate the meat from the sauce and refrigerate. When the fat solidifies, scrape it from the surface so that when reheating the sauce, it will be lighter.

January Featured Wine & Recipe

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

POGGIO POLLINO
Emilia Romagna. Italy

Sangiovese di Romagna “Vigna di Cambro”— Sangiovese from this region is rich with rugged earth, violets and intense plum and fruity notes. Fermented in steel, it’s then bottled shortly after to bring out the natural characteristics of this varietal—producing a ruby red with a silky tannin frame.

Accompanies pasta dishes, roasts & grilled meats well; perfect for this time of year. Stunning with this newsletter’s recipe of the month, of course.

 

JanuaryTestaccioWine

 

RECIPE OF THE MONTH

Tagliatelle Bolognese


Ragu

1/2 cup dry, egg dough tagliatelle

7 ounces Bolognese ragù (see recipe below)

Grana Padano or Parmigiano Reggiano cheese freshly grated

Instructions

•   Cook the pasta in salted boiling water, strain when al dente, and place it in a hot pasta bowl or plate.

•   Bring the sauce to boil and if it’s too thick add a little water from the pasta.

•   Spoon the fragrant, hot sauce over the steaming tagliatelle and serve with the freshly grated cheese on the side.

•   Put a spoon and a fork so the guests can mix their own pasta and put their desired amount of grated cheese. This is the real way to enjoy this dish. The alternative is to sauté the pasta and the sauce in the kitchen, and then serve.

•   Do not decorate with basil leaves or chopped parsley, or even more gross, with garlic bread on the side. This is not Italian!

*    *    *

Bolognese Ragù sauce

To achieve great results, this sauce should be made fresh every morning and be served within a few hours or at least, the same day.

Ingredients for 4 people. Approximately 8 2/3 cups of Bolognese Ragù

21 ounces of coarsely ground lean beef

14 ounces of coarsely ground lean pork

7 ounces of pancetta diced or chopped

1/2 cup chopped onion

1/2 cup carrot, diced

1/2 cup celery, diced

4/1/3 cups canned peeled tomatoes

10 ounces = 11/4 cups dry white wine

17 ounces= 2 1/8 cups fresh milk

3 bay leaves

Black pepper and salt to taste

Instructions

•   Place the pancetta in a large, broad stainless steel saucepan with tall sides. Stir and cook over low flame until the fat is melted, add the onion and keep stirring until it becomes translucent.

•   Add the carrot, celery and bay leaves and keep cooking until the vegetables start to soften and get some color.

•   Raise the flame to very high and add the ground meats, previously mixed and seasoned with salt and black pepper and mixed well, by hand (wear gloves!)

•   Keep cooking and stirring with a wooden spoon until the meat is well done.

•   Pour in the white wine and keep cooking until the wine has evaporated.

•   Process briefly the peeled tomatoes in the food mill and add to the pot. Continue cooking slowly over a low flame for at least 2 hours, if it becomes too dry, add some beef stock.

•   Add some milk and some chicken stock, stir and leave to slow boiling at low flame.

•   Keep adding the milk and the stock for 60 minutes at low flame.

•   Season to taste and leave to rest before serving.

How to get to Testaccio Ristorante LIC

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Get to downtown LIC easily by subway from NYC:

Take the 7 train from Times Square – 42 St station heading to Queens / Flushing

Get out at the first Queens stop. Get off at Vernon Blvd – Jackson Ave. Take the exit marked for the intersection of Vernon Blvd and 50th Ave. Start out going north on Vernon Blvd towards Hunters Point Ave — simply head towards the blue  girder Queensboro (59th Street) Bridge, ahead, and enjoy discovering downtown LIC’s various shops and entertainment buzzing with people before you see Testaccio about 3 blocks up on your left.

47-30 Vernon Blvd, Queens, between 47th Ave. + 47th Rd.

We’re even easier to reach by cab (about 10 minutes from Midtown) from the 59th St. Bridge or Queens Midtown Tunnel. Come over to your contemporary Roman kitchen!

Parties + Events at Testaccio Ristorante

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

We hope you enjoy your experience at Testaccio and will consider us for your upcoming events. Our restaurant is ideal for parties and meetings of most sizes – with a banquette capacity of 122 and cocktail capacity of 150, and easy access to transportation, it’s easy to see how elegant events at Testaccio provide quality, value and total delicious satisfaction.

About Testaccio Ristorante

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Testaccio Ristorante combines authentic Roman nose-to-tail comfort food with NYC flair. NY Times-favorite Chef Ivan Beacco’s* traditional recipes brings neighborhood feel to a modern space.

The New York Times and Corriere Della Sera both recently recognized the movement towards authentic Italian cooking, and towards Roman comfort food, Testaccio as a prime example. Chef Ivan Beacco’s diverse experience delivers sophisticated twists on traditional plates of extremely delicious and satisfying flavors. Clearly, authenticity makes its mark.

Originally a sprawling warehouse, the restaurant’s modular dining areas are perfect for business lunches, private meetings, group meals and events, late afternoon re-charge brunches after PS1 or the Noguchi Museum; romantic evenings, delicious family dinners, bar meals and cocktails, late night bites and desserts.
With a healthy wine list, and a wide array of rooms and entertaining options, including a fully wired private cellar chef’s table room, Testaccio Ristorante is your own Roman kitchen, in the heart of LIC’s downtown art district.

FROM THE CHEF

Friday, February 12th, 2010

CODAThe Oxtail of Two Cities

Coda alla vaccinara is a modern Roman stew made of “oxtail” (in fact, usually veal tail) and various vegetables. The concept of «Quinto Quarto» or «fifth quarter» dates back to when the butcher was paid in kind with the entrails, hide, and tail of the animal. This «fifth quarter» was the only type of meat the proletariat could afford, after the nobles, clergy, the bourgeosie, and the soldiers all got their respective quarters. Butchers developed a way of turning their fee into a delicacy, and that’s how coda alla vaccinara came to be. Today, almost every Roman household has its unique recipe to cook coda, but at Testaccio of course, Chef Ivan Beacco starts with the true, traditional recipe and improvises from that foundation.

Cooking coda is usually a 3-stage process, in order to make the meat so tender it falls off the bone. It’s parboiled at first with celery, carrot and flavorings, then more complex influences such as soffritto and wine in the second stage, and lastly, herbs and spices round the flavor out; it’s often finished with pine nuts, spices, or just salt + pepper—touches unique to that Roman kitchen’s traditional recipe for coda. Chef Ivan likes to keep it simple and close to the authentic recipe. The end result is intense, braised full of flavor notes and so satisfying. Once you try, you’ll know why this is Roman comfort food at its finest. Succulent, sophisticated, superb.

MARDI GRAS / CARNEVALE

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Swing’s the thing – celebrate Carnevale in Roman style with the Antonio Ciacca jazz band and delicious bites from Testaccio Ristorante

1st  Musical Set 7:00 – 8:30

2nd Musical Set 9:00 – 10:30

Tickets: $75  (food and music charge included) + cash bar

Dance to the Antonio Ciacca jazz band, one of the world’s best swing bands. Mr. Ciacca and his band have performed with legendary artists Art Farmer, Lee Konitz, Johnny Griffin and Dave Liebman, and toured extensively with saxophonists Steve Lacy and Benny Golson. Mr. Ciacca was first inspired by learning under Detroit’s jazz greats, and is now the Director of Programming for Jazz at Lincoln Center.  Get into the swing of Mardi Gras with two musical sets, delicious bites by Testaccio Ristorante and fun dancing.

www.antoniociacca.com

Dress in your Carnevale best – or craziest, or just come to enjoy the great band. Special prize given to the best costume of the night!

Buy your tickets directly from Testaccio as a welcome newsletter customer, and get $25 off each ticket for Testaccio’s swingingest Carnevale celebration.

RSVP: info@c-jam.it

Giusy Magrì 646-413-9374

MARDI GRAS / CARNEVALE NIGHT

Special Menu

Artichoke hearts with black olive pesto

3 kind of rice suppli’*: tomato & mozzarella, artichokes & truffle, corn & pecorino

Pasta e fagioli soup

Braised oxtail in red wine sauce & roasted vegetables

Eggplant caponata with rustic bruschetta

Baby spinach salad with pears, walnuts & gorgonzola

Ricotta cheesecake with amarena cherries

* Suppli’ are traditional Roman rice balls (generally risotto) with tomato sauce around a piece of mozzarella, then surrounded by breadcrumbs and fried.

TESTACCIO HISTORY

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Testaccio is the 20th district of Rome, deriving its name from Monte Testaccio—a man-made hill based on thousands of broken, ancient Roman vessels (amphorae).  It’s a down-to-earth workplace of ancient Rome that still holds its neighborhood friendly character, where one feels that everybody knows each other. Much like NYC’s meatpacking district of Rome, Testaccio’s hardworking exterior always extends a warm embrace amongst friends.

Now, Testaccio is a lively area of Rome, and the artificial mountain made of discarded Roman amphorae is a treasure-trove of typical Roman life for experts to explore. Still a lively area, Testaccio holds some of the most diverse restaurants and nightclubs of Rome.

Alviero Pirani, one of the owners, is from the Testaccio neighborhood of Rome, and with the support of Ivan Beacco, the executive chef and the other two partners, Paolo and Carlo Bordone, decided to open a restaurant that would recreate the magic of the Testaccio neighborhood. Remaking the industrial space and introducing recycled elements to build a cordial ambiance is yet another example of the typical Testaccio neighborhood tradition–who for over 2,000 years have always have created masterpieces of what today serves up—everything. Testaccio Ristorante in Long Island City has successfully transported the neighborhood feel halfway across the world from its heart in the center of Rome. Come visit us and see for yourself why Testaccio Ristorante NY is a special place to relax and enjoy.