Sunday, July 18, 2021

No Mayonnaise Potato Salad Recipe

 



QUICK & EASY POTATO SALAD





NO MAYONNAISE POTATO SALAD

RECIPE

INGREDIENTS :

  • 3 pounds red new potatoes
  • ¼ cup red wine vinegar
  • 3 tablespoons whole grain Dijon Mustard
  • ½ cup olive oil
  • 6 scallions, chopped
  • ½ cup chopped parsley
  • ¼ cup chopped dill
  •  Salt and ground Black Pepper

  1. Place the potatoes in a large pot, and cover with water and add 1 tablespoon of Salt. Bring to a boil, and cook until the potatoes are tender, about 20 minutes. Drain and allow to cool. When cool, cut the potatoes in half.
  2. Combine the vinegar and mustard in a large bowl. Slowly whisk in the olive oil.
  3. Add the potatoes to the vinaigrette, and mix gently but thoroughly. Toss in the scallions, parsley and dill. Add Salt and Black Pepper to taste.





AMERICA'S FAVORITE DISHES

And SECRET RECIPES





Tuesday, March 9, 2021

Grammy Awards Suck 2021

 



The MUSIC SUCKS !!!

BIG TIME !!!

THAT'S WHY THE GRANNYS SUCK


I really don't understand why every year for the past years they bother making a Big Thing about the Grammy's like it's something great? A great Happening ? NOT !!! The GRAMMYS for the past 20 years or so Sucks. Why? The Music Sucks. It's really sad, that for the past 25 Years or so the Music is So Damn Bad. It's really incredible and quite unbelievable that after such great music being produced in the 50s, 1960s, 70s, and even into the 80s, that the music has gotten so bad. More than Bad actually, it quite literally Sucks, with a bunch of Mediocre so-called talent, "I hesitate to call it talent, if we're lucky maybe 2% of all the performers that the masses think are talented, but they quite literally SUCK ! People like Taylor Swift, John Legend, Kanye West, Justine Timberlake and all the rest put at Crappy Music. I just don't get it? All these people are quite medicare in their so-called talent (NOT !). All these people; Timberlake, Taylor Swift, John Legend and all the other horrible musical performers of the present would have been laughed off the stage. In fact they never even would have made to the stage in the days of Johnny Carson and The Tonight Show, The Ed Sullivan SHow and the likes. The talent scouts of days passed, if people like John Legend, Swif, Kanye, and Timberlake ever went to the talent scouts and producers of The Ed Sullivan Show, The TOnight Show, Playboy After Dark, Sammy & Company, The Dean martin Show, Sonny & Cher, and the like, the producers would laugh in John Legends face. His music is awful. John Legend, Justine Timebrlake, and Kanyne West are oh so lucky, as they are all Multi Millions, and the produce garbage, Well I guess it's a result of a large part of the American population having such horrible taste, or no taste at all. This is the only explanation that I could figure out why all this crappy noise that they call music, that's devoid of any rhythm, rhyme, or reason, or any melody at all. I'm mystified, when we had all the great R&B, POP, Standards, and ROCK n' ROLL MUSIC of the 50s, 1960s, 70s, and 80s, and the so-called music just became so shitty and is accepted by the tasteless population of AMerica. It's really sad.
So why is CBS making such of a Big Deal about the Grammys when it is going to be Horrible like it has been for the past 10 years? I don't get it. Is this somebody's sick sense of humor, a Joke? Why take away all the great music like, Rock, R&B, and POP music, really great stuff. Music that has stood the test of time, unlike the SHIT that they (Taylor, Justin, Kanye, John Legend, and ???). This is a Sick Joke created by people in the music business? Record Company Execs and what not? "I don't get the Joke? Am I missing something people. Why have they done? Why have they STOPPED Making GREAT MUSIC? Why do they put out Crap Noise now? Does anyone have an answer? Please let us all in on the joke, and please bring back Rock, R&B, and great POP Music and get rid of all the God Awful HIP HOP RAP SHIT and Crappy so-called alternative Rock. "Alternative to what, the great Rock Music of the 60s and 70s. What's the point? Why not make great music like before? Where's Jerry Wexler and Clive Davis when you need them"

"HELP" !!!







SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER

Just 1 Example of GREAT MUSIC of YESTERYEAR

"WHAT THE HELL HAPPENED" ???








Sunday, November 8, 2020

Covid Kills Batali Bastianich Otto Restaurant

 

 



Where is Mario ?






OTTO has CLOSED


You know things are bad when once very popular, former Mario Batali, Joe and Lidia
Bastianch restuaruants close. This is the case with Otto Enoteca, created by Mario Batali and
partner Joe Bastianich back in 2003, another victim of Covid 19 Pandemic of 2020. It's a sad day for me, someone who loves Italian Wine and Italian Wine Bars, as to begin with, there are not that many in 
New York, and now we've lost another. I know what it's like. I myself created with my partner 
Tom T
America's 1st ever Venetian Wine (Bacaro) Bar Cichetti way back in 1998, right around the time that Joe Bastianich joined forces with rising celebrity chef Mario Batali and opened Babbo. This is were they started growing their restaurant empire. They followed Babbo with Lupa Osteria, specialing in Roman Cusisine and Italian Wine. Today Lupa is the only former Bastianich / Batali restaurants operating at this very moment 
(Novemeber 2020). Babbo has not opened and there is rabid speculation that Del Posto will not survive the Pandemic and in all likelihood will shutter it's doors permanently. Eataly remains opened.

Yes I will miss Otto. Joe and Mario set it up quite nicely, especially the bar, which though the prices were quite a bit more than most wine bars in Italy, I really liked the place. My cousin Joe and I went there on numerous occasions and had some good times there. We'd order some nice wine and have a few antipasti plates, and maybe a pasta or two. 

Anyway, as the smoke has cleared with the whole ting with Mario, and him leaving B&B Hospitality.
One would have to say Mr. Batali got out just in time. He was paid off for his share in the company which has now lost a great deal of its former total value. Who knew we were going to have a Pandemic that would change the whole world, killing people, and destroying many businesses in its wake. Otto is a victim of the Pandemic and has closed for good. Babbo has been closed and has not re-opened yet, though we suspect it will re-open one day, and most likely will not fall victim. Del Posto is another story, most feel that it will end up closing for good, though we could be wrong on this thinking. Lupa is a great restaurant and we are happy to see them open, and hopefully for a long time to go. We just got a new President, Joe Biden. We are all hoping and praying and wishing this horrible nightmare of the Covid 19 Pandemic would just go away (as Donald Trump said it would) and die. All everyone wants is to get back to normal. Well as normal as can be? We know many things will change for good, but we all want to go back to work full time and have things go the way they were going before this horrible Pandemic hit, "can we please?"






OTTO

RIP

"Well Miss You"





SUNDAY SAUCE


MEATBALLS

MARINARA

BRACIOLA 

and More ....





.





Monday, October 19, 2020

Quick Easy Banana Pudding Recipe CovidCooking





QUICK n EASY BANANA PUDDING








QUICK n EASY BANANA PUDDING





QUICK n EASY RECIPES
 
And Of COURSE "TASTY TOO" !!!
 
BURGERS - BURRITOS -TACOS
 
STEAK - MEATLOAF
 
PASTA and More ...
 
GREAT for COVID COOKING






BESTSELLING ITALIAN COOKBOOKS





.

Friday, August 28, 2020

People are Cooking During Covide - New Cookbooks


SUNDAY SAUCE 

WHEN ITALIAN-AMERICANS COOK

PEOPLE LOVE SUNDAY SAUCE

by DANIEL BELLINO ZWICKE

"WHO DOESN'T LOVE ITALIAN" ?

IT'S EVERYONE'S FAVORITE

And with TASTY EASY to FOLLOW RECIPES

SUNDAY SAUCE has been FLYING OFF The SHELVES

.

The coronavirus pandemic has us stuck at home and looking for a way to cope.
For many people, it's cooking.
"I think there is a silver lining to be found in all of this, and it might be found in the kitchen," said Stacy Deasy, an American living in Wicklow, Ireland.
The proof is all over social media, with mouthwatering dishes being posted to Instagram, Twitter and Facebook with hashtags such as #coronaviruscooking.
Deasy recently posted a picture of her chicken and dumplings to the NYT Cooking Community group that she's a part of on Facebook.
"Food is comforting. Food is energy. Food can be healing. Those are important things right now more than ever," she said.
Los Angeles resident Erik Dahlgren has had to work from home during the pandemic. But armed with a 25-pound bag of flour, he's been experimenting with bread-making. He recently put a photo of freshly baked sourdough to his Instagram account.
"I need something to keep me busy, and baking always gives me a sense of accomplishment and pride," he said. "Those are the kinds of things I need to get me through these lonely times we are all experiencing."
Brenda McNicol had to cancel her 60th birthday party because of social-distancing measures in Edmonton, Alberta. But she still baked a cake for a virtual cocktail party, which she hosted on a video-conferencing app.
"I think food can serve as a vessel to bring people together, even when we can't actually be around each other," said Steve Roybal of Santa Rosa, California.
BOOKS by BESTSELLING COOKBOOK AUTHOR DANIEL BELLINO

Are FLYING OFF THE at MACARI VINEYARDS

And on-line at AMAZON.com


SUNDAY SAUCE  - "When Italian-Americans Cook"
A lot of people are really taking to cooking (1st time or whatever) since this horrible Pandemic started. Everyone has to eat, so why not cook fresh, tasty food, on your own, that you don't have to worry about who touched it or what not, "Keep Safe."
Anyway, everyone #Loves #ItalianFood and many people #LOVE my book SUNDAY SAUCE that is not only filled with Recipes for the best and most beloved Italian Dishes, I have written delightful little stories (true - non fiction) to go along with the recipes. I've been a Chef for more that 30 years, and I have written recipes that are easy to follow and execute. Many people have just gotten into cooking for the first time as a result of the current situation in America and all around the World. And others who had already known how to cook, are looking for new recipes and want to improve their culinary skills and increase the size of their repertoire. As a result, cookbook sales are booming. As for myself, my sales have increased over the same time period last year, but enough about all that.
All you need to know is that Sunday Sauce, and some of my other books like GOT ANY KAHLUA? aka The Big Lebowski  Cookbook are quite delightful, if I must say so myself; Great RECIPES and wonderful little antidotes and stories of the food and people within.
Thank You All,
Have a Wonderful Day, and Be Safe,
Daniel 
PS ... "Always Mangia Bene!"
Basta
If You Love Food

And you LOVE The BIG LEBOWSKI ?

YOU'RE GONNA LOVE "GOT ANY KAHLUA" ?

aka The BIG LEBOWSKI COOKBOOK

It's Got GREAT RECIPES and STORIES of The DUDE

AVAILABLE on AMAZON.com 

"ABIDE in IT" 

SUNDAY SAUCE

MOST BELOVED ITALIAN RECIPES
.

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

The Most Brutal Summer 2020 Pandemic





Coney Island, New York

Trying to Beat The Heat in The Most Brutal Summer

The SUMMER of 2020





THE MOST BRUTAL SUMMER

The Most Brutal Summer? It was 2020. And the year 2020, a year millions of Americans will never forget, how could we? It was the year of the Covid Virus. We were in a Pandemic, and the whole country shut down on March 15th. All of the so-called non-essential businesses were shut down, and people were told they should stay home, and only go out when necessary, more or less to buy food and toilet paper. Toilet Paper? IN the year 2020 toilet paper was like gold. There were Toilet Paper Shortages, along with Hand Sanitizer, Surgical Mask, and Lysol Disinfectant, there were many shortages, millions of people were instantly unemployed, people were getting the virus, people were dying. The Pandemic of 2020, it was our generations Plague. No one had seen anything like it since the Pandemic of 1918 when The Spanish Flu (Influenza), when ⅓ of the World’s population (50 Million) contracted this deadly virus. It’s estimated that 17 to 50 million people died. One Hundred-Two years later, the United States, and the World has been hit with another deadly pandemic, and the way things are going (0ver 140,000 Americans dead as of July 26, 2020), it looks like we (Scientists, etc. ?) haven’t learned nearly enough about how to control a pandemic and keep it down, “it’s out of control,” so many people are dying, or seriously ill, it’s really terrible.

At one point, New York City was the epicenter of the World, the place worst hit by this horrible virus. Trump called it the Chinese Virus. Yes, we were hard hit, at one point in april 700 to 1,000 New Yorkers were dying a day. Morgs were so over-loaded that they had to put the bodies of poor dead souls into refrigerated trucks, no one alive had ever seen anything like it. There was a shortage of medical help, and nurses and doctors were working around the clock. They were risking their lives to save people. Some of these brave nurses and doctors ended up losing their own lives. Every night at 7 PM New Yorkers went to their windows and clapped because we cared, in a small show of acknowledgment and appreciation for doctors, nurses and other front line workers, those working at grocery and drug stores, and delivering food and what-not. We clapped, rang bells, yelled, and banged on pots every night at 7. The city was desolate, people were inside, most businesses like restaurants, bars, cafes, banks, gyms, rNarbers SHops and Beauty Parlors, and all retail stores were closed down. Most people didn’t leave their homes, just once or twice a week to go buy groceries. I wasn’t one of them. Me, I couldn’t stay inside day and night all cooped-up by myself. I had to get it, get my coffee, fresh air. I went outside, but I was very careful, I wore my mask, I kept away from people, I always had my hand-sanitizer with me and used it often, but I had to go out and get my coffee, fresh air, that’s all I asked for. And yes food. But I didn’t have food delivered like a lot of people, I cooked almost every meal, 3 meals a day, everyday of the pandemic. Well, almost everyday. There were a couple times when my pal Jimmy said, get some sandwiches and go drink a bottle of wine in the park. This we did a few times during the pandemic. Hey we had to do something, people were getting tired of being all cooped up and not seeing people, their friends and family. We’d get a sandwich at Faicco’s (one is enough for 2), we’d go to a park in Greenwich Village or Soho, eat our sandwich, sip some wine, and chit chat about all the craziness in the World, the Pandemic, about work, we were both un-employed, what was going to happen with our jobs, the economy, the World. When was it going to end? There were a lot of questions. Serious ones. The World had changed, it’s changing now, it will be changing, the so-called “New Normal,” getting tired of hearing that one. Getting tired of hearing a lot of things, people dying everyday, the economy, this-that-and-every-other-thing. “Help!”

When a black man, George Floyd was killed by a police officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota on May 25th 2020, that was it. People shot video of the incident of Derek Chauvin with his knee on Mr. Floyd’s neck for almost 9 minutes, with Floyd crying “I can’t breath,” pleading for the officer to stop, but Police Officer Chauvin continued to kneel on his neck. George Floyd cried, “Mamma, Mamma,” he really couldn’t breath, and the life just left his body. He died, murdered by a white police officer, as the other three police did nothing to stop Chauvin from this excessive force, as Floyd was hand-cuffed and he was on the ground. There was no need for a knee on his neck for 8 minutes and 46 second. George Floyd was murdered. 

That was it. Following the killing of Georg Floyd, protest against this killing, and the fresh memory of others sparked a revolution. Protested erupted all over the country. People took to the streets in more than 140 cities around America, against police violence against black men. Some protests were peaceful while others had; looting, vandalism, and violence against police. But there was a pandemic on, and it had not stopped, it was in full force and people were taking to the streets in large groups of hundreds and thousands of people, at a time when people were supposed to stay 6 feet upart from one-and-other and not congregate in groups of more than 10 people at a time; protesters were in groups of hundreds and even 2 thousand people at a time, all next to each other, on top of one and other, not social distancing as we were told was vital to stop the spread of the deadly Covid 19 Corona Virus, people were, protesting, looting, and spreading the deadly Covid 19 Virus. “Hello?” What’s wrong with you people? Are you out of your mind? These protests created quite a bit of bad feelings all across the country. Police were attacked for no reason, simply because they were officers of the law. And the insane notion of disbanding police departments, is something only a madman would think of. Yet it was happening. We were in the middle of a horrible, horrible pandemic, with 700, 800, and up to 1,000 people dying in a single day in New York, we didn’t need all this other crap too. I live in Greenwich Village in, New York, and I’ve never seen so many complete and total asholes in my neighborhood in the entire 38 years I’ve been living here. “Go home,” is all I wanted to say, “get out of my neighborhood. There’s a pandemic going on you fools. It was quite horrible for almost 3 weeks, but the intensity and number of protests and looting finally subsided. “Thank God,” but then the horrible intense heat starts. Haven’t we had enough?

It’s been around 90 degrees or more for the past 5 weeks, with hardly any let-up other than about 4 measly days out of about 35, it’s really brutal. The worst, hottest, nastiest Summer I’ve seen on my 62 years on the planet. “Hello? We’ve had enough already.” And the pandemic goes on. We’ve go the numbers going down to where we’ve been at a really good point of only about 1% of people being tested and testing positive for the CoronaVirus. This is good. And less than 10 deaths a day, down from 700 to 1,000 a day at its worst in New York. But the numbers are up in about two-thirds of the country. Over 144,000 in America, and people are still dying. When is it going to end? Scientists are working feverishly to come up with a Vaccine against the virus. It’s our greatest hope to defeat this thing. Our economy is in the Shitter right now, we all want to get back to work, kids need to go back to school, we want to get back to normal, if we ever can. They say the new normal, what’s that gonna be? A lot of un-answered questions and un-certainty, “we just don’t know what’s down the road,” and we are in the midst of the most Brutal Summer ever, and we just don’t knowwhat’s in store in the future, near and distant. Will things ever be the same? I doubt it, and I just can’t wait for the Most Brutal Summer to end. The Summer 2020 …



DBZ






"IT'S BEEN NASTY for Almost 5 WEEKS NOW"




.


Friday, July 24, 2020

Covid19 Cooking Recipe Cookbook Pandemic

 


Better Days

Capri 2015


  Hello! Welcome, and thank you acquiring this book, we (I am) are honored. It’s a special little book, written in time of the Covid19 Pandemic in the United States and all over the World. It’s not a happy subject, so I really don’t want to get into that, just to not that fact here. But speaking of the Pandemic in America, the happening of it changed many things in this World, one of them being, many Americans (millions) really got into cooking at home. Many had never even cooked before and wanted to learn, many Americans who were already fairly accomplished cooks, upped their game, or simply just cooked more, and tried new recipes along with the tried and true. And as I’ve already said, millions of Americans were jumping into cooking for the first time, some partly out of necessity as in the beginning of this thing, most restaurants were closed, and people had to eat, so millions began to cook, some just to put food in their bellies, others as a new hobby, like knitting, making model planes, doing wood carving, embroidery, or whatever, just something to do. But unlike some of these mentioned hobbies and others, cooking, the making of food, filling one of our most basic necessities of life. Not just a necessity, but an absolute must to survival itself, we need shelter (a roof over our heads) clothing, breathing air, drinking water, and putting food in our bellies. If you can’t breat, drink water, or eat, if any of these three things are denied to you, you will eventually die. So you see, knowing how to cook, is quite important. I’ve written several cookbooks, and through this lock-down thing (Covid), I wasn’t doing much, just trying to keep safe, not get the Covid Virus, and trying to make it through each day without going out of my gourd. At first, I could not write at all. I have a book that is about 85% finished, and I simply couldn’t work on it at all. When writing, as all writers, I have my own methods and ways of doing thing, and how I go about writing, and one of the big things with me is, I can’t write at home and very rarely do (about 5%). I do almost all my writing at one of my favorite cafes, and this one I’m doing at the first cafe I ever went to in my life, when I was a you man of just 15 years old, and I used to hang out on weekends in Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village, watching the street performers and taking pictures with my 35mm Camera. It was a hobby of mine, and I loved it. I’d hang out in the park for a couple of hours, and then go to Caffe Reggio on Macdougal Street, and have a Cappuccino. Well, let me tell you, I thought I was cool, hanging out in this renowned bohemian caffe in the center of one of the World’s great centers of Bohemia, Greenwich Village, New York.  So anyway, after things started opening up, after the the bad stats (people getting the virus) started going down, and things looked better, Governor Cuomo and Mayor Bill Deblasio started, little by little, one-step-at-at-time let various businesses start opening. It took 3 months, but after the numbers started going down, and it looked like it might be safe to let restaurants and cafes open, letting people sit outside, but no indoor seating yet, around the middle of June, the powers that be said restaurants could open under these conditions, people had to stay 6 feet apart, wear mask, wash their hands and such, and keep social distant apart. So Caffe Reggio, aroudnthe block from my house opened. I gotta have my coffee everyday, and I usually do this at my favorite cafes. My current cafes that I frequent for the past several years and before the Pandemic Lock-Down were Grounded Cafe on Jane Street in Greenwich Village, and the coffee lounge at The Marlton Hotel, also in Greenwich Village. Come March 15, 2020 and New York is on lock-down, only essential business can be open; grocery stores, liquor stores (“Essential? This is Funny.”), drug stores, and restaurants, only for delivery service. So no cafes for me to go to. What did I do? How’d I get my coffee, that what vital for me to have each and everyday? Well, I could make it at home, but me, “I don’t do coffee at home. I love it, and I love going out for it. It’s a thing.” So, how did I get my coffee fix, if I didn’t make it at home, and all the cafes in New York were all closed down? Well, I did the only thing I could. I went to the local Korean Market, where they make coffee to go, and I got my coffee their. I was quite stunned at the quality of the coffee and how good it tasted. And cheap to boot, at $1.25 for a small one, $1.50 for a medium, and just a $1.75 for one that was quite large. I was satisfied. No, I was ecstatic, happy as hell. I got coffee and it’s good! At least they can’t take that away from me. And this made me happy. So, as they say “I Got Coffee,” but where to drink it? Simple, I’d got over to Bleecker Farms (Korean Market), get my coffee and go. I’d go to all the little parks in the neighborhood and drink it my coffee at Winston Churchill Park on Bleecker Street, Bleecker Park on Bleecker, Prince Street Park, Spring Street Park and a few others. like Abingdon Square Park on Hudson Street at Bleecker.  Yes I drank my coffee at parks, but my favorite spots were actually on the stoops of two town-houses in the Village, not far from my house. One was on Commerce Street, also known as Cherry Lane, and the other was one block away on Barrow Street. Yes, I’d get my coffee and walk over to one of those stoops. I had my coffee, and it’s a simple pleasure that makes me happy, just about everyday of my life, I just love it. Coffee never gives me a hard time, it’s always ther, it satisfies me, and it makes me happy. What more can one ask for? I’d sit on my stoop on Barrow Street, I’d get comfy, sip my coffee, see if I had any messages, look at my Instagram, post on Instagram, read the News on my Google News Feed, make phone calls, and chit chat with friends on the phone. I’d drink my coffee, play around on my Smart Phone (“Haha!”), jump on my laptop, I was actually writing for my blogs here and there, but no book writing at all, until I started this book. Yes, I’d chat on the phone with friends, a lot of what was going on as far as the Pandemic was concerned, but other topics as well, sometimes what we’d mostly be talking about pre-pandemic, but there was a lot of talking about the pandemic and how to survive it, and what Cuomo and Deblasio said that day, and things we needed to know about this dreaded thing thrust so brutally onto the World. It was (still is as of this writing July 23, 2020). Yes I really don’t want to talk about this that much, but as I said, this is why I’m writing this book, but it’s not what it’s about. So what is it about? Read on and find out. Next chapter? OK, what is this book about? It’s just about cooking, and the Joy of it, knowing how to cook, eating the fruits of your labor (cooking), and if you’re lucky, sharing this food that you made with those you love, friends and family, for this is one of life's greatest pleasures, and I just love it. I’ve been doing it since I’m 13 years old. Yes I love to cook, and I became interested in it at an early age, when I was just thirteen. I, along with my friend John P. and a couple other guys at Becton High School in East Rutherford, I (we) had the balls, and we decided we wanted to take cooking class. No males had ever taken cooking class at Becton or East Rutherford High School which this high school was called for many years before Becton HS was built. Yes no boys had ever taken cooking clas before, only girls. But my friends and I loved food and we wanted to learn how to cook, so we signed up and got into cooking class at Becton Regional HS, way back in 1972, the first boys ever. So we got into class, and we loved it. I can’t even remember the things we cooked other than Rueban Sandwiches, Meatloaf, and Stuffed Peppers are the only dishes I remember cooking. But I do remember loving the class, having a good time, that I learned how to cook, and I was very proud of myself, that my buddies and I were the first boys ever to take cooking class at E. Rutherford HS (Becton), we had the balls and we were all proud of it. I was always a trend setter. I also was the person to get a bunch of my friends to wear Halloween Costumes to school on Halloween, none had ever done it before. it wasn’t an organized activity, other than me getting a bunch of my friends to dress up, they did, and we started a new tradition at Becton. Anyway, this is where I first started cooking, we learned some things at school, then I’d make them at home, and try some new dishes as well. My stepmother Joan was a waitress at the Cambridge Inn Restaurant in Paramus, NJ and she got me a job as a Bus Boy there, where I worked on weekends all through (4 years) high school. I din’t have hardly any weekends off all through high school, but I always had money in my pockets, and I loved working in the restaurant. I even got two of my friends, Ronnie DeRizzo, and Michael Caci jobs at the restaurants as well.  Yes, I loved it, I was dam good at it. I was the best busboy in the place. Seriously. I was smart, and I could move. I was fast, and all the waitresses in the restaurant used to fight over me, to get me to be their busboy that night. I was so good, I did all of my work and I’d do a good part of the waitresses job so she could take it easy, and not have to kill themselves (so to speak). And they paid me for it. They always paid me more than the percentage cut, cause I was worth it. As Walter Brennan used to say in that show he was in, “I’m the Best. No Brag, just fact,” and it was a fact that I was good, the best. So, I worked at the Cambridge Inn, I liked working, I liked all the complements on being such a good worker, “that’s pride my friends.” Yes you might say I was a little cocky. Yes maybe a little cocky, I was confident in myself and my abilities, but most of all, it was that I had Pride. I had pride in myself and the work I did, and that I did it just about as good as it could possibly be done. Yes this job was good for me, it gave me a good work ethic. But then again, maybe it wasn’t good for me. Why? Well for one, it’s not the greatest business in the World, you bust your ass, and you just make a living wage and not a whole lot more. I know I was smart, still am, and if I didn’t get interested in the restaurant business at such a young age, maybe I would have gotten into something much better, and I would have made a lot more money. And I know I had the smarts to do a lot of things. I know I could never be a doctor, or a scientist, but I was capable of doing probably 80% or more of the things (careers) out there. I know I had and have the smarts to be a lawyer, work on Wall Street (Big Bucks), work in television, all sorts of things. Yes, I watched those guys behind the line, the cooks, and I wanted to be one. And I wanted to go to culinary school, and I did. I found out about a program at New York Technical College in Brooklyn. It was for a degree in Hotel & Restaurant Mgt. & Culinary Arts, and I wanted to get it. I checked it out, got all the info, applied and got in. The school was great, we had some wonderful professors, learned a lot, got a good education, and had some fun along the way. Dam, I’m going on and on. I’ve had a good long career in the restaurant business. I worked at some of the finest restaurants in New York, also being some of the best in the World. I did it all, 4 years at the start as a Busboy, and a dam good on. I got my education at New York Tech College. I started cooking in restaurants in New York. At that point in my career, we had a great culinary background at NY Tech where they thought us Classic French Cuisine, and that’s what I wanted to do at that time, in 1982. So my first few years I worked in French Restaurants, and one hotel. Learning how to cook, and cooking in restaurants, you start at the bottom and little by little work your way to the top, in stages. So that’s what I did. After my first year ant NY Tech, I got a job with one of the greatest Frecnh Chefs in all the World, at Lutece on East 50th Street in New York, with the great Andre Soltner. I got a job as a prep-cook and I had to do a lot of things. I had to cut a lot of vegetables into all sorts of intricate shapes, like carving Carrots and Turnips into little Football Shapes. Cutting various vegetables into Brunois and Julienne. I had to clean veal kidneys, calves liver, and meats to braise into some sort of French Stew. I made Fish Terrines and stuffed Quails with Mushroom Duxells and Foe Gras, then wrapped them in puff-pastry. I did a lot of things, including cutting my fingers all the time, as they gave you a lot of work to do, and they wanted things done fast, and when you don’t have a lot of experience with the knife yet, you end up cutting your fingers a lot. Dam, I cringe when I think about it now. I did become quite proficient with the knife eventually, and could work fast and hardly ever cut myself. I also got my fare share of little burns along the way too. Luckily with all those cuts, and a few burns here and there, I never got hurt too bad. Thank God. Yes, that my first job in the kitchen, it was just for the Summer, got some good experience, and learn a good deal, one being that the French can be real ball-breakers. Well, I knew that. No I didn’t. Anyway, Chef Soltner, on the last day, had a little talk with me. He was a little stern with me, he said, “wake up boy, “ not one of my prouder moments, but I would learn. Let me tell you something, cooking in a restaurant is hard work, it’s not easy, and not everyone can do it. There are brilliant doctor and lawyers and all sorts of successful people who could never make it in a professional kitchen, I did, but it wasn’t easy, especially in the beginning when you have almost no experience. But I was tough, I stick it out and I made something of myself. I worked my way up step-by-step. I started at the bottom, I did prep, then became a line-cook, now that’s really hard, and this is wthe point where a lot of aspiring cooks (Chefs) drop out. They quite. They can’t do it. They don’t want to do. I didn’t. Didn’t quit that is. Almost, but I didn’t I stuck it out. My friend Loci, who was the Chef at Le Relasie on Madison Avenue got me a job with Chef Michel Fitoussi at The Palace Restaurant, which at the time was one of the top restaurants in New York, one of the most famous, and thee most expensive place in town. When Loic told me about the job, that it was at the Palace, I told him, “I can’t work there. I don’t have enough experience.” He replied, “Sure you can. Go over there.” I didn’t have the confidence that I could do it, but Loic did, and he pushed me into it. I’m glad he did. So I went over to the Palace, I met the Chef, we chatted, and he ended up hiring me. He had faith. So I went to work at the Palace. My day was, I did a couple hours prep work when I came in, then I worked the line with Michel at night. oh my good, I was horrible, I din’t know what I was doing, it’s a very difficult thing to do, working the line, You got to have mad skills, you have to be super organized, you gotta be fast, and precise, you gotta get the job done, you have to be good, and turn out perfect product when you have 20 things going on at once. Not everyone can do it. I couldn’t. Well I couldn’t for a bout 10 days, then I started getting the hang of it and got better and better, until the day the Chef gave me a nice compliment. He told me I was doing good. He said, “Ah plutante. You were like a Stone Man. Now you know what you’re doing. Good job.” Well he was right, I was like a stone, I’d freeze, it’s dam hard to do, it takes a little time, and then you either get it or you don’t. Michel knew this, and he stuck with me. He was good to me, and he taught me a lot. He was a great Chef. At the time he was known in New York, as “The King of Nouvelle Cuisine,” and he was dam good, and he liked me, and he thought I was good, and that’s all I needed. “Thanks Chef.”



.... 


  This is an excerpt from my forthcoming book, Cooking at Home (working title) / America's favorite recipes. During the Pandemic of 2020 (Covid19 Virus), I was getting tired of doing nothing, basically the same old thing everyday, not working and not writing. I was thinking about all the cooking that people were doing because of the Virus Lock-Down, being stuck at home and not having restaurants to go to, as they were all closed, yet people had to eat. Some would just call and get food delivered (restaurants were open for delivery only) many cooked their own meals at home, and people were cooking at home, much more than before the pandemic.  Many people were cooking for the first time, while others who had a little more experience, cooked more and wanted to learn new dishes. They figured, "what the heck, I have to stay home, I have to eat everyday, I might as well cook." People needed recipes, I love food, I love to cook, I love eating tasty food, writing cookbooks, talking food, and teaching people how to cook. Most of my cookbooks are Italian, but I love all cuisines, and have written books on so-called American Food, and what American's love to eat. So I wanted to write a cookbook for Americans and their favorite dishes, what they love to eat, and incidentally, what I love to eat. I love cooking Italian food, so there is a section called "That's Italian" with a few of the favorite Italian dishes that Americans love to eat most: Spaghetti & Meatballs, Chicken Parm, Lasagna and such. I gathered all my recipes and started compiling the book, on what Americans love to eat, and dishes that any American who likes to cook should have in their repertoire. Most beloved of all, are; Burgers, Fried Chicken, Breakfast dishes, Fried Chicken, BBQ Ribs, Burritos, Tacos, Chili, Meatloaf, Barbecue Chicken, Potato Salad, Buffalo Wings, Pasta, and such. I even put in my recipe for General Tso's Chicken which Americans devour like there's no tomorrow, along with Fried Rice, and Moroccan Chicken. I believe I put together a nice book with a great collected of my recipes. Not just that they are my recipes, as I've been cooking for 40 years, all kinds of dishes, tweaking the recipes, writing them down, and eventually they would go into cookbooks like this one. I still have my mimeographed hand-outs of all my recipes from culinary school, and I've compiled thousands of recipes since then. I have a certain take on food, that's much like the late great Anthony Bourdain, if I must say so, and I believe dear Tony if he were alive would like this cookbook. No it's not about the Pandemic or the Corona Virus< I don't want to talk about that stuff, people are getting sick of it. I'm just letting people know, that because of the pandemic, circumstances in New York and America sparked me to write a cookbook with a great collection of recipes that Americans would really love. I always break my recipes down and make them as simple as possible for people to understand, and help them execute the recipes with tasty results. Always. So this book is for this time and for all times. At least for the next 50 years or so. You can use the book and your favorite recipes within over and over again. I hope you will. This book is for the American people. they've been through a lot.  



  Daniel 


  Greenwich Village, New York, July 24, 2020   


"COOKING at HOME" -  AMERICA'S FAVORITE RECIPES is Coming Soon ! ( Fall 2020)

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No Mayonnaise Potato Salad Recipe

  QUICK & EASY POTATO SALAD NO MAYONNAISE POTATO SALAD RECIPE INGREDIENTS : 3   pounds red new potatoes ¼   cup red wine vinegar 3   t...