Eat Like Sinatra – Franks Favorite Restaurants Pasta and Italian Recipes – Frank Sinatra Cookbook


“FRANK”

Francis Albert Sinatra
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A Young Frank Sinatra  ….  Hoboken, New Jersey


“SINATRA SAUCE” !!!




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Frank Sinatra

“Come Fly with Me” !!!


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PATSY’S  “Franks Favorite Restaurant”

 

 

Frank’s Favorite Restaurant in The World, was Patsy’s on West 56th Street in New York, in The Theater District near Times Square .. Frank’s Favorites were; Calms Posillipo, Spaghetti Pomodoro,  Veal Milanes (extra Thin & Crispy) and Spaghetti & Meatballs of which patsy’s makes The Best in The City ..

PATSY’S is by far the restaurant most associated with SINATRA — on its website, the restaurant notes that it “has been known for years as the restaurant Frank Sinatra made famous.” You can still order up old-school Italian there, but you might not have the exact same experience as Sinatra, who was said to have entered through a special door to sit at a reserved table on the second floor. Sinatra became especially loyal to the restaurant after making a solo Thanksgiving reservation one year, not realizing the restaurant was slated to be closed that day. Patsy Scognamillo didn’t want to turn Sinatra away, so he allowed the reservation. He also didn’t want Sinatra to know the restaurant was opened just for him — so he had the entire staff bring their families to fill the place up, something Sinatra didn’t learn until years later, according to Patsy’s lore. The restaurant still celebrates its connection to Sinatra: At right, in 2002, Joe Scognamillo served actor Bill Boggs, who had dressed up as Sinatra . (236 West 56th St.)

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FRANK & AVA GARDNER Mangia Bene !!! 

FRANK & AVA

“MANGIA BENE”






SINATRA SAUCE

COOK & EAT LIKE FRANK

His FAVORITE ITALIAN RECIPES




 FRANK & DINO     
FRANK & DINO

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PJ CLARKE’S

3rd AVENUE, Midtown MANHATTAN

SINATRA ‘S ALL-TIME FAVORITE BAR / SALOON

.FRANK'S FAVORITE ITALIAN BREAD ... PARISI on MOTT STREET, LITTLE ITALY, New York, NY

FRANK’S FAVORITE ITALIAN BREAD

PARISI BAKERY MOTT STREET

LITTLE ITALY, NY NY

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FRANK'S FAVORITE PIZZA

FRANKS FAVORITE PIZZA

PATSY’S in EAST HARLEM

No Relation to PATSY’S on 56th STREET



PASTY'S PIZZERIA
PATSY’S PIZZERIA

EAST HARLEM

“FRANK’S FAVORITE PIZZA
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SINATRA at JILLY’S New York with Friends and Daughters NANCY and TINA

Frank loved going to his close Pal JILLY RIZZO’S New York Restaurant JILLY’S where Frank would eat Chinese Food, tell stories, and drink JACK DANIEL’S to the Wee Hours of the morning. 




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SUNDAY SAUCE

WHEN ITALIAN-AMERICANS COOK

AMAZON.com 

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Dean Martin looks on as Sammy Davis Jr. pours Frank a Jack Daniels



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Jack Daniel’s and Frank Sinatra

GET “SINATRA SAUCE” !!! 

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FRANK SINATRA with Cigarette & JACK DANIELS





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Dom of DOM’S BAKERY Hoboken , New Jersey

FRANK SINATRA had DOM Send him BREAD to Palm Springs , California





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FOCCACIA From DOM’S BAKERY



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GRANDMA BELLINO’S COOKBOOK

“RECIPES FROM MY SICILIAN NONNA”

by Daniel Bellino “Z”


Author Daniel Bellino “Z” has the same ancestral Sicilian Roots as Frank Sinatra and one Charles “Lucky” Luciano who was born in LERCARA FRIDDI SICILY , as was Frank SInatra ‘s father Martino Severino Sinatra and Bellino ‘s maternal grandparents Giussepina Salemi and Fillipo Bellino who both immigrated from Lercara Friddi to New York through Ellis Island in 1904 . In 1906 Luciano ‘s parents immigrated and settled on the Lower East Side of New York when young Charlie (Salvatore ) was 9 years old.




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Charles “Lucky” Luciano

Born in Lercara Friddi

Lucina




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SINATRA’S Favorite PIZZA !!!

PATSY’S in Eats Harlem , New York NY

2287 1st Avenue neat 117th Street

Opened in 1933 by Patsy Lancieri




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The 21 CLUB

A Favorite SINATRA Haunt For Years





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SINATRA arrives at The 21 CLUB with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis

Good Friend and Bodyguard JILLY RIZZO and a U.S. SECRET SERVICE AGENT




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The 21 BURGER

LEARN HOW to MAKE IT !!!

Click for RECIPE

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Sicilian Pasta with Meatballs Recipe

 

ANGELINA – SERVING Up The MEAL

ANGELINA’S PASTA With MEATBALLS





La FAMIGLIA
“MANGIA BENE” !!!

La PASTA

Con POLPETTINI 


NONNA BELLINO’S COOKBOOK

RECIPES From MY SICILIAN NONNA

“MANGIA BENE” !!!

SICILIAN PASTA with MEATBALLS SICILIANA

For the Dough:


10 ounces Semolina Flour (durum wheat)
A pinch of Salt
2 large Eggs

Mix all above together to form a dough. Knead for a few minutes.

Cover the dough and let rest for at least 45 minutes before using.

Roll pasta dough into thin sheets. Roll the sheets up, and cut to 1/8tj inch thickness.

For the Meatballs:


12 ounces Ground Beef
2 tablespoons fresh Parsley, finely chopped
3 ounces grated Caciocavallo Cheese (or Pecorino, if unavailable)
1/4 cup breadcrumbs
Salt, to taste
Freshly ground Black Pepper, to taste
1 large egg


Mix all above ingredients together. Form into small Meatballs (Polpettini)


For the Broth:


2 tablespoons fresh Parsley, chopped
A handful of Celery leaves
1 medium Carrot, peeled and roughly chopped
1 tablespoon Tomato Paste
½ medium onion, peeled and halved
1 medium Potato
Salt, to taste

1 pound Beef, Veal, or Chicken Bones

Place all above ingredients in a large pot and simmer for 90 minutes

to make the broth. Strain broth, and discard the bones.


To Serve the PASTA with MEATBALLS.


Place Meatballs in broth, and cook at a low simmer for 5 minutes.

Cook the Pasta in boiling Salted water for about 2 minutes.

Drain the pasta in a Colander.

Add the cooked pasta to pot with the Broth & Meatballs. Cook at a low

simmer for 4 minutes.

Serve the Pasta and Meatballs. Remove some pasta and Meatballs and place on a plate, with very little broth, but you do want a bit of broth in each portion.


Serve your guests, with grated Pecorino Cheese on the side to sprinkle over the pasta.

Enjoy !







Frank Sinatra Favorite Italian Cookies – Sicilian Regina Cookies from Venieros

 



VENIERO’S

ITALIAN PASTRIES

Since 1894



On September 23, 1894, one of the East Village’s longest-running businesses, Veniero’s Pasticceria, opened its doors. This venerable local institution has been serving confections, cakes, and pastries to New Yorkers and visitors ever since from its home at 342 East 11th Street, between 1st and 2nd Avenues, in the heart of what was once the East Village’s own Little Italy, and remains one of the few surviving businesses from that once-thriving community. Located just down the block from our offices, we have a special love for Veniero’s — from which we have been known to indulge in a treat from time to time (or more) — and a special insight into the beloved business’ rich history, thanks to an oral history that Veniero’s current co-owner Robert Zerilli, grand nephew of Veniero’s original founder, conducted with us in 2014. 

Antonio Veniero immigrated to New York from Italy in 1885, in the period following Italian unification when poor Italians, especially southern Italians, began to leave the country en masse, seeking better lives and opportunities. At 15 years old, Antonio began working in a candy factory downtown. By 1894, he bought today’s 342 East 11th Street, a pre-old-law tenement built in 1865-66. Originally the business, then called Antonio Veniero Confections, was founded as a social club, complete with pool tables. Antonio sold homemade candy and espresso, the beans of which were roasted in the backyard. Veniero hired other Italian immigrants also skilled in confectionery. This part of the East Village was well populated with Italian immigrants, mostly Sicilian, although Antonio was from Naples. No. 342, which had residences above the ground floor, housed 13 families, all Italian immigrants or of Italian descent, according to the 1900 Federal census. 






VENIERO’S PASTICCERIA

ITALIAN PASTRIES

East 11th Street, NY NY





The same census and 1900-1901 New York City directory show Antonio living with his wife and children across the street at No. 345, a no longer extant building. In his oral history, Robert Zerilliexplains that the business evolved from Antonio’s founding to serve baked goods such as biscotti and cakes, later renaming itself Veniero’s Pasticceri. Following Antonio’s death in 1931, the business would continue to be run by members of the family. In 1970, Frank Zerilli, Robert’s father and a cousin of the Venieros, bought the business. As a teenager, Frank Zerilli had worked in the bakery and learned a great deal working under Antonio.

Zerilli shares great stories of both the family and the neighborhood connected to Veniero’s, including Antonio’s managing to avoid firebombing by the Black Hand, (Mano Nero gang — a mafia extortion racket), neighborhood quarrels with other bakers and pushcart sellers, and a legal fight over the ownership of a coffee-sipping parrot. 

Zerilli was born in 1962 and by that time his family lived in New Jersey. He would sometimes join his father for the workday in the East Village, and in his interview, Zerilli shared the sights, smells, and sounds of the East Village in his early years through the eyes of a child. One of the sounds that dominate his memories was the constant mix of English and Italian throughout the streets and small businesses in the area. As a teenager, he would work at Veniero’s, and lived in one of the apartments in the upper floors at No. 342, rent-free.

The neighborhood has changed quite a bit over the course of Zerilli’s tenure, and he talks about gentrification, as well as changing ethnicities and business and building ownership. On a side note, he mentions the East Village’s punk rock scene, and Joey Ramone coming to Veniero’s to buy a cake. Veniero’s itself has changed over the years too, adding items like red velvet cupcakes, which Zerilli discusses his reluctance to include. One of the many things that hasn’t changed, though, is that Veniero’s is still very much a family-run business, with Robert and his three sisters at the helm as co-owners.





ITALIAN PASTRIES



CANNOLI – RHUM BABA – ECLAIRS

At VENEIRO’S




FRANK SINATRA’S FAVORITE COOKIES


SICILIAN REGINA COOKIES

VENIERO’S




FRANK SINATRA & FRANK ZERILLI

At VENIERO’S

1979

NEW YORK CITY





SINATRA SAUCE

The COOKBOOK

SINATRA STORIES & RECIPES

COOK & EAT LIKE FRANK

His FAVORITE ITALIAN RECIPES