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In 1990, Cutler opened Carmine's, a family-style Italian restaurant on West 90th Street on Manhattan's Upper West Side, which became an instant success and has six branches across the United States and The Bahamas as of 2022. [6] [7] He named the restaurant after harness driver Carmine Abbatiello.
Frankies 457 Spuntino is an Italian restaurant and olive oil company located in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn, New York established in 2004 by Frank Castronovo and Frank Falcinelli. [ 1 ] According to Laura Shunk of The Village Voice , the restaurant is considered one of the fourteen essential Italian restaurants in Brooklyn and is known as ...
Don Peppe is an Italian-American restaurant in South Ozone Park, Queens but was originally in Brooklyn. [1] Don Peppe is a half mile east of Aqueduct Racetrack and is decorated with photographs of thoroughbreds as well as jockey silks. They still have people from the track as customers but not as large as in the past.
Rao's (/ ˈ r eɪ oʊ z /) [citation needed] is an Italian-American restaurant founded in 1896. It is located at 455 East 114th Street, on the corner of Pleasant Avenue in East Harlem (or Italian Harlem), New York City. Rao's has a sister restaurant in Los Angeles. [1] [2]
Patsy's has been known for years as Frank Sinatra's favorite restaurant and, in fact, his family still eats at Patsy's whenever they are in town. [5] In addition to Sinatra and family, Patsy's Italian Restaurant has become a favorite with countless stars on both the east and west coast, who have come to regard Patsy's as a mecca of Italian fine dining.
In 1938, Barbati sold Spumoni and Italian Ice from a horse and wagon. [8] In 1939, he purchased a vacant property on 86th Street to make the spumoni and ice. [ 8 ] By the mid 1950s, the location came to be L&B Spumoni Gardens, with the spumoni factory, a pizzeria and a luncheonette all on site.
Gargiulo's is an Italian-American restaurant established in 1907 in Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York City.. The restaurant was started and run by Gus Gargiulo, and later he was joined by his brother Louis and sisters Tessie and Angelina, with other family members working in the kitchen.
The success Lucali has had led several people, including the owner and his family, to discuss the gentrification of the Brooklyn neighborhood. When Iacono grew up in Carroll Gardens, it was a working-class neighborhood struggling with crime. The restaurant has roots in the neighborhood, but is also frequented by the rich and famous. [1]