
by Liz Robbins
Never has a restaurant opened at a more opportune time, hell having frozen over and over. Santina, tucked under the High Line and enclosed in a glass box designed by Renzo Piano, seems like a mirage. Yet the palm and orange trees are real, as are the Murano glass sunflower chandeliers.
Waiters dress in pastel polo shirts, white pants and sneakers, like deckhands on a yacht. Corny Italian music wafts over the birds of paradise perched in giant vases atop a Carrara marble bar brimming with fashionistas, food bloggers and financial types.
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/
By Kimberly Sutton Love is what brought Tony Nicoletta to Texas from New York.The transpl...
Little Italy San Jose will be hosting a single elimination Cannoli tournament to coincide...
The Wine Consortium of Romagna, together with Consulate General of Italy in Boston, the Ho...
Hey, come over here, kid, learn something. ... You see, you start out with a little bit of...
Award-winning author and Brooklynite Paul Moses is back with a historic yet dazzling sto...
There's something to be said for having your food prepared tableside. Guacamole tastes fre...
For the first time ever, The Cathedral of St. John the Divine, in collaboration with the O...
Fiorenzo Dogliani, owner of Beni di Batasiolo, will join Carmelo Mauro for an exclusive wi...