A Smooth Start for Ruff Club

IMG_8689Laura Gurfein A four-legged friend gets his first look at Ruff Club.

“Come on in the back, where the magic happens!”

Alexia Simon Frost, a co-owner of Ruff Club, led a small group of people and their dogs into the large playroom with walls dotted with decals that look like supersized nail polish art, where more pets and humans were already congregating. For the first time on Saturday, Alexia and her husband, co-owner Danny Frost, along with six staff members donning matching dark gray zip-up hoodies with the company’s orange crossbones logo, welcomed the public into their East Village “dog-friendly social club” for an open house to recruit membership.

Though the doggy daycare and boarding center with its lounge for owners to work or socialize while enjoying complimentary coffee and WiFi doesn’t officially open until January 2, the newlywed couple greeted neighborhood pet enthusiasts this weekend for a tour of their 3,300 square-foot, two level space and invited them to fill out applications. The first-time business owners, both 29, were keen to present themselves to the neighborhood as an innovative enterprise that fills a void in the East Village. So intent, in fact, that Danny stood outside for a time to entice anyone walking a dog to step inside.

It’s easy to tell why they see an opportunity here. A stroll through the East Village is teeming with four-legged friends, and the Frosts figured it was only natural that dogs and humans alike were looking for a place to congregate. In fact, the New York City Economic Development Corporation estimated in September that there are approximately 600,000 dogs in New York City, and up to 55,000 dogs in the area that Ruff Club hopes to serve. Few stores and cafes in the neighborhood allow pets (The Bean, a small franchise with two neighborhood outposts, is an exception). As Danny puts it, the East Village community is “very eager for, essentially, urban living rooms, like a place to hang out, particularly with your dog.”

IMG_8690Laura Gurfein

Alexia and Danny inherited their attitudes towards dogs from their parents. The Simon family got a Keeshond, a large gray German spitz with a curlicue tail that looks like an oversized version of its Pomeranian cousin, when Alexia was eight years old. They named him Astro. “My dad had one when he was growing up. That’s how we ended up with one,” she explained of her first dog at her childhood home in Roseland, New Jersey. Danny’s parents, meanwhile, resorted to lying to keep furry nuisances out of their household.

“What was the story she told you?”

“I think my mom told us there was an allergy-type problem,” he replied. “It was just never even really a remote possibility, and probably as a kid, I just, you know…“

“You pick your battles,” Alexia chimed in.

“My mom, my parents, they hate animals. And my sister and I, therefore, always wanted pets,” Danny said of his childhood, split between Queen’s Bayside and Long Island’s Plainview. “Um, we ended up with fish.” Read more…


Porchetta’s Sara Jenkins Debuts Rustic-Italian Cooking App

Pork-2Credit: Douglas Singleton Porchetta

For the last year, when chef-owner of Porchetta, Porsena and Extra Bar Sara Jenkins wasn’t in the kitchen creating swine-centric plates and cozy pasta dishes for her East Village storefronts, she was working on a cooking app for iPad users.

“I want to encourage and enable people to pick up a zucchini or an eggplant at the farmer’s market on their way home from work and cook it,” said Ms. Jenkins, who launched the New Italian Pantry app this week.

As for encouraging home cooking, she’s not worried it will diminish her business. We’re not worried either — the roasted pork, slow cooked with spices, garlic, rosemary and wild fennel, still seems to run out regularly at Porchetta’s tiny Seventh Street storefront.

“I believe in home cooking. I don’t think I’m in any danger of going out of business if I encourage home cooking,” Ms. Jenkins said, laughing.

Ms. Jenkins partnered with Lazy Susan Media, a company created by Tasting Table’s founding editor Nick Fauchald and app-development company Mizaplas, to create the clever app advising home cooks which pastas and peppers to keep in the cabinet.

As the Italian chef sees it, it’s a “whole-new world” for cookbooks and recipe sharing. The app gave her the opportunity to show home cooks how to prepare delicious food step by step.

“There were some things we thought in particular would be really, really helpful like the shots of what does brown garlic look like and what does it look like when this happens,” Jenkins said.

recipeCredit: Lazy Susan Media Home-Style Porchetta recipe in app

The photo-heavy app is a guide to traditional Italian cooking. The experience entails filling your pantry with 16 staple ingredients — including dried pasta, extra virgin oil, wine vinegar, garlic, onions, Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese and salt-dried capers. All home cooks have to do is pick up some fresh produce, meat or fish when it comes time to prepare a meal.

There are 75 recipes available, a few of which will be recognizable to regulars to Jenkins’ sandwich and pasta shops. On the app, there’s a recipe for a “home-version” of porchetta, boned pork shoulder slathered with white wine and rubbed with herbs. On the tablet app, there are also recipes for Jenkins’ pastas and sauces.

Sara Jenkins’ New Italian Pantry app is $3.99 on iTunes.


The Day | Picking up the Pieces

The bestScott Lynch

Good morning, East Village.

It’s perhaps not the best of mornings, with thoughts of yesterday’s Sandy Hook memorial service fresh in our minds. Mayor Bloomberg spoke on national television yesterday about gun control. Also on the safety front, he was accused yesterday of developing a stealth plan to ban smoking in people’s homes, a claim the city staunchly denies.

As for SantaCon, we might have picked up the pieces, but we’re still tweeting about it.

And out with the old, in with the new: with bistro Lina Frey already a distant memory, the Lobster Joint finally opened on East Houston.


Red Dawn: SantaCon Invades the East Village


Konstantin Sergayev

Justin Timberlake was feeling SantaCon this year: “Seriously… The whole Lower East Side of NY looks like Invasion Of The Drunken Santas!” he tweeted. “I’m not missing out on this next year…”

But neighborhood residents weren’t quite as amused.

If, like many, you barricaded yourself into your apartment all day (or better, evacuated Zone A as the storm approached), watch our slideshow to see what you missed. And below, the madness as it unfolded on Twitter.


Shaoul Ready to Start Work Securing Controversial Rooftop Addition

photo(47)Daniel Maurer

Benjamin Shaoul has filed an application for renovations that will allow him to keep a controversial rooftop addition at 516 East Sixth Street.

The application, filed Wednesday, requests permission to renovate the five-story building and add a “new sixth floor.”

Of course, Mr. Shaoul already added the sixth floor, along with seventh-floor cabins, to the building in 2006. Tenants sued the Department of Buildings for issuing the permit for that construction, arguing that it violated the state’s multiple dwelling law and ran afoul of fire and elevator rules. The Greenwich Village Society for Historical Preservation, among other opponents, argued that the extension corrupted the architecture of the 153-year-old tenement as well as the character of the streetscape. In 2010, the Board of Standards and Appeals ruled that the sixth-story addition could stay, but the seventh-story cabins had to go.

Last year, Mr. Shaoul requested a waiver from the Board of Standards and Appeals, to the chagrin of State Senator Daniel Squadron. In September of this year, the board voted to reinstate permits allowing the enlargement, according to the G.V.S.H.P.’s Off the Grid blog.

Which brings us to the latest filing.
Read more…


Harley Flanagan, a Free Man, On Media Sensationalism and ‘Wannabe Thugs’

photo(245)Ray Lemoine Harley Flanagan showing off his wounds in July.

Harley Flanagan, the original bassist for New York hardcore pioneers the Cro-Mags, no longer faces assault charges tied to a backstage melee at Webster Hall this summer. Initial reports about the July 6 incident painted Mr. Flanagan as a drugged-out madman wielding a hunting knife, stabbing and biting all in his warpath. Mr. Flanagan disputed that account to The Local at his pretrial hearing. We spoke to Mr. Flanagan over the phone after his case was dismissed this morning.

Q.

So what really happened?

A.

The long and short of it: I got invited into to show by people I knew from the scene, wannabe thugs who I used to associate with (I’m not naming names) who brought me backstage under the pretense of squashing the beef with JJ [lead singer John Joseph] and the band. These guys then closed the door and jumped me. At one point I saw the door open and then quickly close again, and I knew they were keeping the door shut from security. At that moment I just saw my kids in my mind and did what I had to do to get out of that room alive. Read more…


Literature Lives!

Worried that Manhattan’s literary culture is fading, Dwight Garner, a book critic for The Times, hops around town and finds it alive and well at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe (“if the vogue for poetry slams has dimmed somewhat in America, no one here got the memo”), KGB Bar (“always worth a drop-in”), St. Mark’s Bookshop (“the place to go when your spirits are sagging”) and the Strand (“Manhattan’s bookstore ground zero”). He also visits Jimmy’s Corner in midtown but he might’ve done better to visit Jimmy’s No. 43 downtown: that’s where the Guerrilla Lit Series convenes every last Wednesday of the month. [NY Times]


Making It | Mariann Marlowe of Enz’s

IMG_9079Dana Varinsky

Long before there was the new Bettie Page store, there was Enz’s. Mariann Marlowe opened the pinup, rockabilly, and burlesque-inspired fashion boutique 34 years ago. “My store was a necessity that came from the scene,” said the designer. “I was hanging with Sid and Nancy, getting inspiration from Malcolm McLaren. Andy Warhol, Mick Jagger, Bette Midler — everyone in the scene was hanging out and coming by. That’s when it was on 49 Grove, and that didn’t last. We either died or we changed.” The store, which also had locations on St. Marks Place, the Upper East Side, and in the Hamptons, is now at 125 Second Avenue. We spoke to Ms. Marlowe, 55, about its evolution.

Q.

It’s hard to survive the punk-rock and rock-n-roll lifestyle as a person much less a business, how are you doing it?

A.

I am always reinventing myself. My store was the first punk store in New York when we opened in 1978. I had just come from living in London and was very influenced there by the scene. I had all this creative inspiration and suddenly my clothes were in movies and on album covers. Debbie Harry, Joey Ramone, and Lou Reed were coming by and Andy Warhol was bringing me a copy of Interview Magazine to check out when it was just 18 pages! Read more…


Former Cro-Mag Off the Hook

photo(245)

Assault charges have been dropped against Harley Flanagan, the ex-member of the Cro-Mags who was accused of attacking current members of the band before a July 6 performance at Webster Hall. DNA Info reports that prosecutors dismissed the case during a hearing this morning.


The Day | Tenants Buy Cooper Square Apartments For $250

Good morning, East Village.

Strega, the band that’s partly based in the neighborhood, has released the above video for its Christmas ditty, “When The Stars Are Shining Bright (At Christmas Time).”

280 apartments managed by the Cooper Square Mutual Housing Association are going coop. “Tenants are buying shares in the M.H.A. for the jaw-dropping amount of just $250 each,” says Val Orselli, the M.H.A.’s executive director. “We’ve averaged about 60 closings per day so far.” [East Villager]

A 36-year-old man was shot in the back on the Lower East Side yesterday afternoon. [NBC NY, Daily News, DNA Info, The Lo-Down]
Read more…


‘Eats Village’ Replacing Mama’s Food Shop? (Plus: Beer Pong and Poetry at Mama’s Bar)

IMG_9088Dana Varinsky

Today’s talk of Mama’s Food Shop got us wondering: what’s going on with the restaurant that its landlord was planning to install in its former digs?

Richard Freedman, who owns the former Mama’s space along with Mama’s Bar next-door, said he’s still planning to open a restaurant at 200 East Third Street, though it may no longer be called “Mama’s something or other,” as he told us back in September. (That plan didn’t sit well with Mama’s Food Shop owner Jeremiah Clancy.) The new venue is tentatively named Eats Village, and should start dishing out comfort food (but likely not burgers) in February.
Read more…


Stocking Stuffer Alert: Mama’s T-Shirts Now For Sale

Mama’s Food Shop

Last year, the perfect gift for all the naughty people on your Christmas list was a Mars Bar t-shirt (you can still score one on eBay). This year another fallen institution, Mama’s Food Shop, is slinging tees.

Jeremiah Clancy, the restaurant’s owner, says he’s selling the heather-grey shirts, designed by Alexia Stamatiou, for $35 until Dec. 31. They’re available via PayPal: just e-mail mamasfoodshop@gmail.com with your size (XS, S, M, L, XL, XXL).

Mr. Clancy closed the beloved comfort-food spot in July. He’s now working at the Ace Hotel.


2 Bros. Serving ‘Supreme’ Slices On St. Marks Again

photo(46)Dana Varinsky

Nino’s may be closed again, but 2 Bros. Pizza Plus has reopened.

The neighboring offshoot of 2 Bros. Pizza is selling $1.50 “supreme” slices at 36 St. Marks Place once again. The takeout joint temporarily shut its doors due to damage from a fire in the building. According to a worker, they reopened over the weekend.


East Fourth Street to Lose Massive Canvases

ArtUp Murals on East Fourth at BowerySanna Chu ArtUp Murals on East Fourth at Bowery

The neighborhood’s cultural district is about to lose some of its color.

With water-main repairs on Cooper Square just about done, the construction containers that were being used as canvases on East Fourth Street are not long for this world.

“The containers are still needed while the final touches are completed on the project; they should be removed by the end of January,” said a spokesperson for the New York City Department of Design and Construction.

Fourth Arts Block and No Longer Empty first jazzed up the containers with a Skullphone painting in September of last year, and works by H. Veng Smith and other artists followed.

Their disappearance isn’t the only unfortunate byproduct of the construction project’s final phase: a reader commenting on our post about an accident at East Seventh Street noted that crossing Cooper Square has become a harrowing experience.
Read more…


Nino’s Shuttered By Health Department

photo-20Daniel Maurer

Nino’s, the iconic pizzeria that closed and then reopened with a new look, has been shuttered again — this time by the health department.

The pizzeria’s windows were papered over earlier today. Health department records show that it racked up 86 violation points (well above the 28 score that puts an establishment in danger of closing) during an inspection last week. Violations included food temperature issues, evidence of mice, and inadequate personal cleanliness.

When Nino’s reopened with a minimalistic look post-Sandy, a manager said “the place is going to be the same.” But last week a tipster reported evidence of change.
Read more…


The Day | Elevator Bandit Arrested

FDNY ChristmasScott Lynch

Good morning, East Village.

“Police have arrested a man in connection with a series of elevator robberies over the last week and a half,” including a gunpoint robbery in the East Village. [NBC NY]

More changes on the Bowery: ““Bitsy Bardot is opening a restaurant at 341 Broome, right on Bowery,” says the chairman of the retail group at Douglas Elliman. “SRO restaurant at 245 Bowery may open soon.” [Commercial Observer]

“Professors at New York University’s largest school are planning to meet Thursday to contemplate a bold undertaking: holding a no-confidence vote about the university’s president, John Sexton.” [NY Times]
Read more…


Neil Gaiman Descends On Bookshop Like a Ninja

EAST VILLAGE buildings sunset (st brigid's)Shelf Awareness A fan shows off a tattoo of Mr. Gaiman’s signature.

Neil Gaiman stopped into the St. Mark’s Bookshop for a so-called “ninja signing” yesterday, bringing a camera crew and a welcome sales boost with him.

According to Terry McCoy, a co-owner of the shop, Mr. Gaiman’s agent called last Thursday to set up the event, but the bestselling British author didn’t announce it to his nearly 1.8 million Twitter followers until hours before the 11 a.m. signing.

“He did it really to help us out, because he knows we’re kind of struggling,” said Mr. McCoy. “He’s a real prince of a guy.”

Several dozen people showed up to the crash signing. For those who missed it, the shop still has about two shelves of books signed by the fantasy and sci-fi novelist and screenwriter. “Perfect holiday gifts for people who like my books. Useless for anyone who doesn’t,” tweeted Mr. Gaiman, who has said the bookshop is his favorite in New York (he, in turn, is one of the store’s top sellers).

As for the camera crew following Mr. Gaiman, that’s a big secret. “I was told that it was confidential, whatever it was,” said Mr. McCoy.


Star the Miracle Mutt Leaves State as Ex-Owner Leaves Country

Star, the pit-bull that was shot in the head by a police officer, is still recovering in a secret location. Meanwhile the miracle mutt’s owner, who was passed out when the shooting occurred in August, has returned to Poland, according to a friend.

The Lexus Project — which advocated for Star after video of the incident gained widespread attention — said the persevering pit-bull had left New York and declined to give further information about her whereabouts.

The dog’s custodians, the Mayor’s Alliance for NYC’s Animals, said that Star isn’t yet ready to be adopted. When she is, the bar will be very high, according to Charlie Cifarelli, the man who created a Facebook fan page for Star and visited her last week. “It will have to be someone without any animals, someone who understands her condition and most likely someone who lives in the East Coast so if there’s an issue, doctors who are familiar with her can help.”

Meanwhile, Star’s former owner, Lech Stankiewicz, has left the country.
Read more…


Dog-Run Duo | Vicky, Angelina, and Charlie Fudge

Time for some more fun at the run. Here’s this week’s Dog Run Duo — Trio, actually!

Vicky and AngelinaNicole Guzzardi Ms. Chryssafi and Angelina.
Charlie FudgeNicole Guzzardi Charlie Fudge

The Master: Vicky Chryssafi, a lifetime East Village resident, brings her two dogs every single day.

The Dogs: Charlie Fudge is an 11-year-old “Beagle on steroids,” as Ms. Chryssafi calls the Harrier. And Angelina is a 4-year-old Chihuahua adopted a few months ago from Earth Angels.

Favorite Food: Charlie Fudge loves to eat. “He is the original garbage disposal,” says Ms. Chryssafi. “He will eat anything, anytime, anywhere.” Angelina, weighing in at only for pounds, will only eat straight from her owner’s hands. “She’s been through a lot, but she’s extremely sweet.”

AngelinaNicole Guzzardi Charlie Fudge

Best Friend: Ms. Chryssafi owns a few other pets, including three parrots, but Angelina is the one that shares a bed with Charlie. “She’s taken over the house, but we don’t mind.”

Pet Tricks: Begging for food. Charlie Fudge barks at his owner when she doesn’t bring his food fast enough. Angelina doesn’t do tricks, but has the special talent of looking quite adorable bundled up in a sweater.


The Day | Tap-Dancing Sheep!

UntitledSuzanne Rozdeba

Good morning, East Village.

Check out the above flyer for the Church of the Village’s seventh annual Christmas pageant. “Tap Dancing Sheep!”

The unidentified man who was found dead on the tracks of an L train station is thought to have been homeless. [NY Post]

Residents of a coop on East 14th Street are banding together to rebuild their building after the storm. [WNYC]
Read more…