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  • Events: Reports

    LIGHTS! CAMERAS! ACTION! STARS for NIAF 40th ANNIVERSARY GALA WEEKEND—OCTOBER 16-18 in D.C.


    Celebrities and entertainment take center stage during the National Italian American Foundation (NIAF) 40th Anniversary Gala Awards Weekend to celebrate a milestone at its new venue at the Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel, October 16 -18, 2015.

     
    As part of NIAF’s lineup of celebrities, actors Danny Aiello, Chazz Palminteri and Annabella Sciorra; singer and songwriter Giada Valenti; performer Tom SinatraThe Washington Chorus; The Sicilian Tenors, Aaron Caruso, Elio Scaccio and Sam Vitale, will join Il Volo tenors Piero Barone and Ignazio Boscetto, and baritone Gianluca Ginoble, as part of the weekend performances.
     
    Back by popular demand, the Foundation’s Friday evening extravaganza will feature SNL legend, NIAF Celebrity Ambassador, actor, entertainer and radio host Joe Piscopo and celebrity guestsfor a celebration of Frank Sinatra’s 100th birthday. Piscopo will honor the legacy of Frank Sinatra with the crooner’s celebrated melodies from his songbook.  Piscopo will also serve as this year’s co-host of the Foundation’s black- tie Gala with NIAF Board member and Emmy Award-winning Fox News Anchor and Global Markets Editor Maria Bartiromo.  They will also be on hand to greet everyone at the “After Hours Party” following the Gala.
     
    Also on Friday evening, renowned mixologist Gina Chersevani, owner of Buffalo and Bergen, with an all-star roster of the nation's top Italian American bartenders, will create signature NIAF cocktails for the evening. Special to the evening is live and silent auctions including Italian luxury items and trips to Italy.
     
    “For our 40th Anniversary and first year at the Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel, we are really excited to present a new, unique version of our annual weekend.  This year is all about recognizing incredible honorees, providing our guests with constant entertainment and celebrations, and making sure we welcome Italian Americans interested in NIAF into our family,” NIAF President John M. Viola said.
     
    This year’s Gala honorees include Amato L. Berardi, founder of Berardi & Associates Inc., and former member of the Italian Parliament, who will receive the NIAF 40th Anniversary Award for Leadership and Service; Richard E. Caruso, Ph.D., founder and director of Integra Life Sciences, who will receive the NIAF Special Achievement Award in Business and Health; Connie Francis, Italian American musical legend, who will be inducted into the Italian American Hall of Fame; Mario Gabelli, founder, chairman and CEO of GAMCO Investors Inc., who will receive the NIAF 40th Anniversary Award for Leadership and Service; Sergio Marchionne, CEO of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles N.V., who will receive the NIAF Special Achievement Award in International Business;

    Franco Nuschese, president of Georgetown Entertainment Group LLC, who will receive the NIAF 40th Anniversary Award for Leadership and Service; Steve Perillo, president and owner of Perillo Tours, who will receive the NIAF Special Achievement Award in Business; Alfred M. Rotondaro, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and former NIAF Executive Director, who will receive the Italian American Community Leadership Award; and Josephine J. (Gargiulo) Templeton, M.D., trustee of the John Templeton Foundation, who will receive the NIAF Special Achievement Award in Philanthropy.
     
    One of the largest Italian festivals in the nation’s capital, Expo Italiana will showcase the best of Italy with the finest Italian food and specialties, wine, fashion and culture on Saturday. The free and open-to-the-public Expo will feature beer sampling, wine tasting, cooking demos, Italian Sports Cars, and pop-up luxury stores. David Greco, owner of the world-famous Mike’s Deli of Arthur Avenue in the Bronx, N.Y., will prepare old-fashioned Italian sandwiches and other specialties as a complimentary lunch. Guests can play bocce indoors on a court set up by Pinstripes of Georgetown. Children can meet La Fata Italiana (The Italian Fairy), who will present a musical learning program. The fun, interactive performance will teach Italian language and culture through song and dance.
     
    Vendors will present new Italian brands as well as top-of-the-line products from Italy in pop-up boutiques. See the latest Italian luxury cars; sample Peroni Nastro Azzurro beer, enjoy espresso at Lavazza Café; sip Limoncello, one of Italy’s most popular liqueurs; and indulge in Dolce Gelati.
     
    There will be an exciting auction preview during Expo Italiana. Guests can bid on vacations in Rome and along Italy’s Amalfi Coast, including Sorrento, or take home the latest Ferragamo handbag. For book lovers, a collection of illustrated books published by Rizzoli, including “Giorgio Armani,” written by the award-winning fashion designer; “Maserati: The Evolution of Style” and a library of Italian cookbooks from The Silver Spoon Kitchen donated by Phaidon, will be available to take home.
     
    Additional highlights during the day on Saturday include an IALC Leadership Forum addressing the issues surrounding Columbus Day; and NIAF- Ieri, Oggi, Domani conference discussing the “State of the Community.”  Friday afternoon features “Il Viaggio dell’altra Italia” (Tale of the other Italy), a film screening about Italian emigration presented by Rai Italia.
     
    Visit www.niaf/40 for a complete listing of activities during NIAF’s Gala Weekend.
     
    For more information about Expo Italiana, contact Stephanie Gordon at 202/939-3107.  For the ticketed NIAF Wine Tasting & Antipasti, contact Xavier Atizol at 202-939-3100 or for events and ticket information for NIAF’s 40th Anniversary Awards Gala Weekend, visit www.niaf.org/40
     
    The National Italian American Foundation (NIAF) is a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving and promoting the heritage and culture of Americans of Italian descent.


  • Events: Reports

    A Benefit Concert for the Veronica Pellitteri Memorial Fund



    Appearing at Birdland with Marcello will be an all-star rhythm section with pianist Bruce Barth and bassist Essiet Okon Essiet.

     
    Special guests appearing will be singers Lauren Kinhan and Kim Nazarian (from New York Voices), Philip Hamilton, the internationally acclaimed singer/songwriter Chiara Civello, clarinetist Anat Cohen and more surprise guests... 

     
    On the occasion of the first anniversary of the death of my daughter Veronica: a benefit concert to raise funds for the Veronica Pellitteri Memorial Fund. 

    For donations to the fund please go to >>>

     

     
    This is a fund of the Fiorello LaGuardia Performing Arts High School where Veronica graduated from in 2009.
    Veronica was a pianist / singer, who matched talent and passion to motivation and sense of responsibility.
     
    This fund will create an annual scholarship in her name FOREVER. This scholarship is intended as an aid for college tuition.
    The awarded student will have to demonstrate those qualities that Veronica possesed.
    In this way this scholarship will make Veronica's spirit live forever.

     
    Bio: Marcello Pellitteri.
    World-class musician, Marcello Pellitteri is best known as an award-winning drummer. Pellitteri is also an accomplished pianist, educator, composer, arranger and producer.
    Pellitteri graduated Cum Laude at the prestigious Berklee College of Music in Boston and then received a Master’s Degree in Jazz Studies with Distinction in Performance from the New England Conservatory of Music.
    For nearly 29 years, Pellitteri has taught at Berklee, where he is currently a Professor. He has played with jazz legends such as Joe Henderson, Woody Shaw, Jon Hendricks; with Grammy award winners New York Voices, Dave Samuels, Slide Hampton, Paquito D’Rivera; with orchestras such as the Boston Pops, the Taipei Philharmonic and with the world renown Gipsy Kings.
    He has scored music for several theater plays.
    Moreover he has performed for prominent international political figures, Royal families and Head of States, such as President Clinton at the White House, Prince Alberto of Monaco in Montecarlo and Princess Margriet of The Netherlands.

    Pellitteri has recorded over 70 CDs and he has appeared on the stages of worldwide festivals and broadcast programs with concerts at Radio City Music Hall, Boston Symphony Hall;, and performances on NBCˆs Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Late Night with Conan O’Brien as well as numerous Asian, South American and European radio and TV shows.

  • Events: Reports

    The Stone Presents Marco Cappelli’s Residency


    The Stone presents guitarist and composer Marco Cappelli’s Residency commemorating his 50th birthday celebrations with concerts, film and theater events from September 8th through 13th. Featuring a stellar line-up including the best of the NYC avant-garde music scene (among which comprise Jim Pugliese, Adam Rudolph, Stomu Takeishi, Doug Wieselman, Ken Filiano, Shoko Nagai, Graham Haynes, JT Lewis, Marc Ribot, Brandon Seabrook, Dan Weiss, Mathias Künzli and many more); several musicians and groups coming all the way from Europe (Ensemble Dissonanzen, Dedalo Guitar Quartet, drummer Marco Cappelli and others); visual artists like VJ Lapsus and actors like John Turturro (who will be the recorded speaker both in the animation inspired by Art Spiegelman “In The Shadow of No Towers” as well as in the theater performance of “The Kraken”).


    Tickets are $15 and are available only at the door.

    The Stone

    Corner of Avenue C & Second Street

    NY

    F to Second Avenue

    $15
    www.thestonenyc.com

  • Events: Reports

    Celebrate NIAF’s 40th with Il Volo!



    Back by popular demand, the Foundation’s Friday evening extravaganza is part of NIAF’s 40th Anniversary Gala Weekend. Join NIAF Celebrity Ambassador, actor, entertainer and radio host Joe Piscopo and guest stars, including Il Volo, the Italian operatic pop trio,for a celebration of Frank Sinatra’s 100th birthday. Piscopo will honor the legacy of Frank Sinatra with the crooner’s celebrated melodies from his songbook.

    Meet renowned mixologist Gina Chersevani, owner of Buffalo and Bergen, who along with an all-star roster of the nation's top Italian American bartenders, will create signature NIAF cocktails for the evening, available at four mixing stations. 

    Special to the evening is live and silent auctions including Italian luxury items and trips to Italy.
     
    For a complete list of events and activities, visit www.niaf.org/40.
     
    The National Italian American Foundation (NIAF) is a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving and promoting the heritage and culture of Americans of Italian descent. www.niaf.org.  




    EVENT:        Joe Piscopo and Friends featuring Il Volo Celebrate Frank Sinatra’s 100th Birthday

    WHAT:            Live entertainment, dancing and an open bar are part of the evening’s entertainment.

    WHERE:         The Marriott Ballroom

                            The Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel

                            2660 Woodley Road NW, Washington, D.C.

    WHEN:            Friday, October 16, 2015

    9:30 p.m. to morning (1:30 a.m. last call)

    COST:            $200 includes open bar

    DRESS:          Cocktail attire

    RSVP:             To purchase tickets, contact Xavier Atizol at xavier@niaf.org,

    202-939-3100.

     

     

     

  • Events: Reports

    Celebrating 35 Years of the Calandra Institute

    Lazio is a region of central Italy bordered by the Tyrrhenian Sea, traversed by the waters of the Tiber River, and characterized by mountains and verdant hills that  slope down to the coast. It is the cradle of occidental civilization and Christian culture, a historic place of lakes and legends, of thermal spas and ancient roads. Its capital is Rome, Italy's largest and most beloved city.

    The John D. Calandra Italian American Institute is the most renowned academic  institution outside of Italy that is devoted to study of the Italian diaspora. Founded in 1979, the Calandra Institute engages in extensive academic research, counseling services, and demographic studies; oversees student internships and study abroad curricula; and produces public programming from seminars to television and online media.

    These key points of the Institute's mission serve as the foundation for all its endeavors. In recent years the Institute has produced significant new scholarship in these areas of Italian American studies and established initiatives in the United States, Calabria, and Umbria, as well as fostering ongoing partnerships with faculty and researchers from other universities in Italy.

    As a result, the Institute is situated at the forefront of Italian diaspora studies.

    The Calandra Institute invites you to celebrate these achievements and the exciting possibilities of the future.

  • Events: Reports

    From Puglia to New York, UARAGNIAUN!

  • L'altra Italia

    Jifna, la "vigna" assegnata

    È passata da poco la mezzanotte; dopo aver superato la dogana, stanchi ma contenti veniamo accolti all'aeroporto di Tel Aviv dal sorriso raggiante di padre Firas Aridah. Si presenta spiegando il significato del suo nome in arabo, vuol dire "piccolo leone " e lo si capisce dal passo veloce e dalla determinazione con cui ci propone il programma della visita. Intanto dai finestrini della macchina, che ci porta in territorio palestinese, si apre a noi un paesaggio familiare: intravediamo vegetazione e sagome di rocce illuminate dalla luna che ricordano la nostra Sicilia.

    La prima impressione, attribuibile ad una intuizione confusa dal buio, viene confermata in pieno la mattina seguente: colline ornate di ulivi, mandorli, noci e...viti circondati da muri a secco si definiscono meglio ai nostri occhi. Ci sentiamo a casa se non fosse che ci salutano con l'espressione "marhabba''; pur essendo un Paese del Mediterraneo non ci aspettavamo tanta somiglianza. Nel nostro primo viaggio che da Jifna porta a Ramallah cominciano però ad emergere nuovi aspetti. 

    Le case costruite con pietra locale hanno un'architettura squadrata e molto sobria, svettano a tratti i minareti con le cupole dorate, parte della popolazione indossa abiti tradizionali, intensi odori di spezie invadono l'aria. Al ritorno ci attende in parrocchia una tavola imbandita la signora Malak ha preparato per l'occasione involtini di foglie di vite con riso e carne e il "maclube", un risotto di pollo e verdure. Alle 16.30 l'inno Ichmnà, che significa incontriamoci, seguito dal Padre nostro dà inizio alle attività del Summer Camp.

    I ragazzi divisi per età in quattro gruppi indossano magliette di vari colori, i capi educatori si occupano alternativamente delle varie fasce d'età proponendo giochi, danze, attività manuali. È previsto nei giorni a seguire anche l'affitto a prezzi modici di una vicina piscina annessa ad un locale ricreativo per trascorrervi gran parte della giornata; il mare, distante diverse decine di chilometri, è un lusso per pochi. 

    La giovane suor Rita, dell'ordine del Santo Rosario, interviene in tutte le necessità, ma il regista è padre Firas - "abuna" in arabo - che con infaticabile energia oltre a svolgere il consueto lavoro per la parrocchia, amministra i beni del patriarcato latino di Gerusalemme e trascorre parte del tempo in ufficio davanti al computer o al cellulare per mantenere contatti anche interreligiosi così non ci stupiamo se all'improvviso sparisce per una delle tante riunioni nel villaggio o in paesi distanti. Ha instaurato un ottimo rapporto di fiducia con i suoi ragazzi, si diverte e scherza ma soprattutto pianifica e verifica con gli animatori le fasi del campo, riserva momenti alla catechesi e nel frattempo scatta innumerevoli foto  da condividere sul web.

    Tentiamo di imparare le espressioni arabe di base per comunicare il più possibile, ma le aspirate e le gutturali ci mettono in seria difficoltà, di certo più facile l'inglese che conoscono molto bene; decidiamo di non darci per vinti e troviamo tra le ragazze interpreti molto comprensive che imparano nello stesso tempo i corrispettivi termini italiani. La serata si conclude al Kindergarden, il giardino della scuola dell'infanzia, dove arrivano alcuni genitori, ci sono anche musulmani perché le classi sono frequentate dai loro figli.

    Il momento ricreativo è gestito dai giovani che in una stanza hanno approntato un piccolo bar; grida gioiose di bimbi che giocano spensierati nell'area attrezzata si sovrappongono alle canzoni di ritmo arabo ponendo la parrocchia di s.Giuseppe, l'unica cattolica, come punto di sereno ritrovo per la popolazione di Jifna, circa 2000 anime, 850 cristiani tra cui ortodossi, il resto musulmani.

    L'incontro con padre Raed, direttore della Caritas di Gerusalemme, ci allarga la visione della situazione dei cristiani in Terra Santa e della popolazione palestinese in genere. E' molto difficile soprattutto nelle striscia di Gaza - "il più grande carcere del mondo" lo definisce - dove gli operatori sono molto attivi nel sostenere i bambini malnutriti o con problemi di salute attraverso un presidio sanitario. Con grande gioia ci mostra la foto con il direttore della Bank of Palestine che ha donato alla Caritas di Gerusalemme un ambulatorio mobile per Gaza. Non è facile ripartire da un luogo così unico; tuttavia sappiamo di aver instaurato un legame di fraternità importante, ci sentiamo insieme operai di una vigna dal terreno difficile da arare, ma che può dare ancora innumerevoli frutti perché i tralci si impegnano a rimanere saldamente attaccati alla Vite.

    *** fine prima parte ***

     

     

    Come aquiloni nel cielo di Jifna
     

    Visitare i luoghi del passaggio di Cristo sulla terra è stata per noi un'insperata opportunità. L'obiettivo principale infatti era quello di vivere la realtà della parrocchia assegnata alla diocesi netina in ogni sua espressione, offrendo ove possibile il nostro piccolo supporto. Dal momento che il campo estivo, come da programmazione, si è svolto interamente nel pomeriggio, Padre Firas con grande sensibilità ha messo a nostra disposizione persone fidate che ci hanno guidato in quello che potremmo definire sicuramente un pellegrinaggio. Michele, operatore del patriarcato, Abu Fedi, un parrocchiano, e il seminarista Firas rimarranno per sempre cari amici a cui dobbiamo tanto per le indimenticabili esperienze vissute. I nostri volti si sono rivisti di lacrime la prima volta a Betlemme. Impossibile frenare l'emozione, resa ancora più intensa dalla celebrazione eucaristicanella grotta della natività presieduta in forma semplice dal vescovo di Montreal insieme ai giovani della sua diocesi: diversi tratti somatici, diversi colori di pelle espressione di fusione multiculturale, comunione della famiglia umana.

     

    Dal quel momento abbiamo cominciato a leggere ogni tappa dalla prospettiva del nostro compito di inviati. Nazareth ci ha fatto sentire tutta la responsabilità nel rinnovare il "si" del progetto iniziato. Lungo le sponde del lago di Tiberiade in particolare a Cafarnao, presso il monte delle Beatitudini e soprattutto a Tabra la chiesa della moltiplicazione dei pani e dei pesci,incendiata da poche settimane, abbiamo colto i possibili ostacoli al mandato confortati da una Parola che malgrado tutto nessuno può ignorare o cancellare. La Via dolorosa percorsa in tutte le sue stazioni fino al Calvario e al Santo Sepolcro, in una Gerusalemme quasi spoglia di pellegrini, ha richiamato la solitudine e la morte del cuore che spesso accompagnano i cristiani destinate a sfociare, se sostenute dalla fede, nella gioia della resurrezione. Il Getsemani e, qualche giorno dopo a Gerico, il monte delle tentazioni custodito in un magnifico monastero bizantino raggiunto con la funivia, ha posto dinanzi a noi le prove che si insinuano nel nostro procedere quotidiano: la diminuzione dell'entusiasmo, la ricerca di vie di fuga, i falsi bisogni, la presunzione di poterci sostituire o peggio di fare a meno di Dio.

     

    Le acque del Giordano, sebbene le sponde fossero infuocate dalla calura estiva, hanno portato refrigerio anche ai nostri pensieri: abbiamo letto il battesimo di un gemellaggio con la Terra santa che deve necessariamente conformarsi all'umiltà del figlio di Dio, pronto a cingersi il grembiule nel Cenacolo lasciando un testamento di servizio ad una piccola Chiesa, unita e forte solo perché ha ricevuto il dono dello Spirito consolatore e liberatore. È il lieto annuncio che portiamo con noi dopo aver salutato nuovamente Gerusalemme e Betlemme.

     

    Si levano alti ad uno ad uno, spinti dal vento, e dondolano nel cielo pomeridiano, "tamara" li chiamano i palestinesi, aerei di carta, resi ancora più sinuosi da lunghe code di nastri variopinti. Guardano una terra santificata dalla presenza delle tre religioni abramitiche, ma dilaniata dall'incapacità umana di cogliere l'aspetto sostanziale del culto a Dio: ringraziarlo per il dono della vita e custodire il suo progetto di pace e giustizia. La questione arabo-israeliana ancora irrisolta - malgrado le trattative continue e i periodi di tregua - rappresenta uno dei tanti nodi che aggrovigliano negativamente la storia degli uomini. I muri di cemento,simili a sequenze di lapidi senza nome, e le transenne di filo spinato, come spirali di corone, separano popoli della stessa famiglia umana rinnovando la sofferenza di Dio, mai realmente compresa. Ai check-point giovani israeliani dai visi severi; donne e uomini con mimetiche e fucili chiedono nervosamente i documenti, indottrinati ad un contegno che ci pare innaturale per la loro età e non lo pensiamo minimamente esteso ai loro coetanei. Una generazione smarrita nei meandri di una politica intransigente e non sempre flessibile alle aperture.

    Sulle colline e su alcuni balconi sventolano con fierezza le bandiere palestinesi perché sia ben visibile la loro presenza e non si confondano le identità. Tutto tende alla divisione, segno inconfondibile di un male radicato nelle coscienze. A Jifna, il cui nome significa 'vigna', una piccola comunità cristiana convive pacificamente insieme a gruppi di musulmani e ortodossi accettando che gli israeliani controllino l'erogazione dell'acqua e l'accesso ad alcune strade. Gente umile e operosa svolge lavori di vario genere: ci sono modesti imprenditori edili, muratori, falegnami, commercianti di generi alimentari in piccole botteghe, lavagisti, meccanici, autotrasportatori.

    Le loro attività non sono garantite dalla pensione, l'assistenza sanitaria è privata, copre i servizi di base e non tutti possono permettersela. L'istruzione pubblica non si ritiene adeguata, pertanto strutture e preparazione sono garantite dalla parrocchia a partire dalla scuola dell'infanzia fino alla primaria di primo grado; per frequentare il liceo o l'università' bisogna andare a Ramallah o a Ber-zeit, i centri più vicini. Ma tutto è a carico delle famiglie e le rette non sono economiche, pertanto si aiutano le più bisognose. Per circa un terzo anche l'iscrizione al ''Summer camp'' di 60 shequel, ovvero 12 euro, costituisce una spesa non sostenibile se si pensa che il salario medio e' corrispondente a 500 euro al mese.

    All'alba e al tramonto dai minareti il canto dei muezzin fa eco nella vallata alternandosi al suono delle campane che annunciano le messe. Sono espressioni di un sentire la relazione con il divino che non divergono ma si intersecano in trame di suoni e di parole che ci raccontano di un Dio che vince l'odio con l'amore. Gli incontri periodici tra cristiani e musulmani costituiscono altre occasioni di dialogo e confronto che attualmente non sono possibili con gli israeliani. Come aquiloni sul cielo di Jifna vorremmo che il vento si profumasse di pace come i gelsomini arabi, che gli unici fuochi fossero quelli di artificio che comunicano, secondo la tradizione, la fine degli esami di stato e la pubblicazione dei risultati. Potremmo cosi' annunciare il corso di una generazione nuova che cerca l'unione in un bacio di fratellanza tra i popoli, in questi giorni di gemellaggio suggellata anche dall'allineamento dei pianeti nella volta celeste, dono di Dio in queste fresche serate di luglio.

    Maria Grazia Modica

    Giorgio Abate

  • The Fancy Food Show in the Words of Italian Trade Commissioner


    The Italian community formally met New York’s new Trade Commissioner & Executive Director for the US of the Italian Trade Commission, Maurizio Forte during the celebrations for the Republic on June 2nd. Forte’s busy calendar after that included the Chicago Trade Show FMI Connect at the beginning of June and the Summer Fancy Food Show that has just ended. The Italian Trade Commission has partnered with The Specialty Food Association and Universal Marketing in the organization of the Italian pavilion at the show as it has been doing for years. This year though was extra special as Italy was the first ever Partner Country for the Summer Fancy Food Show since the year of its inception. Together the three entities have built programs that bring more and more Italian specialty foods to the US consumer.

    i-Italy had a chance to speak to Commissioner Forte, who was attending the show and getting to know as many participants as possible.

    This is your first Fancy Food Show, what is your general impression?

    As always Italy’s presence is pretty incisive. We are not just the country occupying the largest exhibition space (more than 26.000 square feet) with the largest number of exhibitors (more than 300), but now, for the first time in the 61 years of show history, the organizers, The Specialty Food Association, have elected Italy as a partner country as well as the sponsor of this great event. This is to show how much the US love our country and our food products. This year Italy has set a record of participants: exhibitors vary from small family-run businesses to large, well known, more commercial providers. There are individual companies as well as regions that have grouped together several producers and represent the grandeur of their territory. Among the latter we find regions like Puglia, Sicily and Veneto, but I believe that all of Italy’s food is well represented. And facts speak for themselves: whoever we stopped to talk to was proud to be at the show, happy to have a chance to reach such a wide audience as the Fancy Food gives the sort of exposure that only a few trade shows do. There is not one visitor of the fair that has not peeked into the Italian pavilion. At certain moments it was hard to even walk through the aisles. the dollar is strong and Americans are buying, therefore this is an incentive for our producers to do more, work hard and produce only the best. On our end, we are already getting ready to sit down and discuss the next edition as we want Italy’s image to grow stronger and stronger.

    What products seem to be more successful in the US? Are there any products that are still unknown?

    I like to joke that Italy is not a military power, but it’s a culinary power, a force to reckon with. Italy sells everything to the US, leaving us in a position of leaders in many different categories. Italian wine is at the first place, followed by olive oil, pasta and cheese. Italy’s wine exports have risen 42% since 2008, thanks in part to the growing popularity of sparkling prosecco, a wine that is good and affordable. In volume terms, this now outsells France’s champagne worldwide. But Italy sells everything, from mineral water to cured meats, condiments, pastries and so on. There is nothing still undiscovered as we have been working for years at promoting all our country’s products. There is a difference though on how we use certain products which relates to a difference of lifestyle: in Italy, for example, if we want to make a plate of spaghetti in tomato sauce we tend to just get the fresh tomatoes, cut them up season them and proceed to make the tomato sauce. Here it is easier to open a jar... of any kind of sauce. Italian producers then focus on more prepared foods as this is what the US market wants.

    It is indeed known that several producers have adapted traditional recipes to please big foreign customers. An article published in the Economist stressed how a producer like Corsini, a celebrated bakery, makes “unusually large cantuccini, traditional Tuscan almond-packed biscuits, for Starbucks—unimaginable in Italy but perfect for the American coffee chain’s oversized cups.”

    It is important to please big foreign customers but always maintaining authenticity. An American consumer buys an Italian product because it tastes good and it is gratifying, yet there is so much more to know about that product. Its nutritional value is vital. Our nutrition is valid because it is healthy, we eat well and as a consequence we are seconds only to the Japanese in terms of longevity. The way we eat, The Mediterranean diet helps you lose weight, feel great, and improve your health. The Mediterranean Diet is not a diet for those who say “I need to lose weight” (even though it does help), but rather, it is a lifestyle – including foods, activities, meals with friends and family, and wine in moderation. In order to live healthy you have to eat healthy, so do not consume a product only once in a while when you want to taste something good, but make it your regular eating habit. Your lifestyle and your health will benefit from that. We are working hard in educating consumers in order to simply live better by eating well. We are planning to launch a series of promotional campaigns in the fall in order to spread this concept. We are working harder and harder and who knows what the next edition of the Fancy Food Show will be like.



  • Events: Reports

    Short Food Movie at Eataly


    This past November, Eataly and the Italian American Committee on Education (IACE) launched the contest initiative “Short Food Movie at Eataly,” an extension of the EXPO Milan 2015 “Short Food Movie” program themed “Feed Your Mind, Film Your Planet.”


    IACE students, who embark on educational and enriching tours of Eataly throughout the academic year, were encouraged to submit a 30-to-60-second video that presents his or her perspective on food and life to IACE and to EXPO, and the winners have been selected.


    Drumroll please! The first place winning video is called “We Live, Eat and Grow,” created by Alyssa Cuomo. Closely tied for second place are "Good Nutrition Wins a Gold Medal," presented by Gigi Politoski, and "Eating a Healthy Lunch to Live a Healthy Life," by Imma Spagnuolo. In third place, we have the submission simply titled "Iace Video – Eataly," created by Arianna Farinelli.


    The IACE contest winners were determined by a committee led by Chef Lidia Bastianich, author, television personality, and Eataly partner. The committee is also comprised of Maria Teresa Cometto, author, journalist, and IACE vice president; and Mario Fratti, author of the musical “Nine” and IACE board member.


    The final member of the IACE board, Claudio Angelini, our good friend and president of the Dante Alighieri Society in New York, recently passed away. He was a very big supporter of the IACE program and will be dearly missed.


    The committee could tell that each applicant devoted a great deal of time and energy in these projects, and they commend the efforts of all of the participants.


    The IACE winners will receive either a dinner for four at Eataly’s fine-dining restaurant, Manzo; a tasting tour of Eataly for four; or an Eataly gift box, filled with delicious high-quality products directly imported from Italy.


    On Saturday, June 27, IACE is concluding its contest with a celebration for the winners and committee, “IACE Awards at Eataly,” with a screening of the top short food movies and awards ceremony.


    EXPO will also unveil an enormous video installation comprising all of the submitted short food movies, which will be seen by millions of people across the world.


    Eataly is so thrilled by the entries from this year’s Short Food Movie competition, and  it is happy to announce an another competition during the upcoming 2015-2016 school year. With the involvement of world-renown photographer Francesco Tonelli, students will participate in an Instagram competition. Students will be asked to post a picture of Eataly’s marketplace to Instagram with a to-be-determined hashtag, and a jury of experts will select a winner of the images that best visually captures the spirit of Eataly.


    ABOUT IACE:

    The Italian American Committee on Education is a New York based non-profit organization founded in 1975 for the purpose of promoting the study of the Italian language and culture within the tri-state area of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. The IACE program is made possible primarily through an Italian Government grant and operates under the supervision of the Consulate General of Italy in New York. Throughout the academic year, IACE students embark on tours of Eataly’s marketplace, offering students an insider’s perspective and exposing them to the importance of fresh, whole foods; the significance of the Slow Food movement; and ways to incorporate healthy food into their lifestyle. The tours culminate in a cooking demonstration of simple, traditional Italian dishes, fostering healthy eating habits and encouraging young adults to cook at home with provided recipes to take home. Italian vocabulary, phrases, and basic grammar are incorporated throughout the tours.


    ABOUT EXPO 2015 & SHORT FOOD MOVIE:

    Held every five years, Expo is the Universal Exposition of Arts and Knowledge. In 2015, Expo will be held in Milan from May 1 to October 31. The theme of the event will be “Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life” with the aim of giving a concrete answer to a vital need for mankind: to ensure enough healthy food for all, respecting nature and its delicate balance, and avoiding food excess and injustice. More than 140 countries will participate, of which 53 will build their own pavilion where they can show the best of their technologies and innovations, and thus stimulate human progress.


    Short Food Movie - Feed Your Mind, Film Your Planet is the initiative produced by Fondazione Cinema per Roma and Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia within the framework of EXPO Milan 2015. Within this extraordinary event, Short Food Movie – Feed Your Mind, Film Your Planet represents a global open call for the production of thousands of videos inspired by the theme of nutrition and its related topics: the importance of a healthy diet, the role of the territory, the social necessity of a worldwide availability of healthy products and the creation of a sustainable and fair development.


    ABOUT EATALY:

    Eataly is the largest Italian marketplace in the world, committed to promoting high-quality, gourmet yet affordable regional Italian food with a local twist. As of now, Eataly USA comprises Eataly New York and Eataly Chicago, both modeled after the first Eataly in Turin, Italy, founded by Oscar Farinetti in 2007. Eataly USA is a partnership between Eataly Italia, Mario Batali, Joe Bastianich and Lidia Bastianich of Batali-Bastianich (B&B) Hospitality Group, and Adam and Alex Saper, brothers and operating partners. At 50,000 and 63,000 square feet respectively, Eataly New York and Eataly Chicago have plenty for visitors to shop, taste and savor including: several boutique eateries (La Pizza & La Pasta, La Carne (Chicago), Il Pesce, Le Verdure, La Piazza, La Birreria) and two fine dining restaurant, Manzo (New York) and Baffo (Chicago); retail counters, including meat, seafood, fresh pasta, pastry and chocolate, cheese and cured meats; two coffee bars, Lavazza and Vergnano; a Nutella corner (Chicago) and Nutella Bar (New York); wine store, Eataly Vino; a bakery; a mozzarella lab; a gelateria; every essential grocery department including sweets, spreads and jams; more than 100 olive oils, dry pastas and condiments; a housewares section; a book store; a microbrewery; a cooking school; various private event spaces, and much more!

  • Facts & Stories

    Gaga says “Enough is Enough”




        New York born Italian-American Lady Gaga has added her name to Governor Cuomo’s “Enough is Enough” campaign. In light of the recent high-profile cases of sexual assault in American universities and the inability of the university system to effectively handle these instances, a bill to ensure the safety of New York’s public and private college campuses is currently before the legislature. The bill, a New York State initiative, seeks to create a uniform sexual assault policy for college campuses statewide, in order to combat sexual violence and protect students.



        The star’s endorsement of the bill comes as no surprise - Lady Gaga herself is a victim of sexual assault and her Born This Way Foundation works to support and empower youth to create a more accepting and loving world to live in.



        Each year, thousands of American students start a new chapter of their academic careers by enrolling in college. The transition to college student, according to The Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network, makes college-aged women four times more likely than any other age group to be a victim of sexual assault. Additionally, the U.S. Department of Justice reports that about 1 in 5 women are targets of attempted or completed sexual assault during their college career.



        Sexual assault at the university campuses is a national issue that must be addressed. Governor Cuomo hopes the bill will encourage other states to follow suit and establish their own legislation to protect college students. According to Governor Cuomo, “Too many college students today experience sexual assault, too few of the assailants are prosecuted, and too often the survivors lack the resources they need to recover.” In fact, less than five percent of rapes occurring on New York college campuses are reported to law enforcement.



        As this year’s legislative session draws to a close on June 17, Cuomo and Lady Gaga have penned an op-ed for Billboard.com that encourages New York state lawmakers to pass the legislation. In the words of Lady Gaga, “We have a responsibility to the young men and women of this country to stand up against sexual violence everywhere.”



    Join Lady Gaga and stand up against campus sexual assault.




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