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Eataly Aims To Give New Yorkers An Italian Lesson

Upon walking into Eataly, the mammoth new food experience from Joe Bastianich, Lidia Bastianich, Mario Batali and Oscar Farinetti, you might actually think you were in Italy. Besides the produce, nearly everything is imported, and the 50,000 sq. ft. bi-level space is filled with rows upon rows of dried pasta, nougat, olive oils and anchovies piled 12 feet high. You're welcomed with a smart espresso bar as the space opens into seven "restaurants," 14 food stations and a full "piazza" with a raw bar, fresh-cut prosciutto and marble-top tables. But this is not the Italy most Americans imagine—the Italy of quaint Tuscan towns and pushy grandmothers. This is the Italy of Vespas and stilettos. And as Mario Batali hopes, "It could be the cornerstone of Italian gastronomic culture."

Next to the espresso bar is a wall of five iPads, each programmed to display news from Italian newspaper La Stampa. Paired with the signs displayed in both English and Italian, Eataly seems to be designed as a haven for Italian ex-pats. But as Farinetti said during the two-hour tour last night, "Eatly is a market, a restaurant and a school." The goal is not to come and eat Batali- and Bastianich-created meals, but to learn about the food and try it out yourself. Batali told the crowd, "If you ask the Italians, and the smart Americans, where they had their best meal, it was never in a restaurant. It was always in the home."

That's not to say you can't get a good meal at Eataly. Plates of porchetta with crispy skin, house-made mozzarella, raw oysters and oozing thin-crust pizza flowed freely at the opening party, offered with paired wine and beer at each station. And we retained just enough of our semester-abroad Italian to understand Lidia Bastianich when we overheard her telling the pastry counter to give the journalists food so "loro no scrivono male." ("So they don't write anything bad.")

While the packaged goods are mostly imported from Italy (and most are at import prices), the meat and produce is all local. Vegetables come straight from rooftop farm Brooklyn Grange (of Queens), and come November beer will be brewed right on their 300-seat rooftop microbrewery, which will be run by Dogfish Head. "Guest brewers" from Italy will also set up shop every month to create seasonal brews. And we're guessing the crowd once that opens will be enough to rival their neighbors, Shake Shack.

Eataly will be open starting August 31st at 200 Fifth Avenue.

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Comments [rss]

  • Max

    I live in Rome and I visited Japan recently so I know Eataly in Tokyo and that was before I knew that there was Eataly in Italy!  A pity there is not one in Rome

  • swag

    Eataly just doesn't work without Piero Alciati. Just compare the outstanding Eataly in Torino with the newer one in Milan.

  • exnyer

    I think it looks the way a presentation of prepared/packaged food should look anything less would be disappointing.

  • Ritchie

    I've marked the date on my calendar! And for the commenters who are annoyed that Batali used "gastronomic"...really? You do know you sound like idiots , right?

  • Guest

    and a real idiot is mentally unable to remotely care about word choices.

  • Spirit of 76

    [Homer Simpson] Porchetta... mmmmmmm... [/Homer Simpson]

  • Såkandulæredet

    Lol at the gratuitous ipads.

  • bashmentgirl

    Can't wait to eat there!!!!!

  • PKMKII

    Do they sell fresh pasta?

  • Eric

    Looks like there's a whole counter full of it, 2nd picture.

    This place looks and sounds absolutely amazing. All that fresh bread, cheese, pasta... oh man, can't wait for it to open!

  • JenChungsBaby

    Anything with Lidia Bastianich has to be good.

  • schadenfreudian mensch

    I still prefer Giada.

  • grizzzly

    I have still yet to find a single coffee shop, restaurant or bar that I can walk in to and order and receive a cappuccino like you get from the most basic little stand-up Italian bar. If Eataly nails that, I'm sold.

  • CubanB

    Have you tried Zibetto on 6th between 56th & 57th? It's pretty solid.

  • We got a giant smoked ham one time and it was amazing. we sliced it thin like Prosciuto.

  • Guest

    "It could be the cornerstone of Italian gastronomic culture."

    please don't use that word when describing anything to do with food or eating; it has the word gas in it.

    jeesh.

  • mariodesanctis

    If you think that the word "gastronomic" reminds you the word "gas", you might not be educated enough to know the etimology of such word.

    See:

    http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=gastronomy

    In Italy we use the adjective "gastronomico" all the times, and nobody will ever think about gas when hear that word. We use "gastronomia" as a synonym of "great food" and that's all about it.

  • Guest

    you created a new profile just to tell me that?

    i know. i got two voices too: one that says 'a-hem, i'm old enough to know how to behave maturely,' and the other one that says 'pfffftt... hehehe that's funny.'

    i'm just the user

    of the latter.

    :)

  • hotstepper

    what, don't farts make you hungry?

  • Guest

    reply to both:

    hmm, maybe it's a reminder not to eat too much. works for me.

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