Saturday, August 13, 2011

A Story of a Friday Night at the Italian Club Dallas


Last night we hosted our Regional Cena featuring Sardegna at the Italian Club Dallas and it was quite a night so I thought I’d blog about it. 

For those unfamiliar with the series, Cena (Italian for evening meal) is our weekly Friday night dinner.  In January we introduced the concept of the 2nd week of each month being a “regional” week and over the course of 20 months we are exploring each of Italy’s 20 regions.  We start it on Wednesday night with a tasting of wines from the region (which we sell by the bottle at very discounted prices) and on Friday we host the Regional Cena.

During the Regional Cena we offer regional wines, we serve a meal that is authentic to the region, our dance troupe I Colori performs traditional Italian dance numbers specific to the region, we have a slide show running in the background of images from the region and we produce an informational brochure about the region.   We’ll wrap the regional week today with a cooking class to learn how to make the wonderful dinner we had last night.

Last night was one of our most popular yet.  We were sold out by Wednesday (note – make reservations early!) and we had 50 more people on a wait list for the night.  Those in attendance were treated to an amazing meal of Sa Fregula (Sardinian Soup with Couscous, Clams and Saffron Broth); Su Gulurgiones de Casu (Homemade Potato and Cheese Ravioli with Pomodoro Sauce); S’Iscarzofa (Artichoke and Arugula Salad with Pecorino Sardo Cheese); Purcheddu’ (Roast Suckling Pig and Rosemary Potatoes) and Seadas (Puff Pastry stuffed with Cheese and Bitter Honey).

The ingredients used for these dinners are the real deal.  I think one of my favorites in the regional series thus far was Liguria when on a Friday night we served anchovies that had been swimming off the Italian coast just 3 days before.  But then again last night's roasted sucking pig was pretty delicious too!



During a Friday Cena the bar opens at 6:00pm and dinner begins around 7:00pm.  During cocktail hour, everyone mingles (members and visitors) and even if you come in alone, you’ll meet a lot of new friends before dinner even starts. 

Last night about 1/3rd of our guests were new to the Club and they were like family before the Sardinian Soup was even placed on the tables.  After the incredible meal, I Colori performed and they include an audience participation number which is always quite fun.

Lately we have been trending on the website Yelp which is a site where people write reviews of restaurants.  Last night we had several guests who joined us because they had read about our multiple 5 star ratings on Yelp and they even ended up on the floor dancing with I Colori… I can’t wait to see what their reviews will look like!

I Colori Performing a Regional Dance from Sardegna

We finish the night with a fun raffle and by about 10:00pm or so dinner is done… but that’s where the night starts as well.   

After dinner a couple of tables inside the club end up playing friendly card games, one for the men and one for the ladies.  Many of the rest of us end up on the patio outside sharing lemoncello and sambucca and cigars and a whole lot of laughs.   

11:00pm - Chef Tommaso Carves the 2nd Roasted Sucking Pig
By 11:00pm, everyone was somehow hungry again and last night Chef Tommaso rolled out a 2nd sucking pig he had roasted.  Much less formal than during dinner, the pig was carved and the 30 or so people remaining partook in more delicious and mouthwatering pork.

It was like a scene at many homes on Thanksgiving where everyone stood around and was picking at the carving before the meal is served.  It truly is a large Italian family and it is memorable. 

BUT if the pig wasn’t enough, by 11:30pm Tommaso was back inside the Club preparing a large bowl of pasta aioli for everyone to share to top off the multiple courses of meals.  Overall it was an incredible night!

Trying to write about this experience and actually experiencing it are far different. 

I can assure you that you will not find a dining and cultural experience in Dallas quite like ours.  There isn’t a single time that visitors walk out not having met new people and everyone is accepted and welcomed.  Last night we had a couple of the first time visitors who ended up on the patio with us sharing the liquors, pig and pasta.  While it might have been their first time to visit the Club, they were simply like members of the family we haven’t seen in some time and they were warmly greeted and made to feel part of the family.

My family is mainly in New York but I do have a couple of cousins who I visited with in Nashville a couple of weeks ago.  I hadn’t seen them in years but they made me feel like I was right at home again with homemade cookies and lots of love… and it was wonderful.  That is the same feeling that is shared every Friday night at the Italian Club Dallas. 

We offer Cena every Friday and our next regional is September 9th when we’ll feature Abruzzzo which is the region in Italy that my family is from.  Come join us for one and you’ll see what I mean… and you’ll take away an experience you won’t forget. 

Now off to learn to cook…

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Bocce & Life.. in a Blog

I invited my really good friend Eric to join me to play bocce last week for one of our every-other-week bocce nights.  I feared Eric was going to kill me since the night he joined me was the hottest night we have had in Dallas this summer... but surprisingly he didn't.

Eric is a true friend of mine and I respect his views on the world, on business, on life and on relationships.

He regularly writes a really great blog and in the last couple of days, he has written a couple of blogs about our night together... sweltering in the heat... but not minding it and simply enjoying life with some really great people from the Italian Club.

I would encourage you to have a look at his writings as well as some of his many other entries which always give me some great perspectives on business and on life.



And Eric, Thank You... for being a true friend, for enduring the heat with me and for being a natural at bocce!

We need to prepare for you and I to be a team together in our fall championship!

Friday, July 22, 2011

The Dog Days of Summer

I’ve been a little slow in blogging lately… and I’m blaming it on the “Dog Days of Summer” which interestingly is a term that was actually developed by Italians! 



In ancient Rome, the star Sirius, also known as the “dog star,” used to rise and set with the sun during July and August.  Thinking this is what caused the excessive summer heat, the term “dog days of summer” was coined.

While most people and dogs (and bloggers!) tend to slow down in the summer, at the ICD we have actually been very busy behind the scenes getting ready for the fall. 

In late June we held our General Membership meeting and during that we had a lot of exciting announcements.

First off, we have created an entirely new language “school” that will debut in September.  Based on 5-core classes with additional classes covering conversation, children and travelers, we’ll also have new offerings such as “Language at Lunch,” and you can read more about our new school and the syllabus here.

We are also expanding our cooking classes.  We’ll add to our Regional Cena weeks with a new cooking class focusing on the cuisine of the region on the day following the Regional Cena. 

Some of our other enhanced and new offerings will include an extension of our Battle of the Bottles series and offerings such as a liqueur dinner, ladies’ movie night, and Monday Night Football watching.  We’re keeping our website and our Facebook pages updated almost daily with all of the changes so make sure you check back on them frequently.


I’d also like to give a plug to our great friends at Jimmy’s Food Store who have endlessly supported the efforts of the Italian Club.


Jimmy’s was just named the People’s Choice Winner for the Best Sandwich Shop in D Magazine’s Best of Big D 2011: Food and Drink.  The link to their profile in D Magazine is here and the link to Jimmy’s Website is here.  

When you visit their website, make sure you sign up for their weekly newsletter which offers some amazing deals on authentic Italian foods and wines.

And when you do go to Jimmy’s for the best sandwiches in Dallas or some of their homemade meats, pastas and imported cheeses, wines and other Italian products; take a moment and introduce yourself to Paul and Mike DiCarlo.  Chances are you won’t meet two finer Italian Americans right here in Dallas!

While I may be “dogging” a little on my blogging this summer, that doesn’t mean there aren’t a lot of great things happening at the Italian Club Dallas this summer.

If nothing else, stop by on Wednesday’s nights for our weekly summer W.O.W (Wine on Wednesday) promotion (details here) and get to know the Italian Club Dallas a little better… I assure you that you won’t be disappointed!

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Giving Back

The last couple months at the Italian Club have been a whirlwind of activity!

We hosted the Festa della Repubblica Celebration, we staged our 2nd in a series of Battle of the Bottles, we rocked at Taste Addison winning the People’s Choice Award, we’ve introduced a new format for Wednesday nights called W.O.W. (Wine on Wednesday) and on top of all of that, we’ve staged our regular events including two great Regional Cenas featuring Tuscany and Umbria.

Now it’s time for us to take a little break and to give something back.

In addition to our support of our two regular charities, the Children’s Craniofacial Association and the Special Olympics Texas Bocce Tournament, we’re extending our outreach.

Last fall we tried something new and our member volunteers found it to be one of our most fulfilling events – Feed the Troops at D/FW Airport – so fulfilling in fact that we’re planning to repeat it. 


Every day, between 150 and 250 members of the United States Armed Forces depart D/FW Airport for deployment in the Middle East.  This year, on September 12, the day after the 10th Anniversary of 9/11, the Italian Club of Dallas will once again be feeding these heroes as they depart for the Middle East to protect and defend our great nation.  Plans are underway to give these men and women a warm and delicious send-off, Italian Club of Dallas style!

Something else that’s new will be presented at our General Membership Meeting on June 26 ~ the formation of Gli Angeli del Circolo Italiano Dallas ~ the Italian Club of Dallas Angles.  As the Italian Club, we encounter situations of Italian’s residing here in Texas who are facing extraordinary circumstances.  In the Dallas area, they have had no place to turn… until now.

I’ll be personally heading up this new extension of our community outreach and will share more details about the program after we’ve released it to our General Membership on June 26.

During our recent Festa della Repubblica Celebration at the Club, Miss Clara Vick was presented with the Star of Italian Solidarity and the title of Cavaliere (Knight) for her tireless, lifelong dedication to the support of Italian POWs.  During the acceptance remarks, her daughter Rita stated quite simply: “Mother taught us our entire lives that you give back to others without expecting anything in return… that’s just how you do it.”

Her words really hit home with me personally and they are why I’ve championed these added programs on behalf of our Club.  I know the kind hearts our members have and I know they will respond enthusiastically to support these new extensions of our current community outreach. 

Monday, June 6, 2011

It Was A Night of Knights!

We hosted our Festa della Repubblica and Italy’s 150th Anniversary of the Unification event at the Club Saturday night… and what a night it was!


Following a welcoming reception, we began the night with a performance by I Colori Italiani, our Italian folk dance troupe from the Italian Club.  Our guests then followed a procession of the flags of Italy and the United States into the dining area. 

Leading the flag procession was US Army Major General Keith Thurgood.  The flag of Italy was presented by Colonel Gianluca Piccolomini, Commander RAMI of the Italian Air Force at Sheppard Air Force base who was joined by several members of the Italian Air Force.  The flag of the United States was presented by retired US Air Force Colonel and the current Mayor of Parker, Texas, Joe Cordina.

With the colors in place, the guest joined in rousing versions of the Italian and American national anthems led by soprano Marsha Anderson and tenor Ron Montgomery.

Next up, I had the honor of introducing the many dignitaries and guests attending.  Our special guest for the evening was the Consul General of Italy, Fabrizio Nava who was joined by the Consul Generals from the countries of Finland, Japan, Malta, Mexico, Peru, Romania and the Slovak Republic.  Rounding out the list of dignitaries were Castro County Judge William Sava, General Director and CEO of the Dallas Opera Keith Cerney, COO of American Eagle Airlines Fred Cleveland and Sr. Executive VP of Flight Operations at American Eagle, Captain Jim Winkley.

The President of Com.It.es (the Italians’ living abroad committee) Vincenzo Arcobelli then presented remarks which included a moving video paying tribute to the 150th Anniversary of the Italian unification.  Mr. Arcobelli was followed by Consul General Nava who shared some very special moments.

Mr. Nava began with the reading the declaration passed through the Texas legislature designating June 2 as Italian Heritage Day in Texas.  He then presented two “Star of Solidarity” Knighthood Awards as declared by the Italian President to the Chair of the Castro County Historical Commission Miss Clara Vick and to the Distinguished Professor of Art History at Southern Methodist University Dr. P. Gregory Warden.

Consul General Nava, Rita and Clara Vick, Vincenzo Arcobelli and myself
With the formalities completed, our guests enjoyed a wonderful four-course meal prepared by our Chef Tomasso.  Following dinner were performances of Italian Art Songs and arias by Marsha Anderson and Ron Montgomery and the fitting conclusion of the evening was the singing of Happy Birthday (in Italian) as Consul General Nava, Mr. Arcobelli and myself cut the beautiful birthday cake.


As an American-Italian, I have to say this was one of my proudest evenings at the Italian Club of Dallas.  The evening had the perfect balance of protocol, history, emotion, hospitality, friendship and entertainment and it was a wonderful representation of our Italian heritage and traditions.  I was honored to have played a small role in the evening.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Buon Compleanno, Italia!

If you ask any American which is the newer country ~Italy or America~ chances are most will answer America.  Well in reality Italy is the newer country and this week marks a special birthday celebration.

While what we think of today as “Italian” culture and identity has existed for many centuries, it was only in the 19th century that, thanks to a unique combination of political, military, diplomatic and cultural achievements, the country we now call Italy came into being as a unified country. On March 17, 1861 the Kingdom of Italy was proclaimed, eventually becoming the Italian Republic on June 2, 1946. 

Each year on June 2, Italians recognize the creation of the Italian Republic in 1946 with La Festa della Repubblica (The Celebration of the Republic). And this year is extra special because it also marks the 150th (Centocinquanta) celebration of the Unification of Italy.


To celebrate Italy’s birthday, we’ll have a pair of very special events this week at the Italian Club Dallas.

On Friday, June 3 during our weekly Cena we’ll celebrate Italy’s 65th birthday with a special menu prepared from regions all over the peninsula. We’ll also have informational brochures about the unification as well as a performance by our own I Colori Italiani dancers.   Reservations for this special birthday Cena can be made here.

On Saturday, June 4th we’ll have an even more special celebration at the Club.  In recognition of this special year, we'll welcome Consul General of Italy Fabrizio Nava, military and civic dignitaries, and other special guests at this reservations-required event.  Among the many dignitaries joining Signore Nava will the Consul Generals of several other countries. 

The evening will begin with a cocktail hour featuring special antipasti and complimentary prosecco, an elegant meal and live entertainment performances.  Consul General Nava and the Italians Living Abroad Committee (Com.It.Es.) President Vincenzo Arcobelli will give a brief presentation about the history and significance of Italian unification, and informational short films on the subject, courtesy of Com.It.Es., will play on the ICD's big screen. This will be a special evening to meet the new Consul General, Dignitaries, and out of town guests, enjoy wonderful Italian cuisine & entertainment, and raise a glass to our beloved Italia.  Again, reservations are required for this special evening and they can be made here.

We hope that you will join us for one of these two special celebrations we’re hosting to celebrate Italy’s birthday but if you can’t and would like to learn more about the history, we’ve created a special page here on our website that gives you a brief overview of the key historical figures behind the unification of Italy.  

Thursday, May 26, 2011

The Truth According to Google and Yelp

Have you ever Googled yourself?  Did you like what you were able to find that floats around about you in the virtual world?  It can be pretty overwhelming to see just what you will find.  In the virtual world, everyone is capable of expressing their thoughts and opinions about everything from politics to religion to sports to people… and to restaurants.  As a restaurant, the Italian Club Dallas exposes ourselves countless times every day to the opinions and reviews of our guests.  If they have a bad experience with us, there are a lot of places they can write about it.

Now combine this with the other thing I’ve seen in my time as President.  By an overwhelming majority, people write to me or talk to me when they have had a bad experience with us versus a good one.  Its human nature and I know I do it myself.  When we are spending our hard earned dollars, we expect to be delighted and when we are disappointed with our expenditure, we want to let someone know that they fell short of our expectations.  When are expectations are met, we feel it’s what we expected anyway and when our expectations are exceeded, we’re happy but rarely do we take time to write that we are.

SO with that, I monitor everyday what is written about the Italian Club in the virtual world.  I have a series of Google alerts set up so that anytime any mention of us happens anywhere virtually, I get an alert.  If we have a problem, I want to know immediately so it can be addressed and corrected.  Recently an alert came across my email that I wanted to share.

The review below was written and posted on Yelp, which is a site where “real people write real reviews” about restaurants.  In this case the reviewer was a gentleman named Rick C.  I don’t know Rick C. and while I try to personally greet visitors every time I’m in the Club, I didn’t get the opportunity to meet him the night he was in.  Yet Rick C. took the time to write about his experience and to me it said that we are doing our job.  The verbatim text of his review is below and you can read it yourself online here on Yelp.

And to Rick C., thank you for sharing and I’m glad to know that we met your expectations.

Addison, TX

5/14/2011
First, I am not a big fan of Italian food, and never have been...BUT...OMG this place has made a believer out of me.  Second, they only have dinner on Wed and Fri nights.  Third, it’s a club so it not your traditional restaurant, just an FYI

Food - The food was absolutely delicious, it was the best Italian food I have ever had...hands down... from the appetizer salad, to the plate of pasta (I didn't think I even liked pasta!), to the pork chop entree..I can't pronounce half the meal they brought us but I will say, I ate everything, and I am not a big eater...the dessert was a banana custard (but with the consistency of a pumpkin pie), topped with a maraschino sauce, soaked in some kind of liquor and was served over a fresh slice of pineapple and quite literally was the best dessert I have had in the past 7 years...probably longer.

Atmosphere was a fun, festive type environment and the people were forwardly friendly. The walls are lined with pictures from Italy, they had a projector set up and were showing slides of places in Italy, they also had volunteers doing traditional Italian dances that night.

Service -This style of dining was different, then what I was used to, We arrived late ...yes you can arrive late, they start serving dinner on Fridays at 7pm, everyone experiences the same meal together, they were going to not let us in but the manager (Vito) asked the chef if they had room for 2 more, and he obliged. They sat us speedily and began to bring the courses almost immediately. Vito visited our table many times to ensure we were fully taken care and happy. And quite interesting, the chef came to our table to check to see if we liked everything.

Experience
This was one of the most unique, non-Dallas, thoroughly enjoyable dining experiences I have had in the past 7 years of living here. It’s like a big Italian family party and you were invited.  If you like Italian wines and art, delicious food, and boisterous, fun, engaging Italian hospitality, then this is the place for you. If you have Italian roots you will feel right at home.

Summary
It is as authentic as it gets here in Dallas...and most any other place I have been too. I believe its Dallas best kept Italian secret, something not to be missed if you are here in Dallas. Grab all your Italian and non-Italian friends and take them here, you won't be disappointed

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Round II of the Battle is This Thursday, May 26th – Italy vs. France


This Thursday, May 26th, we’ll present the 2nd in our series of the “Battle of the Bottles” when we pair Italian wines versus French wines, all accompanied by a great four-course meal and an educational evening.

If you’re not familiar with the series, we launched it with Italian wines versus California wines.  (Read a review of it here.)  During the evening, our guests are treated to a four-course meal prepared for the wines… and the wines are selected for the meal.  Each course is accompanied by two wines, one from Italy and one from France… but we don’t tell you which is which until the end of the evening and after you’ve scored them yourselves. 

Two wine experts, one representing Italy and the other the French, will offer a description of each wine, delineating its history, describing what flavor notes to expect as you sample it, and providing its retail availability locally.  There will also be a purchasing opportunity at the end of the evening.

The menu for “Battle of the Bottles – Italy vs. France” will be:

1st Wine
Niçoise Salad
A medley of tuna meat, anchovies, hard boiled eggs,
olives, green beans, and tomatoes

2nd Wine
Gnocchi alla Salvia
Fresh potato dumplings with sage sauce

3rd Wine
Agnello ai funghi
Lamb loin with chanterelle mushrooms and rice cake (tortino di riso)

4th Wine
Formaggi Misti
Assortment of matured cheeses, honey, jams, and preserves

The cost is $52 for members and $62 for non-members and reservations need to be made today (Tuesday) by calling Vito at the Club at (972) 931-9167.

I hope to see you on Thursday!


Monday, May 23, 2011

Taste Addison – It’s A Wrap!

Our weekend at Taste Addison is completed and quite simply it was Molto Bene!  We had a great time meeting so many new people that came by to visit us, to try out our Spiedies or to simply have a glass of Italian wine or a cold Peroni and learn more about us!  Grazie Mille to all for visiting us and Taste Addison.

From our side, it was a long but really fun weekend.  Friday started a little rough with some bad weather that came through about an hour before opening (we got evacuated for a brief time) but we rebounded quickly and had hot food ready to go within a few minutes of opening.  The crowds on Friday were smaller but they were troopers and all seemed to be having a really good time.  My personal favorites of Friday were two ladies from another of the booths who stopped by and had a Spiedie.  As soon as they took one bite, they texted their co-workers and before long, we had served most of the staff of their booth our specialty!  Thank you A#1 Air!

Chef Tommaso grilling the Spiedies
Saturday started early with Chef Tommaso at the Club by 7am cooking up Spiedies for an appearance on Fox 4 Good Day.  By noon when the gates opened it got busy and stayed that way all day and night long.  In the early afternoon Chef Tommaso had to duck out for an hour to do a cooking demonstration over in the Taste Showcase.  I personally didn’t make it over there but I heard it was a standing room only crowd.  Later in the day, within 20 minutes of each other, I had 2 people stop by who knew what Spiedies are since they came from my hometown.  Both being connoisseurs of them, they gave ours a thumbs up and thanked me with one saying “I never thought I would see the word Spiedie printed on a sign in Dallas, Texas”.  Around 5pm the concert crowds starting rolling in and it was very busy until we closed that night.

Sunday we slept in (a relative term) and after a noon opening, we took some time to feed some of the security and vendor staffs who had been working so hard behind the scenes all weekend to support all of the vendors like us at Taste.  The day was sunny and hot and the crowds were great.  We closed it at 5pm and had everything struck and back at the Club by 7pm to conclude a successful weekend.  In total, we served somewhere in the neighborhood of 500+ Spiedie sandwiches plus another couple hundred each of our Italian Sausage and Italian Meatball sandwiches.

Now before I recognize some people, I want to add one note.  The voting for the People’s Choice Award is still open at this link on Facebook.  We’re currently in 1st place and want to hold our lead until the voting closes.  If you haven’t voted for us yet, please take a minute and do so!

OK, putting on Taste Addison took months of effort and there are two groups that I’d like to thank.  First is the Special Events group from the City of Addison and especially Barbara Kovacevich and Chris McMurtry and also to Autumn Reo from Shiroma Southwest PR … thank you - you and your teams make this and every event we do with Addison a joy for us!

Some of our volunteers at the wrap!
The second and most important group is our own volunteers from the Italian Club.  Unlike every other booth at Taste, our team was composed 100% of volunteers.  In total we had over 40 members of our Club spend anywhere from a few hours to the entire weekend working in the booth.  Without all of you, we never could have done what we did.  


My personal thanks goes out to our Taste Addison Volunteers: Chef Tommaso Lestingi, Sous Chef Edgar, Angelo Vaccaro, Barbie Gumin, Gina & Tony Corazza, Fred Hansen, Doug Delsanter, Kathy Delsanter, Bobby Brown, David & Sue Mauriello, Sue & James Robertson, Matt Dio, Lisa Newman, Semira Pacifico, Tina Neal, Ben & Dottie Parlapiano, Ken & Jan Venuso, Bonnie & John Rahne, Les Jackson, Jenna Trovalli, Sheryl Champlin, Laura Justiss, Charles Castellano, Ron Miglini, Yvonne Chaney, Anthony Massa and Diane Caneva, Rae Gene Mungioli, Karen Mungioli, Chase Newman, Joe Murphy, Nick & Toni Parigi, John Pulley and Salli Goldstein.

Working the booth with
my daughter Jenna
I know we’ll be back at Taste next year but I hope to see you at the Club long before then and again, please remember to place a vote for us for the People’s Choice Award!

Friday, May 20, 2011

Taste Addison Is Here!

It's Taste Addison weekend and we're ready for a really great event!

The new banners for our booth are in and they look beautiful, our new t-shirts are in and they're great and our new Club brochure will be ready today!  And the best part is I sampled Chef Tomasso's Chicken Spiedies yesterday and they are simply delightful!  He has mastered the recipe for them and I promise you if you try one you'll be hooked!

Now all we need is two things... you to visit us at Taste Addison and you to vote for us in Taste: the Competition!

Taste Addison starts today (May 20) and here are the hours:
Friday - 6:00pm - Midnight
Saturday - 12:00pm - Midnight
Sunday - 12:00pm - 5:00pm

When you come, visit us in booth #89 which you'll find on this map.  And if you follow us on Facebook, check us out today for a Taste Addison special offer for our Facebook followers!

If you're at the event on Saturday, Chef Tomasso will be participating in the Taste Showcase in the Addison Conference Center on Saturday at 2:00pm.  You can find his recipe for a Seafood Risotto in the Taste Addison section of our website.

See you at Taste Addison this weekend and enjoy your culinary experience!

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Taste Addison - Taste: the Competition - A Follow Up

I wrote last week about Taste: the Competition that is part of Taste Addison 2011 that we are competing in and I wanted to share some more about it.

The great folks from the City of Addison and Channel Three Productions have put together a video tour of the competing restaurants and the Italian Club was featured in Episode 1.  We were featured along with some other really great restaurants in Addison and you can view our segment in the video below starting around the 6:10 mark.



The other big part of the competition is the voting for the People's Choice Award and we could use your help.  Please take a moment and click on this link and place your vote for The Italian Club of Dallas.

And finally, please come visit us at Taste Addison from May 20-22.  It's a great event that features over 60 restaurants as well as live entertainment all weekend and a lot of fun family activities.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

The Five Methods of Perception - Hearing

The five methods we as human beings have of perception are: hearing, sight, touch, smell and taste.  I’m sure if you think a little on each of these you will have distinctive ones in each category in your life that you will always remember.  I was sharing a story today with a friend about one of my sounds so I thought I’d write about it.

While I have many, there are 4 distinct sounds in my life that I will always remember and I can instantly snap back to the places and times and circumstances in which they occurred so I thought I’d share them.

My first was a professional moment.  At age 20 I produced a live event for 2,000 people including the Governor of Texas. Moments before the 55-minute multi-media experience began, my client shared the story of all of the technical difficulties we had faced bringing this particular project to life.  We had pieces of equipment arriving only hours before the presentation and quite honestly, we had no idea if it was going to work or not.  When the client introduced the challenges, they introduced me as the person who had overcome them.  Although I wasn’t the one who had, I was in the spotlight and thus that first distinctive sound was that of 2,000 chairs turning on a concrete floor to turn around and see who I was.

The 2nd was when I was on a safari in Africa.  I was blessed enough to witness a pride of lions chase and kill a buffalo which to witness first hand is a very rare occurrence.  Watching nature take its course, as the lions were taking the buffalo down as it was trying to escape them, the sound of the heavy breaths coming from the buffalo were so distinctive and the experience was so raw and harsh yet natural, it’s one that will always be with me.

The 3rd happened in Italy, in a town named Chieti, and on my first visit to the region and cities that my family originated in.  During my stay, while enjoying a beverage in a bar, I happened across a man named Nicoli and when he found out I had come back home to explore my family history, he adopted me. Nicoli spent 2 days showing me around, calling my distant relatives to tell them I was there from America and taking me to find the foods my Grandmother made from the region.  As I was leaving, riding on a city bus down from the hilltop to the train station, Nicoli ran alongside the bus  like you would see in a movie yelling arrivederci amico mio (goodbye my friend) at me as I left town.  I can still see that sunny afternoon and Nicoli running.

The 4th one is a funny one in that it is one that I hear repeated often at the Italian Club Dallas… the clinking of wine glasses and a very friendly “Salute”.  

I first heard this sound at my grandparent’s house as my extended Italian family would gather and toast to America and to their life here.  I now hear it often as I gather with my friends, both old and new, as we toast life.  I can probably describe to you just about every time I’ve heard it and there are many to describe!

This sound isn’t about the wine itself, it’s about the gathering of friends.  People who genuinely care for one another who are celebrating and toasting life and the blessings we have of simply being alive to enjoy it and to share it with one another.

While there are many sounds from the Italian Club Dallas that I enjoy which include the music, the conversations in Italian, the laughter we all share and the popping of the corks, it is the clinking of the glasses that to me signify what we are all about.

The Italian culture is much more than just the culture and the music and the food and the wine… it is all about the spirit and the passion for life we share which is celebrated in that moment when our glasses clink. 

If you’ve never experienced it or if you’ve forgotten what it sounds like… come visit or join us… I’m sure it will be music to your ears and to your heart!

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Taste Addison - Taste: The Competition

We had a video crew in the Club today to shoot a video piece for Taste Addison and our participation in Taste: The Competition.  Chef Tomasso has been perfecting his recipe for Spiedies and as an expert on them, I can safely say he’s nailed it!

Taste: The Competition runs from May 6 – June 5 and during that time, Spiedies will be offered as one of the entrĂ©e selections as part of our daily lunch.  We’ll also be serving them in our booth at Taste Addison.  When the video becomes available, I’ll post it so you can get a look!

Once the voting opens, you can vote for our Spiedies as the People’s Choice Food either online or at the Information Booth at Taste Addison from May 20-22. 

And if you’re planning on coming to Taste Addison, Chef Tomasso will be featured in the Taste Showcase at the Addison Conference Center at 2:00pm on Saturday, May 21.  In the showcase, he will conduct a cooking lesson on making a seafood risotto. 

I encourage you to come by the Club for lunch and try out our entry or to visit us at Taste Addison for the competition, the Showcase or many of the other great activities that Addison has planned for this fun event on the weekend of May 20-22.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

ICD President - Me As A Person

This one will be different… this entry is for me.

I’ve got two friends that write blogs.  One is recovering from an addiction and one is a business professional who has dedicated his life to daily acting in God’s way.  They are very different blogs to read, yet the two authors are very similar.  They are two men I respect very much who care enough and who are passionate enough to share themselves in cyberspace in the hopes that perhaps only one person will be touched by their writings.  Jon & Eric, you inspire me, so tonight I’m going to write one for me.

As the President of the Italian Club my passion is for our Club and for Italy and for all things related to the Italian culture and way of life.  And as a professional it is my responsibility to use this blog for purposes of the Italian Club Dallas.  But behind the title, there is a person, a human being, who also tries to live his life daily following God’s way and caring for all people equally.  In short, I have a passion for life and while everything surrounding the Italian Club and the Italian culture is dominant, it is only a part of me.  So allow me to one time share some of me.

I am a father of 5 wonderful children that I love dearly.  My oldest will turn 21 this year and she is completing her sophomore year at the University of Oklahoma.  My boys are 16 and 14 and they are both young men I respect and admire greatly and my two youngest are twin girls who will turn 3 later this year.  My first job in life is to try to be a role model to all of them.  I’m not always successful, but I do try to the best of my ability.

I am in a significant relationship with an incredible woman who has faced her own share of challenges in life.  She has fought through things in her life that most of us would never wish on anyone.  She inspires me with her strength to fight on each day and I love her dearly.

I am a trainer in a program called the Life Enrichment Boot Camp.  Monthly, this four-day seminar helps people shed their past anger, bitterness and resentment and find a better life and a better spiritual relationship.  Through this program I have been blessed to have been God’s instrument to touch others and I have been touched myself by many of my trainees, my fellow trainers and especially by the person that trained me.  This is my purpose.

I am a traveler... I love to explore the world and I love to experience new places and new cultures and new people.  I have made friends around the world and to me there are no strangers, only people with different backgrounds and experiences and languages, each of whom can teach me something new.

I am an Executive Producer of large, live events and some of my work has been viewed around the world and chances are pretty high you have seen some of it but that’s not really important, it is only my profession.

So what is important to me is how you look at life, which is why my strongest personal passion is for the Italian Club Dallas as well as for my children and friends.  Italians, by nature, know a life a little different than most of us in the United States do.  Italians take time to appreciate and celebrate traditions and family and the simple pleasures of life.  They take time to make friends, to get to know those friends, to share experiences with them and to feel blessed for each day they are alive.  It is something we often lose here in Dallas and through my friendships I’ve made at the ICD, I feel it daily and at each and every event we host or that I attend.

I certainly don’t want to sound preachy, that’s simply not me.  But I wanted to take just one entry in my blog and help you get to know me, the person and human being, so that if you do visit us at the club that you know you’ll be welcomed by me and by people like me with open arms and you will be in the company of a group of people who, using Italy as their common ground, share a passion for life.

I hope you have a good May 1!

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Our Heritage Wall

Next week will mark the 105th anniversary of the date my Great-Grandfather Vitale Trovarelli last passed through Ellis Island and established his residency in the United States.  May 29, 1906 marked his 3rd and final passage through Ellis Island (his first was in 1896) and he was eventually joined by my Great-Grandmother, my Grandfather and my Grandfather’s brothers and sisters.

Our Italian heritage is an important part of each of us at the Italian Club and to celebrate it we have created our Heritage Wall in the Club.  On the wall, our members can have their family photos displayed and the collection already has a lot of great stories behind the photographs.

One of the photos up on the wall is that of my Grandparent’s wedding party taken on June 25, 1925.  I had lunch in the Club this week and it was fun to walk my guests over to the wall and show them my heritage proudly displayed along with those of other members.  


Of course I get asked about how others can get their photographs up on the wall and it’s all explained here on our website.

Next time you’re in the Club, stop by and have a look the photos already there and if you have a photograph of your Italian heritage that you would like to share, please read the link about how to do so.