Moto
When Billy Phelps and John McCormick were building Moto, their Williamsburg
bar and café, not only did they contend with construction delays, loan
rejections, and, as tensions mounted, each other they did it all under
the prying lenses of a pair of documentary filmmakers. The café's
torturous eighteen-month gestation was captured in excruciating detail by
Kate Novack and Andrew Rossi in Eat This New York, premiering this month at
the Hamptons International Film Festival, where it's sure to appeal to the
same audience that flocked to Fully Committed and devoured Kitchen
Confidential.
The plot: Two friends from Minneapolis harbor the romantic
fantasy of opening a café. They find the perfect off-the-beaten-track
location a decrepit check-cashing joint below the el at the intersection
of Hasidic Williamsburg and Hispanic Williamsburg. They don overalls and
build the place from the ground up, the same meticulous way they rebuild
their beloved vintage European motorbikes (hence the name). They bicker,
cadge money, and dream of a subway train's leaping the tracks and destroying
the place. For perspective and comic relief, the filmmakers juxtapose
interviews with some of New York's most successful chefs and restaurateurs.
Keith McNally wistfully longs for his own bootstrap beginnings, Daniel
Boulud loses patience with his staff during peak dinner service, and Sirio
Maccioni wonders whether it was all worth it. Now that Moto is open its
kitchen turning out an evolving menu of panini and salads, its cozy premises
often filled with live music Phelps and McCormick have put the worst
behind them. Those days are gone but not forgotten, and coming soon to a
theater near you. ROBIN RAISFELD
394 Broadway, at Hooper Street
Williamsburg, Brooklyn
718-599-6895
Soy Luck Club
In Hong Kong, where Vivian Cheng was born, soy is a basic foodstuff. It is
here, too if you're a cow. Otherwise, it's relegated to faux burgers,
dairy substitutes, and aging hippies. But Cheng and her partner John Pi are
out to rescue the bean from its marginalized status at Soy Luck Club, their
new West Village café, where only the décor is retro. "We want to
implement soy in city life," says Cheng, who studied architecture at
Berkeley (!), outfitted the café with vintage Herman Miller and Knoll,
and lined the shelves with soy-enriched products like cereal and shampoo.
Instead of eschewing meat, the mostly organic menu incorporates soy into
sandwiches, salads, breakfast pastries, and a Starbuckian line of hot and
cold drinks, from green-tea soy lattes to mocha soyaccinos.
115 Greenwich Avenue
212-229-9191
· Cuisine: Health food
Petrosino
There'll always be a market for Barolos and Barbarescos, but Southern Italian
wines (and foods) are certainly enjoying their moment, to judge by
Petrosino, a breezy new restaurant where a stylish fashion-industry and
neighborhood crowd congregates at the poured-concrete bar. The cellar
ventures deep into Campania, Puglia, Sardinia, and Sicily, and the menu
veers southward as well a change of pace for chef-partner Patrick Nuti,
sprung from the geographic confines of midtown's Tuscan Square to sauté
caciocavallo cheese, bake jumbo shrimp on Sicilian rock salt, and adorn
swordfish carpaccio with golden beets, oranges, and olives. (190 Norfolk
Street; 212-673-3773.)
190 Norfolk Street
212-673-3773
· Cuisine: Southern Italian
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