Saturday, June 2, 2012

How about some more gelato for Second Avenue?

Jeremiah and I have both been watching the former Estroff Pharmacy space on Second Avenue between St. Mark's Place and East Ninth Street ... As he noted about the "cryptic symbol" in the front window of the incoming business... "Fro-yo? Mashed potatoes?" ... (And cause for an anxiety dream) ...

[Via JVNY]

Workers on the scene this morning are putting in the new signage and front window, etc. Any guesses?


It will be a gelato shop/cafe.

Gelato? Aren't you thinking that a new gelato shop just opened on Second Avenue? Yes, down just south of East Fourth Street...


Meanwhile, around the corner on St. Mark's Place...


The shell of the former Timi's Gelateria Classica™ — "a gelato franchise for the 21st century, with true Italian artisanal gelato made fresh daily" — sits empty since closing late last year.

5 comments:

Barbara L. Hanson said...

God, I miss ice cream. You know, a scoop in a cone, strawberry, not fragola or fraise.

Dhalgren said...

Welcome to the Gelato renaissance in New York City. Just wait until Paciugo opens in Manhattan (they just opened a stand in the Delta terminal at LaGuardia).

Anonymous said...

Perfect. The more gelato, the better. In Italy there seems be a gelateria on every corner, and I wish every bank branch and Starbuck's in the East Village would be replaced by a different gelato place.

By the way, we tried the 4th Street one ("Ti Amo" is the name) and it was excellent. They even give you the samples in miniature cones. The gelato was dense, fresh, tasty, superb. Better than many I had in Italy.

The St Mark's place had promise, and it was good in the beginning, but the quality degenerated. The last regrettable time we had gelato there it had frozen ice crystals in it (meaning it was allowed to melt and be refrozen, or too high a water content), and that awful refrigerator/freezer taste. Never went back after that.

Scuba Diva said...

How about some vegan gelato? Offering one flavor of sorbetto is a nice gesture, but I like choices. Besides, more people are dairy-intolerant than are soy- or nut-intolerant.

Anonymous said...

I'm with Barbara, I prefer ice cream. Does that make me a 'ugly american'?