Tuesday, December 17, 2019

28 years of Unsilent Night and making 'beautiful music in the street'



This past Sunday evening, composer Phil Kline hosted the 28th annual holiday presentation of Unsilent Night, in which Boombox-toting participants travel from Washington Square Park to Tompkins Square Park to pre-selected musical accompaniment.

Residents from more than 40 cities — in the United States and Europe — now take part in their own harmonious holiday stroll during the month of December, culminating with the event in Manhattan.

EVG regular Dan Efram, who shared these photos, asked Kline about the the legacy of Unsilent Night.


[Kline in Tompkins Square Park]

"It was always meant to be a party, and I think for me, writing it was like giving a gift to friends. Like, here's something we can do together for free in this city that might help us escape the madness for a little while," Kline said. "I think it's kept going because many people feel that way, and need that gift too. The way it has spread around the world, largely by word-of-mouth and internet, is something of a shock, but here we are. The madness isn't going away anytime soon and we need to get together and make beautiful music in the street."



You've got that Lovenburg feeling



Lovenburg, a fast-food burger joint based in Antalya, Turkey, is coming to the United States, opening its first outpost at 328 E. Sixth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue.

Lovenburg promises a variety of "homemade natural burgers" ...

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HAMBURGER TARİHCESİ Hamburger adı Almanya’nın ikinci büyük şehri olan Hamburg’tan gelir. Kelime anlamı Hamburglu veya Hamburg’a ait olan, yiyecekler için ise Hamburg tarzında pişirilendir. Benzer yiyecek kökenleri ile ilgili çok farklı iddialar söz konusudur. Bugün bildiğimiz şekli ile ilk kullanımları 1800′lerin sonu 1900′lerin başında olmakla birlikte kökeni Cengiz Han’ın ordusuna dayandırılmaktadır. Moğol askerler sefere giderken eğerlerinin altına koydukları etleri atın sırtıyla eğer arasında dövülürmüş. Mola verdiklerinde de içine soğan doğrayarak yerlermiş. 1200′lü yıllarda Cengiz Han’ın oğlu Kubilay Han Moskova’yı fethettiğinde Ruslar Moğallar’dan öğrendikleri bu yemeğe Tatar bifteği (Ruslar Moğollar’a Tartar dediği için Steak Tartar) adını vermişlerdir. Tabi orjinali at etiyle yapılıyordu. Ruslar’la ticaret yapan Almanlar 1600′lü yıllarda bunu ülkelerine götürmüş, sonrasında da Amerika’ya göç eden Almanlar 1800′lü yıllarda bunu Amerika’ya taşımışlardır. Hamburger yuvarlak şekilli bir köftenin iki dilim yuvarlak sandviç ekmeğinin arasında sunulan sıcak bir sandviç çeşididir. Burger diye de anılır. Köftenin üzerine bir dilim peynirle sunulanına çizburger (cheeseburger) denir. Ketçap, mayonez, turşu, soğan, domates ve benzeri bir çok farklı malzemeyle de sunulur. Genellikle dana etinden yapılır. Tavuk, hindi gibi farklı etlerin de kullanıldığı çeşitleri mevcuttur. Bunlar genellikle et türü ile isimlendirilir. Tavuk burger, Hindi burger gibi. Günümüzde maliyetleri düşürmek için ete ek olarak malesef %70′lere varan oranlarda katkı maddeleri de kullanılabilmektedir. LOVENBURGER hamburger köftesi %100 doğal kıyma, baharat karışımı ve sarmısak’la hazırlanarak, salça, su ve baharat karışımı ile hazırlanan özel karışım LOVENBURG sosu ile sunulur. Ayrıca peynir eklenerek hazırlanan Cheese Burger, Lüks Burger, iki hamburger köftesinden daha büyük olan Süper Burger, tavuk etiyle hazırlanan Tavuk Burger LOVENBURGER ailesinin diğer üyeleridir.

A post shared by Lovenburg (@lovenburger) on


The incoming East Village location also has an Instagram account, which notes this location will open soon.

Lovenburg will be peddling burgers between two excellent vegetarian/vegan restaurants — Spicy Moon and Souen ...

Twas 8 days before Christmas: MulchFest signage arrives in Tompkins Square Park


[Photo Sunday by Steven]

In case you were wondering, eight days before Christmas, when you might be able to mulch your tree after the holidays (did you even buy one yet?) ... the city is getting an early start with the MulchFesting promotion. Signage arrived in the center of Tompkins Square Park over the weekend.

According to the Parks Department website, you may drop off your tree at any Mulchfest location between Dec. 26 and Jan. 11. Chipping Saturdays will then take place on Jan. 4 and Jan. 11 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Back to the Parks Dept. website:

Bring your tree to a chipping site on Chipping Saturdays to take home a tree-mento! We'll chip your tree and give you your very own bag of mulch to use in your backyard or to make a winter bed for a street tree.

Stay tuned for a few dozen more MulchFest posts and mulch-related puns (I know this mulch is true!) between now and Jan. 11.

Land of Buddha, a Himalayan gift shop, taking over the former St. Mark's Comics


[Photo by Steven]

Signage for Little Buddha, a Himalayan gift shop, arrived yesterday at 11 St. Mark's Place.

No word yet on an opening date. Workers had been spotted renovating the space in recent months.

St. Mark's Comics closed its doors here between Second Avenue and Third Avenue after 36 years in business back in February.

Owner Mitch Cutler cited a variety of factors behind the closure. "I have been working 90 hours a week for 36 years, and I no longer have the wherewithal to fight them — all of these various reasons," he told me in late January.

The shop is still selling merchandise online, however...


Previously on EV Grieve:
St. Mark's is deader: St. Mark's Comics is closing after 36 years

Reactions to St. Mark's Comics closing

Le Sia remains closed for renovations on 7th Street


[Photos by Steven]

Le Sia remains dark on Seventh Street near Cooper Square.

The well-liked restaurant, which serves a Chinese crawfish boil, has been closed since before Thanksgiving.



A notice on Instagram states that Le Sia is "closed for maintenance."

Le Sia debuted in January 2018.

Monday, December 16, 2019

Monday's parting shots



The city has dumped a lot of salt on the streets ahead of the mixed precipitation (aka sleet) that we're expecting overnight... Vinny & O noted the salt mines on Avenue A and Avenue B this evening...



Our radar imagery is currently showing more steady precipitation, which will become widespread across the East Village late this evening into overnight.

Christmas spirit at the 9th Precinct



The 9th Precinct's annual holiday party took place this past Saturday morning on Fifth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue.

EVG contributor Derek Berg shared these photos from the event, which included a toy giveaway to the children in attendance...









The Associated has closed on 14th Street


[Photos by Steven]

The Associated Supermarket on 14th Street in Stuy Town is now closed. According to several readers, the grocery shut down after the business day this past Thursday here between Avenue A and First Avenue.

EVG correspondent Steven stopped by on Friday morning and found the store shuttered ... there were no signs to note a closure... people figured it out on their own, though...











News of this closure first surfaced in September. The final day was expected to be somewhere at the end of November or early December, per Town & Village.

The closing date continued to change over the course of the past week. Employees told customers different dates, including Dec. 9 and Dec. 10.

On Saturday morning, workers were spotted removing items from the market...



Longtime store manager Norman Quintanilla told this to T&V in September:

“A lot of people are crying and upset about it,” he said. “It especially affects a lot of elderly customers that we help with phone orders. They don’t know where else to go.”

Quintanilla said that he wasn’t involved in discussions with Associated’s ownership and Blackstone regarding why the store is closing but he said that business has been steadily decreasing every year.

Joseph Falzon, the store’s owner, previously told Crain's that a confluence of factors had cut business nearly in half. For starters, construction on 14th Street for the L train obscured the supermarket with a 12-foot fence these past two years.


[Obscured view of the former Associated from Saturday]

If the Associated remained open, then they'd have faced competition from the Trader Joe' opening soon across 14th Street. The TJ signage arrived last week...



In an email in September, Stuyvesant Town General Manager Rick Hayduk told residents that they are "working on finding a new tenant with full understanding that a local grocery store is important to the community; but this will take some time."

Previously on EV Grieve:
The Associated on 14th Street in Stuy Town is said to close by year's end

New Citi Bike station arrives on 1st Avenue


[Photos by Steven]

A new Citi Bike docking station with 51 docks arrived on the east side of First Avenue between Fifth Street and Sixth Street late last week...



This was one of the two new docking stations that Citi Bike said they'd add to the East Village this year. Still no sign of one at the other promised location, 12th Street and Avenue C, though a Citi Bike rep said that remains in the works.

Previously on EV Grieve:
A look at where Citi Bike is expanding in the East Village

Hakata Zen is (almost) back on St. Mark's Place



After nearly a year-long closure for undisclosed renovations, Hakata Zen is set to return here at 31 St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue...

A hiring sign is up...



A reader said back at the start of the New Year that a broken pipe was to blame for the temporary closure.

Anyway, to recap the whirlwind of concept switcheroo-ing here, the restaurant at No. 31 was a Hakata Hot Pot/Zen 6/Sushi Lounge combo starting in March 2016. A year later, it became Noodle Cafe Zen presents Sushi Lounge & Hakata Hot Pot. Eventually the space just became Hakata Zen.

The Smith reopens for evening bar service after last week's fire



The Smith reopened this past Friday night for bar service featuring a limited six-item menu and $2 oysters.





The main dining room will remain closed for now. This follows the kitchen fire last Monday night that temporarily closed the bistro here at 55 Third Ave. between 10th Street and 11th Street.

The FDNY had the fire under control in less than 40 minutes. The @FDNYalerts account stated that the fire was in a kitchen duct.

The Smith started in the East Village in 2007, later expanding to seven locations total in NYC (4), Washington, D.C. (2) and Chicago (1).

Joe's Steam Rice Roll back open on St. Mark's Place


[Photo yesterday by Steven]

After a mysterious closure these past seven weeks, Joe's Steam Rice Roll was back open this past weekend at 36 St. Mark's Place.

During this time, there wasn't any note for patrons or message on the restaurant's website or social media properties about any kind of closure for renovations. No one ever responded to an email query or Instagram message about this location's status. One source on the block said that this outpost is under new management.

Joe's debuted back in June here between Second Avenue and Third Avenue, making this the third NYC outpost of the popular quick-serve establishment, which got its start in Flushing.

Kavasutra opens 2nd East Village location


[Photo via EVG reader JG]

Kavasutra opened a new kava bar Saturday evening at 45 E. First St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue...



This marks the South Florida-based chain's second East Village location. The one at 261 E. 10th St. between Avenue A and First Avenue arrived in July 2015. Kavasutra, which also has outposts in Colorado and Arizona, has been accused of sexism and transphobia in the past.

As for kava, you can read this Eater primer about the beverage.

No. 45 previously housed the vegan cafe pop up Skinny Buddha.

Sunday, December 15, 2019

SantaCon came to town. Again.



Here are a few scenes from the latest SantaCon invasion on Saturday afternoon... the first batch of photos are by Derek Berg...





















Readers/residents in general felt as if there were more participants this year. (I also heard from people who thought the crowds thinned out earlier than in previous Cons.) Complaints about this alleged charity event included the usual sightings of Santas throwing up and using the sidewalks as a toilet ... as well as a general obnoxious indifference about blocking sidewalks, forcing residents — ones who didn't feel like plowing through the crowds — into walking on the streets.

---

EVG correspondent Steven took these photos from Second Avenue and Ninth Street, always a SantaCon stronghold ...



Once again, Solas on Ninth Street served as a "Special Santa Venue" ...



While the 13th Step and the Copper Still were not official "SantaCon Charity Venues," they each drew large crowds ...



... with the 13th Step charging a $5 entry fee...