Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Mona Lisa Travel Journal Recipe Notebook

 



The MONA LISA

TRAVEL JOURNAL - NOTEBOOK

RECIPE JOURNAL





My MONA LISA JOURNAL


The Mona Lisa is a painting by the Italian Renaissance Artist Leonardo da Vinci of Vinci, Italy in Tuscany. Da Vinci was also a renowned inventor and writer. Da Vinci completed the Mona Lisa in 1506.The painting is of a woman seated against an imaginary landscape background (the Tuscan Countryside).

The Mona Lisa is without question, the Most Famous Painting in the World. It is also the most expensive, with estimated worth pf $800 Million Dollars.

The Mona Lisa has been captivating people for centuries. Since 1801, the Mona Lisa has been house in The Louvre Museum, in Paris, France.

Your "Mona Lisa Journal" This book features the World's most famous painting on its cover image of the Mona Lisa, by famed Italian Renaissance painter Leonardo da Vinci. It has 100 blank / lined pages for you to write in.

Use as a Daily Journal, notebook, Travel Log Journal, or as you see fit. It will be fun to write in, as you see the beautiful Mona Lisa each time you open your own personal journal. Enjoy it to its fullest.

This item makes a wonderful gift.

Gift Ideas : Birthdays, Christmas, Friendship, for starting School and College.




Available on AMAZON.com


Sunday, April 30, 2023

Writers Essentials Coffee Laptop Cafe Pen Paper

 





CAFE DUEX MAGOTS 

 PARIS




Erik Larson: Top 10 Essentials to a Writer’s Life

1. Good Coffee: Every writer has a ritual that begins the day. It’s like turning a key to start your car. For me, the key that starts the day is a good cup of coffee, preferably Peet’s Coffee.
2. More Coffee: Alas, I drink as many as five cups a day. And then switch to tea. My teeth are the color of plum-tree leaves.
3. Oreo Cookies: I mean, look, if you have a cup of good coffee, you need an Oreo. Some mornings—the tough ones—I define as two-Oreo days. Double Stuf preferred.
4. A Sense of Pace: Many writers make the mistake of engaging in what I call “binge writing.” They write for 10 hours straight, riding the perfect wave of inspiration. The problem is, you still need to wake up the next day and do it again. Best is to pace yourself. Write for three hours straight, without interruption, then stop.
5. Knowing Where to Stop: My favorite “trick” is to stop writing at a point where I know that I can pick up easily the next day. I’ll stop in mid-paragraph, often in mid-sentence. It makes getting out of bed so much easier, because I know that all I’ll have to do to be productive is complete the sentence. And by then I’ll be seated at my desk, coffee and Oreo cookie at hand, the morning’s inertia overcome. There’s an added advantage: The human brain hates incomplete sentences. All night my mind will have secretly worked on the passage and likely mapped out the remainder of the page, even the chapter, while simultaneously sending me on a dinner date with Cate Blanchett.
6. Blocks of Undisturbed Time: I set aside a minimum of three hours every morning, seven days a week, during which no one is allowed to intrude except to report an approaching cruise missile.
7. Physical Diversion: When I stop writing, I need an escape—something that takes me out of the work and wholly into another realm. My main diversion is tennis, though I also find cooking to be very helpful. Something about chopping onions is very restorative. Dogs are helpful, too. They force you to go outside and confront the weather, although my dog did once eat a 19th-century edition of a British physicist’s autobiography.
8. A Good Library: For all writers, but especially those of us who write  nonfiction, a good library with open stacks is crucial.





ERNEST HEMINGWAY

"A WRITERS WRITER"







CAFFE DANTE

Greenwich Village, New York


MY WRITING ESSENTIALS

Daniel Bellino-Zwicke


1.  A Good Cafe

2. COFFEE

3. My Laptop (Macbook Pro)

4. REESE'S PEANUTBUTTER CUPS





MY FAVORITE CAFFE

CAFFE DANTE








Reese's Peanut Butter Cups










The MARLTON

"COFFEE TIME"

Art by Daniel Bellino Z





GOING to PARIS - NEW YORK - WHEREVER ?




FLIGHTS to PARIS - NYC - ASIA

AIRLINE FLIGHTS & HOTLES 

WORLDWIDE

FLY with  EXPEDIA.com









Hemingway Inspired Me to Write

HemingwatERNESTttfe


HEMINGWAY

 

Yes, it was the great Ernest Hemingway who inspired me to write. And it wasn't just his great writings but the man and the life he led. For Hemingway was the ultimate Man's Man as they say. He was rough and tumble and didn't take crap from know one. A lady's man Ernest Hemingway was, a hunter, adventurer, traveler, writer, and mercenary. The man's life was even more interesting than the characters in his books. 

The first book I read by Ernest Hemingway was a required read in High School English Class when we were assigned to read and study The Old Man & The Seas, Hemingway's great classic novel of the old Cuban fisherman Santiago in Havana, Cuba and his fight and struggles to fight a great fish, a fight that mimics the struggles of life.

I read just about everything Hemingway I could get my hands on; all his novels, his short stories, and biography's and articles written on the great writer of prose. I read a Farewell to Arms, The Sun Also Rises (my favorite), the complete short stories, magazine articles, and the bibliography "Papa Hemingway" by close friend and biographer A.E. Hotchner.

I traveled in the footsteps of Hemingway, going to his homes in Key West and Havana, Cuba. I bought a book called Hemingway;s Paris, and I followed in the footsteps of the great writer, going to all his favorite restaurants and cafes. I ate Choucroute at Brasserie Lipp on the Boulevard Saint Michel in Paris, I had drinks at Cafe Select and Closerie des Lilas, both on the Boulevard Montparnasse. I strolled the Luxenbourg Gardens, and at escargots and drank Beaujolais at Polidor, just like Ernest did. Yes I wanted to be Hemingway, I tried and tried, but I would never come anywhere near close to being the writer that Ernest Hemingway was. I could write nice little short stories, but a novel? No way. I have become a writer, I know, not a great one, not by a long shot, but a writer never-the-less, and a published and Best Selling Author at that, no less, but no Hemingway. But my writings do serve a purpose, and many do like (even love) my writings (books). I write about Italian Food, Italy, and the Italian, and Italian-American lifestyle and culture. I write little stories about Italian Food, Italian-Americans, Italy, and Italians, and people seem to like them.

Hemingway helped teach me to write, and I taught myself to write with the help of the great Ernest Hemingway and other writers. I't go to my favorite cafe in Greenwich Village, Caffe Dante, and I'd write. I'd write and write and practice as much as I could. I'd read and write, trying to hone my craft, the craft of writing. I dreamed of writing a great novel as all writers do. This would not happen. Who knows, maybe it will one day, but don't count on it. I don't, but you never know, someday my writing skills may one day develop enough to do so, "one never knows."

Before I ever started writing, I'd never known that I'd be able to write and have a book published, did I? I now have seven books published and three of them have become best sellers and I am a Best Selling Author, but not of novels. I wish I could write a great screenplay, that would be made into a successful movie, but as of now? No way, but I have had some good success and I'm quite happy the way things have developed. I make some money at it, I'm not rich, and I still have my day job, but I love what I do, and I am quite happy doing all this. Going to the cafe, just about every day, and I write, I promote, and I learn, all thanks to Hemingway, the man who inspired me. To write.

Basta.


  Daniel Bellino Zwicke  


 

HEMINGWAYyyygd

Ernest Hemingway



  Part II   My 1st Book. My first book was La Tavola. How I wrote it, and how quick I wrote it was quite amazing. Of course I had always wanted to write a book, I started one called The Bachelors Cookbook, but I never finished it. I didn't have the tools, or a formula. After starting that first book, The Bachelors Cookbook was a cookbook to teach and help bachelors how to cook, but not only that. It was a book to teach bachelors (single men) how to cook, and subsist on their own, and how to save money by cooking and make life easier and more enjoyable for themselves. But there was another major angle to the book, and that was how to meet and romance women, by learning and knowing how to cook for them, and how by doing so would greatly enhance you chance of having romantic interludes and relationships with the opposite sex, women. Well I thought, that this was all great, and it was and is, and now that I'm reading this, and rehashing on this great idea of mine, and I now have quite a lot of experience, know-how and all that, that I think it's high-time that I do it. I now have the formula. The formula? What is it you ask? Well, I do have a very good writing formula to write and produce good non-fiction books. For me, non-fiction is a whole lot easier to write than fiction, which I know I'm not great at, but non-fiction is a whole other thing, and I do believe I'm pretty good at this, and my track record has proven so with 7 books, three of them Best Sellers. So back to my formula, what is it you ask? Well, the whole ting is to # 1 have a Theme of what you book is going to be about. For me, I write about food, travel, and experiences regarding these subjects and subject matter. I write mostly about food and to be more specific Italian and Italian-American Food and lifestyles. I'll think up a them, Sunday Sauce for example, and then building a book around this. Sunday Sauce is the famed Italian-American dish, also known as gravy, that Italian-Americans eat each and every Sunday all over America, and especially in the great Italian Americans enclaves of New York, Boston, New Jersey, Baltimore, Brooklyn, and other parts of the country that have Italian neighborhoods with a strong Italian population that includes business such as Italian Restaurants, caffes, Pork Stores, Bakeries, specialty shops, Italian Butcher Shops, and the like, necessary for Italian living.

When you have your theme, you need to make an outline with topics and sub-topics that pertain to the  main theme of the book. So with my book Sunday Sauce I had an outline that included such topics as Meatballs, the Pork Store, Pasta and other topics that pertained to Sunday Sauce, how to make it, the rituals around it. as well as stories and antidotes that tied into this main theme of the book.

Taking the topic of pasta, several sub-topics to pasta in my book Sunday Sauce were; Spaghetti Vongole (Clam Sauce), Spaghetti Meatballs, Tomato Sauce and other topics. Once I had my outline, I'd write one-by-one on each topic in the outline. Each topic was a chapter in the book and I'd knock them off one at a time. It was easy. Now I've had a lot of different experiences as far as Italian Food and cooking go. I have a great repertoire of recipes that are in my books, so I tell stories about the food, the dishes, I have my recipes that are included in the book, and my books are a collection of Italian recipes as stories of all the different dishes in the great repertoire of Italian Cuisine. And  a large part of all this is to inspired people to cook wonderful Italian dishes, and to bring friends and family together at the dinner table. This is what it's all about; cooking tasty Italian Food, eating with friends and family, and having wonderful times around the table. This is my passion, and that's a Key element . in all of this. if you have a passion, write about it, and it all should come together easily. And so this is how I do it all. This is how I've had seven books published, and I keep doing it. I enjoy it. I love it, and hope you will to. Good Luck.  


PS .. My 1st book was La TAVOLA  - Italian-American New Yorker's Adventures of The Table, and this is where I first discovered and created my formula for writing my books. 

Again, good luck to you all.   

  Daniel's    BOOKS by Daniel Belino Zwicke on AMAZON.com Daniel-Bellino-Zwicke.com   

  GET SUNDAY SAUCE  








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NEED a FLIGHT

A HOTEL ?



GREAT DEALS on HOTELS & FLIGTS

WORLDWIDE  "FLY with EXPEDIA" !!!


Wednesday, October 5, 2022

Luxury Hotels PARIS France

 

 




CAFE DUEX MAGGOTS

PARIS

FRANCE







PARIS - FRANCE

"The CITY of LIGHT"






NEED a HOTEL in PARIS

WORLDWIDE





Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Learn How To Make Sunday Sauce Gravy alla Clemenza

CLEMENZA TEACHES MICHAEL

HOW To MAKE MOB WAR SUNDAY SAUCE 
alla CLEMENZA

CORLEONE STYLE




Richard Castellano

and AL PACINO
in
Francis Ford Coppola's

The GODFATHER

Adapted from Mario Puzo's Novel


“Hey come over here kid. Learn something. You never know when you’re gonna have to cook for 20 guys some day. You see, you start out with a little oil. Then you fry some garlic. Then you throw in some tomatoes, tomato paste, you fry it, you make sure it doesn’t stick. You get it to a boil. You Shove in your Sausage and Meatballs, Hey? Add a bit of Wine, a little sugar, you see? And that’s my trick.”

                   Peter Clemenza,
               ….. The Godfather







The INGREDIENTS



From My Latest SUNDAY SAUCE

Braciole
Sausages
Garlic
Onion
Pork Neck
Ground Beef
(Not Pictured)
San Marzano Tomatoes

Barbi Brunello
To Drink with Dinner





LEARN HOW to MAKE

CLEMENZA'S MOB WAR

GODFATHER SUNDAY SAUCE








.




                                                        

Saturday, February 22, 2014

An ANONYMOUS VENETIAN

 
VENICE





ANONYMOUS VENETIAN
 
Starring
 
TONY MUSANTE
 
and
 
FLORINDA BOLKAN
 
 
 
 


Tony Musante and Florinda Balkan walk a Venetian Fondamenta
 
Venice , Italy
 
 
in The Anonymous Venetian
 
 
 
 
Anonimo Veneziano (English: The Anonymous Venetian) is an award-winning 1970 Italian drama film written and directed by the famous Italian actor Enrico Maria Salerno in his debut as a film director. It starred American actor Tony Musante and Brazilian actress Florinda Bolkan .
The film is especially notable for its romantic musical score, composed by Stelvio Cipriani. In the movie's musical score there is also an Adagio, erroneously attributed to the Baroque Venetian composer Benedetto Marcello (31 July or 1 August 1686 – 24 July 1739). In reality, the author of the D concerto for oboe and orchestra was his older brother Alessandro (1 February 1673–19 June 1747). In 1970, Frida Boccara recorded the song "Venise Va Mourir", the main theme of the film.
 
FILM PLOT
 
A Venetian musician is affected by an incurable disease. He arranges to meet his wife, who is now living with another man in another city, but does not tell her about his condition. They walk through the streets and channels of Venice. They remember the happy times when they lived together, she in blissful ignorance of his terminal illness. He has to play a classic concert piece, recently discovered, but with no known composer, the 'Anonymous Venetian', in a concert hall. She finally realizes that she is still in love with him.
 
 
 
 
Anonimo Veneziano
 
 
 
 
FAUSTO PAPETTI
 
Anonimo Veneziano
 
 
 
 
 
.


 
An ANONYMOUS VENETIAN
 
Theme Song

Anónimo Veneciano Banda Sonora original 

de la película Anonimo Veneziano (Stelvio Cipriani) 

 
 
 
 
 
.
 
 


Florinda Bolkan
.
 


 
An ANONYMOUS VENETIAN
 
HIGHLIGHTS
 
 
 
 
.
 
MUSIC and MOVIE STILLS
 
From AN ANONYMOUS VENETIAN
 
Florinda Bolkan and Tony Musante
 
Venice Italy






FINAL SCENES

Venice







TONY MUSANTE

In VENICE




 
 
 
 
 
.
 
 
 
TONY MUSANTE
 
RIP
 
 
 
 
 
.
 
 
MANGIA ITALIANO
 
by Daniel Bellino "Z"
 
 
 
 
 
 
.
 
 
Music From An Anonymous Venetian
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
.
 
 
The Gorgeous FLORINDA BOLKAN
 
 
 
 
 
 
.

 
Piazza San Marco
 
as Portrayed by CANALETTO


.
 
 

CAFFE FLORIAN
 
Piazza San Marco
 
Venice
 
 
 
 
.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
.
 
 
SUNDAY SAUCE
 
by Daniel Bellino Zwicke
 
 
 
 
 
 
.