Archive | January, 2010

Sign up your children for art classes

Registration is open at the Muriel Guépin Gallery (47 Bergen St between Court and Smith) for children art classes, which aim to develop children’s creativity and to have them think of themselves as young artists through enriching their knowledge of art and offering them experience with a variety of materials. Classes are taught by art educators who are also professional artists, and a ratio of at minimum one teacher to every eight students is always maintained. For more information on the classes, visit here.

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Jersey Shore’s “The Situation” interviewed in Body Elite Gym


Looks like Mike a.k.a. “The Situation” from MTV’s Jersey Shore series was interviewed at Body Elite Gym (corner of Court and Union Streets) before the series premiered in December. Thanks to Carroll Gardens Diary for the tip!

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First CHA Happy Hour of the year- tonight!

Join the Cobble Hill Association as it relaunches its happy hour series tonight at Watty & Meg (corner of Court and Kane Streets) from 6-9 pm. The CHA happy hours will take place on the first Wednesday of every month at a local bar or cafe, with drink specials and reserved tables or seats. Tonight, there will be $3 beers and $5 glasses of wine at Watty & Meg at the tables specially reserved for the CHA happy hour.

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Meet the Caputos

Photo by Max Flatow.

Photo by Max Flatow.

Take an inside look at Caputo’s Bakery at Carroll Gardens Diary, where they speak to John and James Caputo (father and son owners, pictured above), and discuss the 106-year history of the Italian bakery on Court Street.

Established in 1904 by John’s father and grandfather, the bakery was originally opened for business on the southeast corner of Union and Hicks before it and adjacent buildings were demolished to make room for the construction of the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. John’s father was the baker and he did everything by hand in an old-fashioned slow mixer. They sold three breads: plain, seeded, and scalita (a dry Sicilian bread that goes best with soups, I learned). Home deliveries were big then and so frequent trips were made by horse and wagon around the neighborhood, running up stoops with bread baskets. “Families ate a lot of bread – five to ten loaves a day!” John says.

The clientele was noticeably different as it was a working-class Italian-American neighborhood. “If you wanted to work behind the counter and be a salesgirl, you had to speak fluent Italian,” John recalls. “Our backhands? All Italian.” Those scalita loaves went fast. “Today we only sell a couple of scalitas, but we used to make hundreds of them. Meat was expensive and so the staple was bread. You filled up on bread. My father used to say ‘You can’t have a piece of meat without a piece of bread’,” John reminisces. James laughs and adds, “Our family still can’t eat without the bread.”

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Christmas tree recycling this weekend

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Recycle your Christmas tree at Mulchfest 2010 this weekend, and take home some mulch for your garden. Bring your trees to Cobble Hill Park (Clinton and Verandah Place) this Saturday and Sunday, January 9th and 10th, between 9:30 am and 2 pm. Please remove all lights, decorations, and garland from the trees; no wreaths or artificial trees will be accepted.

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