Monday, June 26, 2023

Sinatra Bellino n Pacino - SATISFY ME ONE MORE TIME

 
FRANK SINATRA
 
 
SOME NICE THINGS I'VE MISED
 
 
 
 
 
 
LYRICS
 
Don't deny me, satisfy me one more time
Barricade me and invade me, just one more time
Sacrifice me, don't be nice, be wild and free
Make a sex-pot symbol out of little old me
 
Caress me, molest me, one more time
Misuse me and abuse me one more time
Excite me and ignite me with your sweet torso
Use your muscles, my corpuscles, wanna go
 
Assault me, attack me, lose control
Let's smother each other in a good old strangle-hold
There's nothing but loving on my mind
Don't deny me, satisfy me one more time
 
Compromise me, vandalize me, have a ball
Destroy me and enjoy me through it all
Demolish, disassemble and dismantle my apparel
If a birthday suit ain't cute ill wear a barrel
 
Bite my ears, baby, nibble on my nose
Let your dimples put goose pimples on my toes
There's sugar oozing over from my elbows to my knees
So cover me with kisses, get yourself some calories
 
If you don't want me climbing up the wall
Don't fool around my fertile ground at all
While the cold is getting colder, just be sure
Everything we got is body temperature, warm it up
 
They're still a lot of groovy goodies left
When you reach the cookie jar, just help yourself
There ain't nothing, but loving on my mind
Don't deny me, satisfy me one more time
Encore, encore, encore





SATISFY ME ONE MORE TIME

Composer - Floyd Huddleston

Music & Lyrics by Floyd Huddleston 1974


Satisfy Me One More Time ? Not many people know this song, even rabid fans of the late great Francis Albert Sinatra have nover heard it. I first discovered the song in 1987 when I bought the album "Some Nice Things I've Missed" by Frank Sinatra. 

When I put the song on I was flabbergasted, and I Fell in Love with the song in an instant. The song is up beat, fast tempoed, Risky, and Sexy as Hell, "You've Just Gotta Love it" ???  

This song has been become sort of a theme song and anthem of mine personally. I delight in turning people on to it, and sing it myself at get-togethers. And everyone loves it when I do, and astonished by it, and suprised that they've never heard it before. Who wouldn't be ? I'm sure you'll agree, when you do. So listen and delight in a Sinatra song that you mibhet very well be hearing for the first time?  SATISFY ME ONE MORE TIME, sung by Sinatra.  "Ancor Ancore Ancore" !!!


Daniel Bellino Zwicke


 
 
 
 
 
LEARN HOW to MAKE SUNDAY SAUCE 

alla SINATRA
 


SINATRA BELLINO & PACINO !!!!









.

Monday, June 19, 2023

Travel Guide I Love Positano - ITALY

 



POSITANO

"ARRIVING in STYLE" !!!




POSITANO

ITALY






POSITANO 0 Video Tour

COMPLETE WALKING TOUR of POITANO

The AMALFI COAST






"A MUST HAVE on The AMALFI COAST"

POSITANO The AMALFI COAST

TRAVEL GUIDE - COOKBOOK





WHAT to DO on The AMALFI COAST !!!

CAPRI SORRENTO NAPLES & CAPRI



TOP THINGS to DO

POSITANO The AMALFI COAST

CAPRI POMPEII NAPLES SORRENTO

BOAT CAR BUS & VESPA TOURS






HOTELS & FLIGHTS

GETTING THERE & FINDING a HOTEL




FLYING to ITALY ?

NEED a HOTEL - ROME POSITANO - WHEREVER ??? 

HOTELS & FLIGHTS WORLDWIDE

FLY WIth EXPEDIA !!!









FIND a HOTEL in POSITANO

CAPRI SORRENTO The AMALFI COAST

ROME & ALL ITALY






Le SIRENUSE

OUR FAVORITE HOTEL !

POSITANO












BEAUTIFUL POSITANO

ITALY






"I LOVE POSITANO" !!!

GET POSITANO STUFF !!!



GET POSITANO StUFF !!!







MAP of The AMALFI COAST

ITALY







TAKE a BOAT to CAPRI !!!









CINQUECENTO !!!

FIAT 500

by BELLINO


From FINE ART AMERICA





 


POSITANO








WHERE to EAT ???









Friday, June 16, 2023

Diners and Coffee a Match Mad in Heaven

 




COFFEE

Thw ICONIC GREEK DINER COFFEE CUP




It can be hard to remember, but coffee isn’t just a delicious liquid drug — at its most basic level, it’s a plant that people sow, grow, and harvest. There are plenty of kinds of coffee, too, and none as significant on the global market as coffee canephora, also known as robusta. That’s one of the hardiest, most caffeinated varieties of coffee. And while its counterpart arabica gets more attention for having a wider flavor profile, robusta is far less likely to be classified as “specialty” coffee. Both kinds’ global popularity is thanks to Europe’s carving up of coffee-growing regions such as East Africa and Southeast Asia for export: The Dutch taking coffee to Indonesia and enslaving locals is how we got the now-common term “java,” for example.

Political theorist Carl Schmitt called such adventures in mercantilism the beginning of the “Eurocentric nomos of the Earth” — he’d know, given his support of the Nazi party. Thanks to coloniality, numerous commodities like coffee became associated with Europe. In brief, naval travel and military technology allowed Spanish, Portuguese, and Dutch conquerors to leverage the addictive crop as one more line item in a growing global ledger. Propaganda supported the expansion. There was Edwin Lester Linden Arnold’s handbook for coffee growing in 1886, published one year after the Berlin Conference began cutting up Africa into new districts, and J.W.B. Money’s Java; or, How to Manage a Colony. Both treat the people harvesting large-commodity crops including coffee as inferior, which means coffee and subjugation go hand in hand.

The next generation of imperialists including the young United States took to these lessons and examples to enslave people the world over for their own sugar, spice, tea, and coffee. Take the Belgians’ colonization of the Congo in the late 1800s, a premier region for rubber and robusta coffee. It was the Belgians who named robusta coffee as such due to its “robust” resilience to pestilence. Locals were worked to death, often from exhaustion but also from acts of violence at the hands of Belgian exporters and guards. And, as Adam Hochschild writes in King Leopold’s Ghost, Africans were not to be paid in francs for their labor, instead receiving cloth, beads, and brass rods. “Money in free circulation might undermine what was essentially a command economy,” Hochschild writes.

The impacts of these actions live on. Burundi — also colonized by Europe — is today one of, if not the, poorest country in the world and depends heavily on coffee exports. According to Standart magazine, the government tightly controls seed allowances, pays farmers only once or twice a year, and mandates that farmers sell their coffee as a low-grade commodity rather than a specialty. Vietnam, which has suffered numerous invasions over generations, is the second-largest coffee producer behind Brazil. And El Salvador’s political unrest and civil war in the 1980s can be traced back to the early occupation of coffee barons, including James Hill, an English businessman who became one of the country’s most infamous coffee oligarchs.





Mickey's Diner

MINNESOTA




No matter the ruination, the United States was eager for coffee to become part of its social fabric from the jump, and ingrained it has become. There’s evidence that suggests that coffee came to the East Coast in 1607 with English captain John Smith, and the drink became a backbone of the young new empire. A few centuries later, around the middle of the 20th century, the coffee break became a thing thanks to a greedy tie factory owner in Denver. In 1962, the International Coffee Agreements was established — actually a stabilizing move thanks to mandatory quotas on coffee imports — only to be blown up in 1989 amid market share disputes among producers and changing consumer tastes. Through it all, coffee burrowed deeper and deeper into the United States’ psyche.

Which is to say, diner coffee is, really, the improbable marriage of low prices and a hungry market. According to the Smithsonian Magazine, the first attempt at a diner came from Providence, Rhode Island, in 1872 in the form of a horse-drawn wagon serving cheap, hot food to people looking for late-night eats. And by 1924, the name for the “rolling restaurants” and “dining cars” became shortened to diner. As these casual restaurants multiplied (long before anything was even considered “ethical” or “fair trade certified”), coffee emerged as a cheap, on-demand menu staple. That coffee became part and parcel of Americana is thanks to these historical events, the rise of restaurants in the country writ large, and, of course, public relations. See: Denny’s partnership with Major League Baseball, chimerically combining the dark elixir, baseball, and Americana on color TV.

With the rise of Equal Exchange and fair trade certification in the 1980s and the proliferation of coffee chains around the world that have fueled consumer tastes for ever-higher quality products, coffee is continuing to evolve. As of 2023, Fairtrade International upped its minimum purchase per pound for certified coffee to $1.80, coffee workers at Starbucks and Peet’s locations throughout the country are unionizing for better pay and conditions, and fourth-wave coffee, with all of its possibilities, is either just over the horizon or already here (depending on whom you ask). But diner coffee, and the low-quality sourcing and methods used in its production, falls well outside of all that progress. It’s a relic in time, an artifact of an America not unlike the restaurants it’s poured in that are still somehow super cheap.

In truth, diner coffee can’t really change. There’s virtually no demand for that coffee to taste better, and supply for the commodity-grade staple is as abundant (for now) as it is unethical. As Michael Pollan might prescribe, drink coffee you can trace, drink only as much as you can afford to buy that is thoughtfully sourced, and buy mostly from small and direct-purchasing farms. But as the botanist also concedes, sometimes you still crave an Oreo.




The BENDIX DINER

Hasbouk Heights, New Jersey


On a spring afternoon in Sedona, Arizona, the Coffee Pot Restaurant is somehow as busy as many diners would hope to be during the morning rush. Servers in bright red T-shirts and aprons chat beneath southwestern motifs and rockscape paintings. Hiking through Red Rock State Park just outside of town can really sap your energy. So while there are vortexes that might refill that void, a damn fine cup of coffee also does the job. 

But for all the health-focused marketing throughout the touristy town, Sedona hosts more places to get your aura photo taken than cafes with transparently sourced, fairly purchased coffee. So, Coffee Pot’s $3.75 cup of coffee will have to do.

No, it isn’t good for the planet. Or, most likely, for workers. But when there’s nothing much better around, and when the nostalgia hits, a cup of jet-black, bitter diner coffee remains an affordable, bottomless delight.






The BIG LEBOWSKI COOKBOOK

GOT ANY KAHLUA ?

The COLLECTED RECIPES of The DUDE



Wednesday, June 14, 2023

Things to Do in Italy

 




ROME







THINGS to DO in ITALY

VENICE ROME SICILY POSITANO

THE AMALFI COAST & ALL of ITALY







HOTELS & FLIGHTS WORLDWIDE








GOING to VENICE ?

THINGS to DO in VENICE - All ITALY

GET YOUR GUIDE !




Monday, June 12, 2023

Ten Best Songs All Time Top 500 Music RollingStone Magazine

 






ROLLING STONE Magazine TOP 10 SONGS All-Time 


 # 1   LIKE A ROLLING STONE  - Bob Dylan

# 2    SATISFACTION  -  The ROLLING STONES

# 3    IMAGINE  - John Lennon 

# 4    BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY  - QUEEN

# 5    GOOD VIBRATIONS  - The BEACH BOYS

# 6    COMFORTABLY NUMB  - PINK FLOYD

# 7    JOHNNY B. GOOD  - CHUCK BERRY

# 8    SWEET CHILD O MINE  - Guns N Roses

# 9    STAIRWAY to HEAVEN  - LED ZEPPELIN

# 10   FREE BIRD  - LYNRD SKYNRD





ROLLING STONE MAGAZINE

# 1  BEST SONG ALL -TIME



Bob Dylan

"LIKE a ROLLING STONE"




# 2 BEST SONG ALL TIME 

ROLLING STONE MAGAZINE



"SATISFACTION"

The ROLLING STONES

1966




# 3  BEST SONG ALL-TIME

Rolling Stone Magazine



John Lennon

"IMAGINE"

1971




# 4 BEST SONG ALL-TIME

ROLLING STONE




QUEEN

"BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY"

1975






GOT ANY KAHLUA ?

aka The BIG LEBOWSKI COOKBOOK

The COLLECTED RECIPES of The DUDE





TRAVELING ???



FLIGHTS & HOTELS WORLDWIDE

FLY WITH EXPEDIA















Learn How to Make SINATRA SUNDAY SAUCE ITALIAN GRAVY

Sinatra n Sunday Sauce

   SINATRA & SUNDAY SAUCE ?   Yes, they go together, Francis Albert Sinatra  & Sunday Sauce  ...            ...