Drive 2011 poster
Viragh envisions his book used by home chefs for both movie-themed parties or quiet, romantic evenings of “Nitehawk and chill.”
Some are included in the cookbook, like the “Leatherface Jerky” with Thai chili, garlic and soy sauce, an ode to “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.” Special feasts and themed dishes and drinks at Nitehawk come and go with the first-run, arthouse and classic films he shows, but a few menu items are permanent by popular demand. ‘Ready to be done’ with COVID: Why experts say fatigue a factor to omicron spread in CT.The Dish: Former MLB pitcher Ron Darling stops by Norwalk bakery for a cake.NWS: Snow expected Sunday night, winds picking up.Norwalk still searching for family of soldier killed in Vietnam nearly 60 years ago.Married for 60 years, Westport couple dies on same day.Seventh-grader who overdosed on fentanyl at Hartford school Thursday has died.CT fashion designer goes viral with help of his mom - and Cardi B.“There wasn’t anything like that up here and I thought it would be a wonderful addition to the New York film and culinary scene.” “After school, I moved up to New York to pursue some other things and always missed that sort of experience,” he said. It was founded in Austin, Texas, where the Fort Worth native went to college. Viragh was inspired by Alamo Drafthouse, a dine-in theater chain with liquor and beer service and an increasing presence now in New York.
Drive 2011 poster movie#
The glossy cookbook is part schtick, like the cocktail “Red Rum,” a mix of rum and hibiscus syrup for “The Shining” (for the uninitiated, “redrum” is murder spelled backward), and part literal movie reference, like the “Cup O' Pizza” from “The Jerk.” He, too, was executed in the restaurant scene. The name of the veal dish is based on a line uttered by the character Virgil Sollozzo before Al Pacino's Michael Corleone shoots him to death, though the Nitehawk book attributes the famous words to corrupt police Capt. “Try the Veal, It's the Best in the City” contains veal, new potatoes, olives and sliced blood orange in honor of “The Godfather.” In the classic film trilogy, oranges can be seen in scenes involving deeply meaningful death.