Staten Island Call Girls

Staten Island Call Girls




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Staten Island Call Girls


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We asked dozens of borough natives — and a few transplants — to share the Staten Island-centric words they most often have to explain to outsiders.
'DON'T BE JELLZ' & OTHER S.I.-CENTRIC SAYINGS
The youthful results above prove this borough is a unique world unto itself within New York City. But this is just the beginning: Share your favorite S.I. words and phrases in the comments section below and we'll feature the best submissions in a future roundup. But wait, there's more. 
Vincent Barone | vbarone@siadvance.com
Advance Executive Editor Brian Laline is not sure exactly when, but at some point in the Staten Island Advance's 123-year history, its readers adopted a strange linguistic quirk .
Pamela Silvestri | silvestri@siadvance.com
If you're on Staten Island and you hear someone ask, "Ay, what are you, GAGOOTZ?" It means your "crazy in the head." But if you're in, say, a mature, Italian-American gentleman's garden, that "gagootz" refers to a long, hanging squash typically harvested in August. Actually, that's really a "cucuzza."
Cucuzza grow in the shape of baseball bats, hence the nickname "baseball squash." Those summery specimens can grow up to seven or so feet, one of which is enough to feed a family for a few days.
Gravity driven, they grow downward from a network of prolific vines. Cucuzza hold edible seeds. The squash can be stored in a cool, dark place for a few months, although they may develop brown freckles.
What can you make with them? Well, Vincenzo Parelli of Montalbano's Pork Store in Rosebank loves the way his Dad, Cosimo, cooks the creature.
Sometimes he shaves the skin so the cucuzza's skin looks striped, then turns it into a raw salad. But when Cosimo oven-roasts the cucuzza, he stuffs it with a mix of rice and meat. For this preparation, the skins are completely peeled off.
Another serving suggestion: Stew in marinara sauce with a little Chianti, then add beans and serve over polenta, perhaps with a poached egg.
Met Foods sells them at the Grasmere and Castleton Corners locations. They hail from a cucuzza farm in Louisiana dubbed by its owners and authorities on the subject as "The Cordaro Family Plantation." And, you can find that farm product at Met Foods in Castleton Corners and Grasmere.
As Louis Prima sang to his "sweet cucuzza" in his song "My Cucuzza" — "I'd rather have cucuzza for it means amore to me!"
Marlon Brando in "The Godfather." A hero from DeFonte's. (Paramount Pictures/Staten Island Advance photos)
Veteran New York newspaperman Paul McPolin: You know you're from S.I. when "you know what 'omerta' means … You look at people who say 'sub' or 'grinder' or 'hoagie' — instead of hero —with utter disdain."
So many readers ask me, "Why the #*@# do you keeping calling Staten Island by them name Shaolin?" For the clueless, Wu Tang Clan is one of the most pioneering groups in the history of rap. S.I. is where its founding member first began envisioning the group's profound legacy on the music world. The clan would go on to release 19 compilation albums totaling six platinum records and more than 40 million sold. The homegrown musicians rechristeneed our borough Shaolin — a nod to the group's love for the kung-fu (aka "Shaolin chopsocky") movies, "Black Samurai" in 1977 and "Fury of the Dragon" in 1979. A young Robert Diggs, who later became RZA, the collective's mastermind, saw the films at here as a kid and couldn't shake the inspiration: "I would walk and dream of movies in my head," RZA told us a few years back. "I used to always get inspiration from this place. It started on Staten Island."
To the outside world we are Staten Island but as acclaimed photographer Michael Falco pointed out: Many natives pronounce it "as one word — "Statniland."
Photo caption: A "Staten Island" print Magie Serpica of Milk & Honey Tattoo in West Brighton.
Pamela Silvestri | silvestri@siadvance.com
Can you say "capicola?" On Staten Island, one might hear the word for the Italian, dry-cured ham called out as "Gobba-Goal." But Italian speakers typically forgo the "G" sound and intone the word as it is spelled — with a hard "C."
"It's 'Cobb-ah-Cola,'" offers Vincent D'Antuono, proprietor of Pastosa Ravioli in West Brighton. "Sometimes it's made with white wine. The meat is made from pork."
Ultimately, he said, the head and shoulder of the pig often are used to make the cured, sometimes black pepper-forward end-product. Capicola around New York City may be nicknamed "Coppo" or "Cappy" and spelled as "Cappocollo," thanks to Boar's Head Brand. (For our purposes, we have spelled it as it is in Italian — 'capicola.')
Regardless of the product manufacturer, it comes packed in a netted casing, as Italian tradition deems that this packaging allows the meat to dry-cure naturally. The netting allows flavors, mainly derived from pork of shoulder, to ripen and develop fully.
Boar's Head "authorized distributor" Gary Serventi explains the difference between Capicola and "Ham Cappy" or "Cappy Ham." "The word 'cappy' comes from the word 'Cappocollo,' a salami made from cured, dried pork," he explained. But Cappy — a comparatively leaner item with a smoother texture made from pork muscle — is a cooked ham coated with paprika and piquant spices. In reality, the spices of the cured and cooked versions are all the same.
"Capicola is aged and dried," clarifies Patty Walsh of Silver Lake Superette & Bagels.
She adds it to sandwiches loaded with other Italian cold cuts like mortadella, salami and provolone cheese.
D'Antuono slices open a loaf of crusty Italian bread, lays on the capicola, tops that with slices of fresh mozzarella plus fresh basil leaves. He puts a drizzle of aged balsamic vinegar on top, then caps the "Cappy" with the bread crown.
"It really is delicious," said D'Antuono.
We'll let "Italian Slang" guru Stevie B. take this one.
The personification of the "Guidette" stereotype: Staten Island Tech grad Tara Mooney's "Staten Island Girls Remix Spoof" — a video parody of Katy Perry's summer 2010 hit "California Gurls" — eclipsed 76,000 views on YouTube.com five days after it was posted.
It’s up to 736,570 views now — and likely would be much higher than that if Mooney hadn't disabled the video's embed function. Whatever, you can still watch it to your left.
Mooney sings about comically exaggerated lifestyles of some of the borough's young (and not-so-young) adults: Cosmetics, fashion — "bright white thongs under our black spandex" — prescription drug abuse, promiscuity, brawls and fist-pumping.
All the while, Ms. Mooney dons the signature hair poof and extreme fake tan that has made "Snooki" of MTV's "Jersey Shore" a household name.
Mooney said her video was recorded in one day, without second takes on location at South Beach, the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Boardwalk, Richmond Avenue and the Great Kills and Tottenville train stations.
As for the exaggerated accent? She says it came from her life's experience.
"That isn't actually how I sing," said Mooney, who studied occupational therapy at SUNY Buffalo, “but when I'm at school I realize how strong my accent is, because I sound different from everyone else and most of the time I get made fun of for it."
The song was born when Mooney heard the Perry hit on the way back from Rockaway Beach. She started singing along, but substituted the chorus with her own.
"Staten Island girls are recognizable: Orange skin with black hair on top," she chanted for the hook.
"It’s all in good fun!,” Mooney said. “This video is not meant to represent all of Staten Island, it's just an exaggeration."
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