Intrepid photo by Gregor Schram on Unsplash. You can expect great views and photo ops with a Jeepney, a Filipino transportation staple. Photo: Stephanie Azarias & Alexander Olpindo, CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons.Įntertainment and food await at Jeepney sa Amerika, a Radial Park festival this Saturday. Bagel-themed bites, entertainment, and activities are on tap, with bagel favorites like Ess-a-Bagel, Utopia Bagels, and Kossar's in the house. You'll have access to closed parts of the museum after hours for ghost hunting-if you've got the nerve.īagel, coffee, and beer experts alight at City Point this Saturday and Sunday for the Third Annual Brooklyn BagelFest. The Morris-Jumel Mansion shares history Friday night on the spot where George Washington bunked down during the Battle of Harlem Heights. Go on a ghost adventure at Manhattan's oldest house. The festival takes place on and around Mulberry Street between Canal and Houston Streets in Little Italy. The Feast brings the world to Little Italy and Little Italy to the world. There is free music (most nights 7-9:30pm) and free music and/or food talks (every afternoon 2-5pm) on the Festival Stage at the corner of Grand and Mott Streets. The Feast of San Gennaro runs daily 11:30am-11pm, extended to midnight on Fridays and Saturdays. Figli di San Gennaro (Children of San Gennaro), a community organization, now runs the Feast, keeping alive the original spirit of September 19, 1926, when new immigrants from Naples celebrated their city’s patron saint, Saint Januarius, and the day in 305 A.D. San Gennaro legends like deep-fried Oreos, sausage ‘n’ peppers, and zeppole (a beloved Italian pastry) are all available, along with new favorites from the neighborhood’s latest generation of cafes and restaurants. Now celebrating its 96th anniversary, religious processions, parades, live music, and authentic Italian eats highlight the festivities. More than a million people every year make their way to the historic streets of Little Italy to experience the Feast of San Gennaro, NYC’s largest and longest-running Italian festival. (9/12-9/18) Looking for what to do in NYC this week and weekend? There's tons going on for summer in the city, with new restaurants, festivals, pop ups, and all kind of other things to do in NYC this week.
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