Audio By Carbonatix
Keep Miami New Times Free
We’re aiming to raise $7,500 by April 26. Your support ensures New Times can continue watching out for you and our community. No paywall. Always accessible. Daily online and weekly in print.
NE 79th Street — with the Russian market Marky’s, Brazilan hotspot Boteco, and the German Schnitzel House — feels like New York at the turn of the century. Now there’s the Italian social club with a name that means “I came, I saw, I conquered.” The new Veni Vidi Vici is all about Abruzzo coffee, Italian wine, Italian ice, and Italian mini-bites daily.
See also: “A Little Forgotten”: On 79th Street, New Restaurants Pave a Better Way Forward”
Owner Roberto D’Angelo is a whirlwind of ideas, an Italian-American with deep roots to Philly. He’s extremely animated and a little crazy — a character who should not be missed.
Cusano Bakery supplies a host of artisan breads, and the Philadelphia Italian Ice Company offers eight flavors of extraordinary gluten-free ices made with only fresh juice (no sugar added).
Wine goes for $6 to $7 a glass. The Italian ice is a buck a scoop.
The spot boasts about 6,000 books, three-flat screen TV sets, chessboards, and, eventually, some serious Uno matches. Coming soon is an outdoor bocce ball court. D’Angelo dreams of adding a putting range, outdoor lounge with music, and cigar-smoking area, and it appears it all may happen.
A statue of a robust Italian chef (“Uncle Vinny”) will stand outside, and any patron who takes a picture and posts it to Instagram, Snapchat, Facebook, or other social media will receive a free ice.
Vini Vidi Vici, which opened October 1, is a place to drink, enjoy, and relax. Or, as D’Angelo says: “Gotta make a bookstore sexy, and there is absolutely nothing like it around.”
Follow Short Order on Facebook, Twitter @Short_Order, and Instagram @ShortOrder.