56 THE QUEENS COURIER • BUZZ • APRIL 4, 2019  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
  
  
  
 As a kid, I was always fascinated  
 by the World’s Fair. 
 It all started when I first saw  
 the glittering stainless steel  
 Unisphere out the car window  
 on the ride back to Long Island  
 from my grandmother’s house  
 in Glendale. When I asked my  
 mother about it, she’d fondly  
 recall  taking  my  brothers  to  
 the 1964–65 World’s Fair. 
 Many years later, I would  
 move  to  Queens  and  wholeheartedly  
 embrace its diverse  
 cuisines and culture and come  
 to love the Unisphere — a  
 sculpture  originally  commissioned  
 as a tribute to the Space  
 Age — as a symbol of the diversity  
 of the World’s Borough. 
 So  when  Joshua  Schneps,  
 CEO and co-publisher at Schneps  
 Media and founder of LIC  
 Flea & Food, approached me a  
 few years ago to tell me of his  
 plans to pay tribute to the largest  
 event ever to take place in  
 the history of New York City  
 with a culinary and cultural  
 festival with 100 vendors representing  
 100 cultures, I jumped  
 on board immediately. 
 The second annual World’s  
 Fare, which will be held on  
 May 18 and 19 at Citi Field, features  
 many of my personal favorites  
 from all over the world,  
 including  the  Arepa  Lady,  
 the crown jewel of Colombian  
 street  food  in New York City;  
 Indonesian desserts from  
 Moon Man; as well as Italian  
 arrosticini,  succulent  lamb  
 skewers from  D’Abruzzo,  
 which won first place in the  
 savory  division  at  last  year’s  
 Fare.  
 Newcomers this year include  
 Chef Troy’s Table representing  
 Jamaica  with  their  
 nutritious and delicious I-tal  
 Rastafarian  vegetarian  cuisine, 
  Balkan Bites flying the  
 flag of Kosovo with flaky savory  
 burek and sweet baklava,  
 Cafe Escencia representing  
 Spain with scrumptious sourdough  
 churros wheel, and a  
 thoroughly modern take on ancient  
 Eastern Mediterranean  
 frozen confection from the Republic  
 of Booza. 
 There will also be a dessert  
 classic that many attendees of  
 the iconic 1964 World’s Fair  
 may remember: Belgian waffles  
 as prepared by street food  
 sensation Wafels & Dinges. 
 In addition to Schneps, this  
 year’s culinary committee features  
 a trio of female culinary  
 powerhouses:  Gael Greene,  
 Chef Alex Raij, and  Chef  
 Anita-Lo. 
 These days, the Detroitborn  
 Greene  is  best  known  
 as the Insatiable Critic and  
 co-founder of Citymeals-on- 
 Wheels, but as restaurant  
 critic  of  New  York  Magazine  
 from 1968 to 2002, she changed  
 the way Americans think  
 about food. One could trace  
 the evolution of New York restaurants  
 on a timeline that  
 would reflect her passions and  
 taste  over  30  years  
 from  Le  Pavillon, 
  which has  
 its roots in the  
 1964–65 World’s  
 Fair, to nouvelle  
 cuisine to couturier  
 pizzas,  pastas  
 and hot fudge  
 sundaes, to more  
 healthful eating. 
 Chef  Anita  Lo,  
 author  of  “SOLO:  A  Modern  
 Cookbook for a Party of  
 One,” has appeared on “Top  
 Chef  Masters,”  “Iron  Chef  
 America,”  and  “Chopped.”  
 In 2015, she became the first  
 female guest chef to cook at  
 the White House. 
 Chef Alex Raij began her  
 lengthy love affair with traditional  
 Spanish cooking at  
 Meigas, an ambitious  Spanish  
 restaurant  in  Tribeca,  
 after  completing  her  formal  
 culinary  education  at  
 the  Culinary  Institute  of  
 America.  She  now  owns  
 and  operates  four  restaurants: 
  Txikito, Chelsea’s acclaimed  
 Basque  restaurant;  
 El Quinto Pino, named the  
 Absolute Best Tapas by New  
 York Magazine;  La  Vara,  
 exploring Jewish and Moorish  
 inf luence  in  southern  
 Spain; and her latest, Saint  
 Julivert, a petit fisherie inspired  
 by  ports  of  call  near  
 and far. 
 I  am  truly  
 amazed  that  the  
 World’s Fare  
 has  managed  
 to  assemble  a  
 lineup  of  cuisines  
 that  almost  
 rivals  the  
 diversity  of  the  
 World’s  Borough.  
 In  the coming weeks  
   19 
 I’ll  be  profiling  some  of  my  
 favorite  vendors.  Check  
 back next week to learn how  
 the Sainted Arepa  Lady  got  
 her start. 
 This  is  the  first  edition  
 of  a  weekly  column  written  
 by Joe DiStefano, a Queensbased  
 food  writer,  culinary  
 tour  guide,  and  author  of  
 the  bestselling  guidebook  
 “111  Places  in  Queens  That  
 You Must Not Miss.” 
  
  
  
  
  theworldfare.nyc 
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 MAY 18 & 19, 2019 
 
				
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