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Shop Talk: Palmas Brazilian Grill's Sam Masini

We pose five quick questions to one local shopkeeper in this biweekly series.

 

 

There's been a spate of new businesses we've written about of late – Threads of Life, Hudson River Acupuncture – and then there's this restaurant a little off the Beekman/Broadway/Main loop that's been sitting pretty for months but you may not know about it.

Sam Masini is one of three partners running Palmas Brazilian Grill, though he's the most unlikely candidate to open a Brazilian place: Italian roots, himself an acupuncturist/naturopathic physician by day, nearly a vegetarian. While we sampled chicken from the buffet in the main dining room of this three-room bar/restaurant (with parking lot!), Masini told us how he got into this business and what in the world he eats here.

So buy local and go say hello to...

Sam Masini of Palmas Brazilian Grill

1. Masini...that's not Brazilian. How did you come to own a Brazilian restaurant?

SM: No, I'm not Brazilian. I had three grandparents born in Italy. This is sort of the place's third try. The prior owners fixed up the space. Palmas Brazilian Grill was their name. They tried to get it going a few times in 2011 but the partners weren't good for each other, and they sold it. We bought the business and got it going around November. There are three partners. My wife [Edineia Cardoso] is Brazilian, one partner is Mexican and his significant other is Colombian so at times they come in and cook and we have different dishes but mostly typical Brazilian food. My wife had a restaurant before and we talked about doing it again. It was the lure of a restaurant fully set up with things we would want, more or less walk-in. We find though it's more less than more. 

2. And what is typical Brazilian food?

SM: Weekends we have the churrasco going, the charcoal rotisserie is popular. Brazilian is not that different than American. It's familiar foods: chicken stew with potatoes, carrots. In the salad bar you always find a 'mayonnaise,' a potato salad really with peas and carrots. I've never gone into a restaurant of this type and not seen it. Beets, fresh cooked and chilled. The full buffet will have a beef, chicken, pork dish, a leafy green, a major starch like polenta or lasagna. White and colored rice. Red and black beans. Feijoada, black beans with cuts of pork and sausage.

3. Where do you live? And would you move here?

SM: New Rochelle. That's where my wife owned her restaurant. I thought about [living here] just this morning. I grew up in Westchester but don't have much experience on the west side. Most if it was walking on the aqueduct. It's a perennial question for me of where to live. It's kind of a well-kept secret here, these Rivertowns. 

4. Kind of like your restaurant?

SM: We're off the beaten trail. We haven't gotten the word out. There's a bit of a crowd on the weekends but weekdays are more sparse. I do hear there's a sizable Brazilian population here in Tarrytown, Sleepy Hollow, Ossining. The Brazilian restaurant on Main Street [Sol Mar] is not like us. We are the working class buffet style. There you have a waiter and more exotic food. I find immigrants in general, from my own family experience, find the ancestral foods the most desirable. Simple food we would eat at home. We do notice customers ask for, if not typically get, things they are familiar with. The standardization of the buffet is pretty important. 

5. How does your lifestyle square with this? As far as time and work and what you eat?

SM: I have a garden at home and grow kale, radish greens, arugula, mustard greens. I don't have the output to sustain a day here [to feed people at the restaurant]. I eat oats, millet; mainly from here I eat rice and beans. I'm pretty close to vegetarian, but at times I feel like four chorizo sausages.

For my work, I do house calls only. I did that to have more of a life and it's been great. I go as far East as Stamford, limit my Northerly excursions to around Chappaqua and go west to the river and down to the Bronx. The range of my patients is greater than my range.

My wife's restaurant had three partners [in 2003 in New Rochelle]. The one who did the paperwork absconded with the profits. He stopped paying vendors, sales tax, the landlord. Then the vendors and the landlord came around and he left the country. This time, I'm the paper guy.

 

Palmas Brazilian Grill is located on 60 Clinton Street, Sleepy Hollow, 914/909-6440, cash only. Open daily from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. (or later). $6 small plate, or $8 large from buffet, to go or stay.

Related Topics: Community
Love a shop (and its keeper) that we should feature? Tell us in the comments.

joan oltman

7:40 am on Thursday, January 26, 2012

You tell us everything except the prices and location. Where is it and what is the price range?

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Krista Madsen

7:56 am on Thursday, January 26, 2012

Sorry! Somehow I cut off the last bit with all the info. It's there now!

Lou K.

6:20 pm on Thursday, February 9, 2012

Anyone have a phone number for them that actually works?

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Lou K.

6:22 pm on Thursday, February 9, 2012

These don't:

914.939.3990 on their Facebook page.
(914) 909-5516 on Google maps.
914/909-6440 in the article above.
914-909-3990 in the Tarrytown Patch restaurant listing.

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Krista Madsen

6:30 pm on Thursday, February 9, 2012

Thanks for letting me know. Guess I'll just stop by and ask since it seems I can't call them! I will report back

Lou K.

5:09 am on Friday, February 10, 2012

We wound up going to Caravela, since they answered their phone. It's really easy to make a reservation that way.

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Krista Madsen

7:32 am on Friday, February 10, 2012

FYI, no need for reservations at Palmas

Lou K.

7:20 am on Saturday, February 11, 2012

I may have stated that the wrong way. What I was really trying to do, was (i) to see if they were open, given that I had friends coming from White Plains, (ii) whether they had a liquor license, since caipirinhas make a nice preprandial, (iii) if they serve feijoada, and (iv) if they do, whether they have farofa. I had promised these friends a (hopefully) authentic home-cooked Brazilian experience, based on your review.

It would, alternately, be great if they had their website up and running, with the relevant info there. I'm not a web site designer by any means, but I put together basic, but custom, five pagers for friends and colleagues in a couple of hours. And I do that for free as a hobby, or could be persuaded to do that for a caipirinha, followed by a nice caldo verde, a feijoada with all the trimmings, and some guava paste and cheese for dessert.

I do hope they succeed, but it's disheartening when there not even a phone, or better, a phone with a message with the basic info.

All part of marketing for success.

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Krista Madsen

7:48 am on Saturday, February 11, 2012

Tried to stop by to get their number and they weren't open yet. Will try again and mention your web site offer; I agree, you really need a website. Or at least the right number on Patch!

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Krista Madsen

3:25 pm on Friday, February 17, 2012

So, an unbelievable update, they are ALREADY OUT OF BUSINESS! Now why did he let me interview him...that was just a few weeks ago... http://patch.com/A-qSHq

Lou K.

4:02 am on Saturday, February 18, 2012

Why not update your review and the Patch restaurant listing with a red Helvetica bold 24 pt. "CLOSED" to save people the frustration of driving to find the place -- we rely on your reviews.

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Krista Madsen

10:07 am on Saturday, February 18, 2012

It's been updated, thank you. Before you mentioned it, didn't know it was closed. They must have run off in the night...

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