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"NY Italian"


LPShanet

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A friend of mine, who used to live in the NY area, is visiting currently, and said he wanted to eat "New York Italian". In my mind (and I'm pretty sure his, too), this refers to the sort of old school, red sauce driven style we all used to think of as Italian food. While we've moved on from that style in many ways, it can still be really good and satisfying, so I was wondering what people thought were the best places to get that kind of fare currently. Specifically, we're looking at Manhattan spots (not Bronx/Arthur Avenue, etc.), preferably downtown, or easily reached parts of Brooklyn.

My first thought was that a good option would be Torrisi and/or Parm, since they are essentially odes to that style of food, but executed better. And I guess to some extent, places like Roberta's, Frank, Piccolo Angolo, and Franny's might be evolutions of the style. Il Mulino, Emilio's Ballato and Ponte's are still open, though I never hear anyone mention them much these days. Any thoughts on these and others?

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Ponte's is not much good these days.

Bamonte's in Williamsburg is pretty tasty if you order right. Same for Ecco on Chambers Street.

I enjoyed Parm fine but it's definitely an evolution from the classic, and the same goes for the rest of your suggestions (I haven't been to Piccolo Angolo for 10 years, so I can't speak authoritatively on that one).

Have not been lucky enough to eat at Torrisi yet.

And underrated, forgotten place is Marchi on East 31 Street. Literally lost in the mists of time. They only serve one meal, and it's been the same since 1925 or whenever they opened. About six courses, starting with crudités, through cold cuts, a salad of tuna with capers and chopped celery, homemade lasagna, fish, chicken, and desert made out of these rather tasty deep-fried lemon crostoli with powdered sugar.

It's spread among several rooms of old attached townhouses, and though it can comfortably seat maybe 250 people, you might be the only ones there. I think the food & the experience are great, but not everyone may agree. Not expensive at all for what it is. Ask for James, and get him to tell you his stories of his acting career in heavy metal videos, etc.

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Frankies Spuntino?

Not a bad choice, but be aware that the Frankie's on Clinton Street has morphed into Francesca's, their attempt at Spanish tapas, pinxtos, etc. (my first visit there was less than impressive). They still have a Manhattan outpost, though, at 570 Hudson. Frankie's Spuntino website.

I've had a couple of good meals at Sauce, which has opened in the old Kampuchea location. Real red-sauce stuff, along with some more innovative fare; for instance, I like their zucchini "pasta" with bottarga. As a matter of fact, Eater listed it as the affordable alternative to Parm in this piece. It's from another Frank (Prisinzano), the owner of Lil' Frankies, Frank and Supper, so he must be doing something right.

Mitch Weinstein aka "weinoo"

Tasty Travails - My Blog

My eGullet FoodBog - A Tale of Two Boroughs

Was it you baby...or just a Brilliant Disguise?

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The original Frankie's in Carroll Gardens is excellent, especially if you eat outside. I don't think you could possibly consider it old-school or "New York Italian," however. It's thoroughly modern, and great.

I was never crazy about the Clinton Street branch even when it was serving Italian. Never thought it came close to measuring up to the Brooklyn one. Have not been to the West Village offshoot yet.

There are some off-the-beaten path midtown and uptown places that do serious Italian that's not red-sauce that are more New York to my mind... Grifone and Lusardi's come to mind.

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I agree that, whether you like the food or not, Frankies' on Court St in Bklyn is most definitely not old school NY Eyetalian. And I really don't think that either Roberta's or Franny's are either... not by a long shot. Additionally, I am hesitant to agree that you can order right in Bamonte's, as the last 3-4 meals I've had there were not good at all but, since I stopped going many years ago, I really can't provide any recent confirmation that it should be avoided.

So, if you're going to stay in Manhattan and/or close-by Bklyn locations, I think that Piccolo Angolo really does the best job of it, with gigantic meatballs and a great variety of old time favorites, including slices of fresh garlic bread in the basket, gratis. And an owner (Renato) right out of the old school handbook. I love this place and have been going for over 15 years. Then there's Queen in Downtown Bklyn, which can hit the mark (although less so, in my opinion), but you have to put up with plastic flower ambience and a waitstaff that sometimes is old time friendly and other times seems not interested in you at all.

Il Mulino is definitely in the category but the Manhattan location is tough to get into, is merciless with the upsell and price non-disclosure, and the food can be uneven.

Of course, when this long time Brooklynite wants an old time red sauce place, I'm just as likely to get in the car and hit Park Side in Corona (as I'm doing with friends from this board on Friday) as I am to walk the 3 blocks from my home to Queen. Just saying'.

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Parkside and Queen are real, no doubt about it... the decor at Queen is tragic, I gather it was once perfect red-booth style, but got torn out and replaced with the kind of hotel marble and glass favored by old-school Italian restaurants these days. I guess that actually tells you the food is likely to be good, in a perverse kind of way.

A similar thing happened to the decor at Tommaso's in Bath Beach / Bensonhurst, even harder to get to than Parkside, but better in my opinion... the "Sunday Special" is amazing, as is the lasagna. And you have access to one of the best wine cellars in the country (albeit frustratingly difficult to order from due to out of date lists and a completely crazy proprietor).

I miss Andy's Colonial Tavern in East Harlem. Best linguini in white clam sauce I've ever had. The old chef, Sal, was cooking until he was extremely old... maybe in his '90s? I remember seeing him perched on a tall stool in front of the stove because he couldn't stand anymore. After he retired, the place went downhill fast and then closed.

There was a crude oil painting hanging by the bar that said something along the lines of "DON'T SNITCH". NO QUESTION about the realness of that place...

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I agree about Tommaso's, but thought it was too far out of the way to mention (I wasn't actually recommending Parkside for this visit, just mentioning that it's the benchmark for red sauce Italian... and, since I'm going tonite, it's on my mind). The owner of Tommaso is an acquired taste but, if you like owners who break out into song (in his case, opera... not bad on some arias, by the way), then this might be perfect. The wine cellar is really good. You remind me that I have to get back there one of these days.

Another place that has a great wine cellar is Manducatis (also in Queens). The kitchen is not what these others are but, if/when Ida is in the kitchen and, if she's feeling good (two big maybes these days), it can be the perfect place.

By the way, Queen's decor was never actually replaced. The original location, with it's dark old-line furniture and lighting, was one block away (where the big movie theater and Barnes&Noble are now). That whole block was razed (about 15-20 years or so ago?) and Queen moved the restaurant to the current location, without relocating the pizza place it ran next door (the 1st place that Dom DeMarco made pizzas before opening DiFara's 40-something years ago). The new restaurant was furnished in "modern" style to keep up with the needs of the lunchtime lawyers and politicians who flock to the place & pizza was "by request only". Significant dinner business is relatively recent (5 years or so?) and I think that they're still wondering what happened to bring in all these "young 'uns" who like their food.

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Also on Il Mulino - if I recall correctly, I think the place originally focused on food from Salerno very specifically. It certainly can be incredible, but the whole experience is rather a trial.

It always gets me that you can fill up immediately on the free appetizers, yet nonetheless the bill is guaranteed to be three bills a person.

Somewhat similar is Scalinatella in the east 50s or 60s... high-end, pushy, but classic and very good. They were the first place I saw the now-celebrated tactic of endlessly shaving white truffles on your pasta - each shave probably costing an extra $15. But man was it good. I think they might have changed chefs, or owners, or even gone downhill? Very scene-y place too, in its way.

Gino's Italian Cuisine on Lexington and 60th is gone but not forgotten. No credit cards (though there were house accounts), no reservations, fluorescent lights, plastic flowers attached to strange rotating fans, old-guy waiters who always remembered your name, and half the menu wasn't on the menu, you just had to know. Not always great, but really great when it was great. I enjoyed the pasta al segreto, the spaghetti with meatballs and sausage, chicken scarpariello on the bone with sausage, etc. And that incredible zebra wallpaper!

Not to be overlooked: Gene's on 11th St. near 6th Ave. in the Village. Great old bar in front, the back covered with 1960s wallpaper depicting Italian scenes, an elderly, regular clientele, and, unlike any of the above-mentioned restaurants in this particular post, extremely affordable. This is truly classic NY Eye-talian-American... order stracciatella, fettucine alfredo, spaghetti bolognese, and most importantly veal scallopine al limone (could be called piccata on the menu - both uses are common in the NY metro area).

(The Istrian places in Astoria are worth a look too. I enjoy Piccolo Venezia, even if it has a bit of that modern decor problem.)

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  • 2 weeks later...

This is not an upscale place but I admit to being more than an occasional customer. Very large portions of basic red sauce dishes, with eggplant rollatini that is almost perfect. It's the type of place that has more tables filled at 5:30 than at 8pm & where the average age is 40 only because it serves as many 10 year olds as 70 year olds. Not many places left with Keno games on TV screens in the dining rooms. Very old line and worth checking out. Just stick to basics & find a relatively inoffensive wine.

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Are there any "NY Italian" restaurants in Midtown West or Hell's Kitchen that any of you would recommend? I'm just looking for a midweek, pre-theater meal, so decent would be good enough for this occasion.

I'm currently considering Puttanesca http://www.menupages.com/restaurants/puttanesca/menu and Trattoria Trecolori http://www.trattoriatrecolori.com/menu.html . I'm open to any suggestions.

Thanks for any suggestions or comments.

Edited by phoenikia (log)
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I've never eaten there, but Barbetta is supposed to be a classic. More upscale.

A little south of there is Supreme Macaroni Company, which dates back to the 30s (at least), and was a classic old-school place back in the '90s. Have not been there since. UPDATE: it's closed, and the building was demolished.

And for new Italian, there's Esca, a Batali joint I have not yet visited, but which gets good reviews.

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I've never eaten there, but Barbetta is supposed to be a classic. More upscale.

A little south of there is Supreme Macaroni Company, which dates back to the 30s (at least), and was a classic old-school place back in the '90s. Have not been there since. UPDATE: it's closed, and the building was demolished.

And for new Italian, there's Esca, a Batali joint I have not yet visited, but which gets good reviews.

While Esca is indeed a "Batali joint," the chef is David Pasternack, who knows his way around seafood the way Batali knows his way around, well, Crocs.

It's very good - can be great and isn't cheap. Probably wouldn't even call it a joint.

Another pre-theatre favorite Italian joint is the Bastianich owned Becco, where the pastas are good and reasonably priced.

Mitch Weinstein aka "weinoo"

Tasty Travails - My Blog

My eGullet FoodBog - A Tale of Two Boroughs

Was it you baby...or just a Brilliant Disguise?

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  • 2 weeks later...

Ponte's is not much good these days.

Bamonte's in Williamsburg is pretty tasty if you order right. Same for Ecco on Chambers Street.

I enjoyed Parm fine but it's definitely an evolution from the classic, and the same goes for the rest of your suggestions (I haven't been to Piccolo Angolo for 10 years, so I can't speak authoritatively on that one).

Have not been lucky enough to eat at Torrisi yet.

And underrated, forgotten place is Marchi on East 31 Street. Literally lost in the mists of time. They only serve one meal, and it's been the same since 1925 or whenever they opened. About six courses, starting with crudités, through cold cuts, a salad of tuna with capers and chopped celery, homemade lasagna, fish, chicken, and desert made out of these rather tasty deep-fried lemon crostoli with powdered sugar.

It's spread among several rooms of old attached townhouses, and though it can comfortably seat maybe 250 people, you might be the only ones there. I think the food & the experience are great, but not everyone may agree. Not expensive at all for what it is. Ask for James, and get him to tell you his stories of his acting career in heavy metal videos, etc.

Sorry for the long absence from this thread. On the night in question, my guest ended up having already eaten his fill of Italian at earlier meals, so we ended up doing something else. However, the mention of Marchi's brings back some great childhood memories for me, so many thanks! Hadn't even thought about that for decades, but used to go there with my parents. Glad to hear it's still alive.

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