DINING OUT -- MARY FURR
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If you get it right the first time, don’t mess with it. It’s what
restaurant owner Larry Sullivan and his wife Mary Jean of Toscany,
Huntington Beach, believe and what their loyal clientele have counted on
since they opened their first and only restaurant and hired cook Jose
Hernandez six years ago.
You enter the double storefront and settle at the long banquette
divided by white lattice. It’s at once open and breezy but also warm and
friendly. The welcome is the same --Larry Sullivan brings you wonderful
yeasty rolls just out of the oven powered with Parmesan that come with
each lunch and dinner.
Everything is made in the tiny kitchen beginning with a
fresh-as-summer garden green salad with generous handfuls of sliced ripe
olives, tomato and pepperocini. Or try the minestrone full of vegetables
with lima and kidney beans. If you only want a salad lunch, there’s a
super antipasto ($6.50) with salami, ham, cheese, olives and hard boiled
egg.
Pastas ($5.50 to $7.95) are varied -- the ravioli ($6.95) are big
round pockets stuffed with beef or cheese and brought sizzling from the
oven. Be careful as they can be very hot, which is also true of the
cannelloni (lunch $5.50, dinner $6.95). Two large tubular pasta in a
small casserole are drenched in a thick marinara and topped with melted
mozzarella. This is a traditional sauce -- smooth with pureed tomato,
bits of onion and olive oil and lots of flavor. Recipes are based on
those from Mary Jean Sullivan’s family who owned Geno, an Italian
restaurant in Milwaukee.
This is also the sauce that covers the spaghetti (lunch $4.95, dinner
$5.50) and to which we added two big fat Italian sausages ($1.95). They
are the meaty firm kind, flavorful, not too spicy, with a faint flavor of
anise.
Larry Sullivan says a cornerstone of Toscany is the pizza (11-inch to
15-inch, $7.95 to $14.95) with 15 possible toppings. We went for the
special ($10.95 to $14.95), a beautiful thing to behold. It’s New
York-style with all the good meats you’d find in an Italian kitchen. The
crisp bottom and thick texture have enough body to absorb the flavors of
ham, sausage and salami with slices of earthy mushroom, crisp bits of
bell pepper and onion. Wholly satisfying. Eat in, take out, delivered
pizza knows no season.
Desserts are rich slices of heaven. Outstanding are a dense New
York-style cheese cake and spumoni, about four inches high with layers of
chocolate, vanilla and green ice cream with candied fruit, two different
crusts----one on the side of nuts, one on the bottom of crushed flavored
pastry.
Toscany, in a long mini mall next to Michael’s Arts and Crafts, has a
neighborly feel that manages to serve wonderful pasta and pizza from its
tiny kitchen.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have comments
or suggestions for her, call (562) 493-5062.
FYI
Toscany
WHERE: 7568 Edinger Ave.
PHONE: (714) 848-9385
FAX: (714) 848-2606
HOURS: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. weekdays, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday, closed Sunday.
MISC.: Delivery available.
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