Dining out
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Mary Furr
Wisely Paolo Pestarino, chef/owner of what was Stefano’s, Old World
Village, has changed little about the Italian restaurant but the name.
It’s now called Paolo’s Ristorante and is on the west side facing
Center Avenue. The table-filled dining room still has the village mural
on one wall, the vine rope with hanging grapes looped across the ceiling.
It has always been a chef-driven place, but now it’s even more
authentic and delicious -- from the fragrant crusty bread Paolo makes to
the rosemary herbs he grows in the tiny garden by the patio. With a
grandfather who was a chef on a big cruiser to a mother who owned a
restaurant in the Piedmont of northern Italy and taught him her way with
sauces, cooking, he says, is his passion.
Before choosing an entree begin with the biggest, most aromatic salad
-- fresh, crisp romaine with Gorgonzola and walnuts ($4.50) brought to
the table by server Carlo Mori, who, like Paolo, worked for many years on
cruise ships. Carlo lifts the oil-slicked leaves to my bowl spooning in
chunky blue vein-striped Gorgonzola cheese and halves of walnuts -- a
perfect combination with plenty to share.
If you’re choosing pasta, there is none better than the perfectly
named capellini tutti gusto (lunch $7.50, dinner $9.95). The thin pasta
is sauteed in Frantoio’s extra virgin olive oil imported from Italy with
sun-dried tomatoes, mushrooms, capers and sliced roasted peppers, which
combine well in the rich sauce. The serving is so generous and the
ambience so warm and family-like, you can understand why Italians love to
eat at home.
Another pasta, this one with sliced sausage, is linguine salsiccia
(lunch $7.95, dinner $13.95). The short tube pasta is sauteed with fresh
Italian sausage in a light tomato sauce. The sliced sausage is grainy
with bits of meat and fat in a light skin. It is served at dinner with
penne, the tubes coated inside and out with the sauce.
If you’re into more than pasta, a good selection is gamberi
(shrimp)/scampi style (lunch $11.50, dinner $16.95) large tail-on shrimp
sauteed in a medium thick white wine sauce flavored gently with garlic
and fresh herbs. The Mexican shrimp are large and firm, split and brushed
with garlic and olive oil. The wine sauce makes the dish. It’s assertive
without being overpowering.
Then there is fresh salmon (lunch $10.95, dinner $17.95), which at lunch is sauteed with lemon and capers, those great little buds that add
piquancy to the thick, pink, moist fillet. At night the preparation is
served with balsamic vinegar and herbs or in a champagne sauce with
mushrooms. All the sauces enhance the fresh Atlantic salmon, which is
true of nearly every dish at Paolo’s.
Tiramisu ($4.95) made by Paolo, is a nice, light cake square with a
touch of espresso coffee and dark cocoa but the other frozen desserts are
imported from Binbi, an Italian gourmet specialty shop. The chocolate
tartufo ($5.50), Italian for “truffle,” though small is really rich -- a
hardened ball coated with crisp crunched cookie crumbs served cut into
fourths and swimming in chocolate sauce.
The cuisine at Paolo’s Ristorante is authentic, delicious and varied.
This is not a quick lunch place. Sandwiches and salads are served more
quickly than entrees. Everything is prepared with care when ordered so
relax and wait, it’s worth it.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have comments
or suggestions, call (562) 493-5062 or e-mail o7 [email protected]
FYI
Paolo’s Ristorante
WHERE: 7561 Center Ave. #37 in Old World Village
HOURS: lunch, 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.; dinner, 5:30 to 10 p.m. Closed
Mondays
PHONE: (714) 373-5399
MISC.: Beer and wine are served.
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