Valentine’s Day dinner in the village
DINING OUT
Josef Bishof built a replica of his hometown just off the San Diego
Freeway in Huntington Beach. It’s called Old World Village and it’s
the location of Paolo’s Ristorante, which serves some of the
freshest, most authentic Italian food in town.
Chef and owner Paolo Pestarino is following in his father’s foot
steps -- both have been chefs on cruise lines that traveled the
world. For the love of a lady, however, Paolo came ashore at Newport
Beach, where he opened his first restaurant. He has now moved to Old
World, where an open door invites you into the casual cafe.
Informative servers Adam “Catfish” Mepeek and Liz help you decide
on the daily specials. This day, it is a wonderful char-marked filet
of Atlantic salmon (lunch $10.95, dinner $17.95), which is thick and
tender, its moist, pale, pink flesh sauteed with fresh mushrooms in a
champagne sauce as smooth as satin.
For me, it is gamberi (shrimp) scampi style (lunch $11.50, dinner
$ 16.95) served on a warm colorful Italian platter. It has six big,
beautiful tail-on Mexican shrimp -- which are more tender and
tasteful than tiger shrimp, Paolo says -- brushed with garlic oil and
sauteed in a white wine sauce flavored gently with herbs. It is
served with penne (short tube pasta) in a light tomato marinara and
steamed fresh spinach -- not creamed, just plain as it would be
served in an Italian home.
If you’re choosing pasta, an excellent one is sliced sausage with
penne (lunch $7.95, dinner $ 13.95). The short tube pasta is sauteed
with 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.
How could we resist the homemade tiramisu ($4.95), a beautiful
square of lady fingers with a touch of espresso caffe, layered with
whipped cream and dusted with cocoa? Talented Paolo makes this
dessert, also. The cafe is home to him, and he’s in and out of the
kitchen, chatting with diners, rather like some small European cafes.
What better setting for Valentine’s Day than Paolo’s, which will
be serving a special ($36.95 per person) that begins with bisque, to
be followed by veal scaloppine porcini or lobster stuffed ravioli
topped with Mexican shrimp or Chilean sea-bass balsamico. This, Paolo
says, is the favorite of the many diners who have followed him from
his previous Newport Beach restaurant.
Dessert will be the traditional tiramisu, which translates to
“take me up.” If you dine at Paolo’s, you could well think it was
heaven.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have
comments or suggestions, call (562) 493-5062 or e-mail
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