Sicilian cuisine to die for
Mary Furr
Next to a good cup of coffee or a thick hearty soup, the most welcome
sight in a restaurant is the chef at work in an open kitchen, which
is what greets you as you enter Mangia Mangia.
Located on the Goldenwest side of a strip mall dominated by Expo
on Edinger Avenue, it’s a double storefront from which chef Giuseppe
Cafalu could be seen at the grill as co-owner brother Pietro led us
to a table.
It was from the daily specials on the black board that we selected
our entrees, each served with an exceptionally varied green salad --
red leaf, feathery frise, oak leaf and baby spinach with a light
dressing -- just the variety of texture and color is an indication of
the excellent preparations to come.
I chose tachinni papaglo ($11.95) -- two thick slices of white
turkey sauteed in a Marsala wine cream sauce covered with sliced
mushrooms, quartered artichoke hearts for tartness and red bell
pepper for color. A basket holds crusty buttered garlic bread, which
is perfect for sopping. The bowtie pasta with a chunky tomato sauce
balanced the plate. The food here is cooked with love -- the kind
you’d have for your family.
The pastas are varied -- penne, fettuccini, linguini, vermicelli
-- each paired with a sauce that is a perfect marriage. The rigatoni
salsicca ($9.95) my friend had is a short al dente ridged macaroni
perfect with the course-grained sausage and a faint licorice flavor
that fills the flat bowl it’s served in.
Giuseppe Cafalu prepares the dishes when ordered and seasons with
a light hand -- sauces do not overwhelm. While waiting for your
entree, enjoy the plasma TV that takes you through the villages from
which the brothers emigrated. The cream-colored walls are also
covered with pictures of Sicily -- one even shows the house where the
brothers were born. Pietro Cafalu said he returns to Sicily each year
to visit friends and check out restaurants.
There are about eight flavors of gelato ice cream, but for dessert
we shared Chocolate Chip Canonoli, a tube-shaped pastry shell
deep-fried and filled with whipped ricotta cheese and bits of
chocolate. It’s not sweet, but has a blended cream cheese flavor.
Here Mangia Mangia is Buono! Buono!, or to paraphrase “Field of
Dreams:” If you serve a better cuisine, they will come; for the last
17 years, they have come to Mangia Mangia.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have
comments or suggestions, call (562) 493-5062 or e-mail
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