Today's review roundup includes: Public, Acqua Pazza, Mandler's, Pearson's, Eat Inn, Oceana, Spicy & Tasty, Sui, Sumile, Jack's Luxury Oyster Bar, 50 Carmine
NYTimes Diner's Journal William Grimes visits Public (210 Elizabeth Street, NoLIta; (212) 343-7011):
When the pinot noir hails from Tasmania and the falafel comes with kangaroo meat, you know you're being taken to the far end of the known culinary universe. Public, the latest addition to the crowded and quirky assemblage of restaurants and boutiques in NoLIta, is an extreme example of Antipodean fusion cuisine, and it comes courtesy of two New Zealand chefs, Peter Gordon and Anna Hansen, who own the Providores in London. They've brought over Brad Farmerie, their head chef at the Providores, to form a triple team in the kitchen.
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Today's review roundup includes: Grotta Azzurra, Pho Hoa, Amma, Pearson's Texas Barbecue, Public, Pylos
NYTimes Diner's Journal William Grimes visits Grotta Azzurra (177 Mulberry Street, at Broome Street):
. . . The reborn Grotta Azzurra is not too proud to put grilled sardines on the antipasto menu. Caprese salad, of course, remains on the menu. But there are deluxe touches here and there, like grilled langoustines, drizzled with a little olive oil, or the ravioli stuffed with lobster and crab, flavored with vin santo. By and large, seafood dishes outperform the meat dishes. Leading the list are swordfish with a robust topping of slow-cooked tomatoes, caper and black olives, and pan-seared lobster alla diavola, in a bright, fiery tomato sauce. It has twice the personality of grilled pork chops with polenta and cipollini onions, described in the menu, for mysterious reasons, as `stuffed.`
. . . There are better Italian restaurants in New York. A lot of them, in fact, But Little Italy, or what's left of it, needs all the help it can get these days. Grotta Azzurra, simply by refusing to be a cartoon Italian restaurant for the tourist trade, takes a noble stand.
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Today's review roundup includes: Matsuri, The Biltmore Room, Temple
NYPost Steve Cuozzo reviews Matsuri
(369 W. 16th St., at Ninth Avenue): MATSURI, the booming new Japanese brasserie in the Maritime Hotel, calls itself a "contemporary, truthful interpretation of Japan." But it's more true to family-friendly Las Vegas. What's a great chef like Tadashi Ono doing with sirloin steak and soy sauce?
. . . Matsuri's Japan 101 menu plays it so safe, you'll have a more daring time at many a local sushi joint. Shrimp tempura, anyone?
. . . The best dish is a Nobu knockoff, grilled black cod ($15) lent a distant smokiness by sake paste marination. Juicy, sliced duck breast roasted with wasabi sauce and chives ($16) arrives gloriously pink with crackling skin.
But every time I sensed the real Ono revving up, we came up snake eyes. Sushi is wound with nori as limp as soba noodles ($12). The latter come with "grated mountain potato" - a Japanese yam, an acquired taste I have yet to acquire.
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