The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
On The Cheap  |  Restaurant Reviews

Da Vinci Ristorante

A charming story with a happy ending
By ROBERT NADEAU  |  March 5, 2008
4.0 4.0 Stars
inside_CRW_9231
CUTLINE: SEARED SCALLOPS: This appetizer, served with six asparagus, artichoke tapénade, and
saffron mascarpone, is hard to resist.

Da Vinci Ristorante | 162 Columbus Avenue, Boston | Open Mon–Wed, 5–10 pm, and Thurs–Sat, 5–10:30 pm | AE, DC, DI, MC, VI | Full bar | Valet parking, $16 | Ramped access | 617.350.0007
This isn’t a restaurant. This is one of those novels that get made into a movie. A boy named Shingara Singh grows up in India, and at 16 moves to Germany to work in an Italian restaurant named Leonardo Da Vinci. The owners have no son, so he becomes the boy they never had. They teach him everything about Italian culture, and soon his Italian is better than his Hindi. He takes a new name, “Peppino,” comes to America, works in the kitchen of the House of Blues, finds another family Italian restaurant (La Campania in Waltham), and then teams up with a Polish girl to open a superb Italian restaurant in Boston’s South End. Bring up the acid-jazz soundtrack, roll the credits.

Maybe there’s a cameo role in there for the restaurant critic who writes a glowing review? The camera looks over my shoulder and pans to a basket of sliced Italian bread: soft inside, crusty outside. My hand dips the bread in some gray stuff as I deliver my line, “Ooh, eggplant spread, really good eggplant spread.” I move toward the other bread-basket accompaniment. Cut to the hand writing a note: “super-good extra-virgin olive oil.”

Since one member of our party arrived early, we ordered two silver-dollar-size crab cakes ($4) from the bar menu. They were a little overly fried but very appetizing. On the real appetizer menu, it’s hard to resist something like seared scallops ($13). There’s only two giant sea scallops, but also six asparagus tips in a saffron-mascarpone sauce, a swell artichoke “tapénade” (translation: thick dip), and “chips” of fried leek and tomato skin — all arranged lovingly on a long, rectangular plate. A portobello mushroom appetizer ($11) was served sliced and flavored with balsamic vinegar, with a salad of unusual greens and more tomato-skin chips. The organic green salad ($9) was lots more of the same, with some paper-thin parmesan, toasted almonds, and a hint of white-truffle oil.

One could also start with a “primi” order of pasta, as the Italians do. Our order of papardelle Boscaiola ($17) was excellent, obviously homemade chewy ribbons of pasta with a rich wild-mushroom gravy (trumpets, parmesan, and maybe some truffle oil, too). This is a small order, but a small eater who doesn’t share could make dinner of it.

Pasta can also be ordered in large sizes, which are not priced on the menu. A rigatoni Bolognese ($15/primi; $21/dinner size) was unusual in that the large tube pasta was housemade. The difference, again, was in the texture, which had some chew but not the hardness found at the center of al dente dried pasta. The meat sauce was classic, every bite richer and meatier than it looked.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Wisteria House, Estragon, 2006 restaurant awards, More more >
  Topics: Restaurant Reviews , Culture and Lifestyle, Beverages, Food and Cooking,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
Comments

ARTICLES BY ROBERT NADEAU
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   JADE GARDEN SEAFOOD RESTAURANT  |  November 04, 2009
    Ready for some reasonably priced lobster after years of paying too much? You’re in luck, since a price war seems to be unfolding on the streets of Chinatown, with various window signs advertising twin lobsters in ginger and scallion for as low as $14.95.
  •   SOFIA ITALIAN STEAKHOUSE  |  October 28, 2009
    I have to admit I giggled when I got a press release describing this restaurant as being located in the “white-hot West Roxbury-Dedham dining scene.” After all, the space had already killed a reasonably good steak house, Vintage, after a long closure in which it tried to upscale, then ended up downscaling by adding red-sauce Italian dishes.
  •   BUBOR CHA CHA  |  October 21, 2009
    I’m not an enthusiast of fusion food, but I do like the cuisine of Malaysia, where history has developed a four-way fusion cuisine.
  •   PUNJAB PALACE  |  October 15, 2009
    Punjab Palace — by the same owners of Kenmore Square’s India Quality — “proves to be the kind of kid brother that would make any older sibling proud,” my colleague MC Slim JB wrote last year. That’s true, but this is also another second-tier Indian restaurant. So why do Slim and I like it so much?
  •   CON SOL  |  October 14, 2009
    Three-year-old ethnic bargain spot Con Sol snuck under reviewers' radar with an Iberian menu that draws mostly on Portuguese-American food — a cuisine that feels native to long-time Cantabrigians, but otherwise is little known north of New Bedford and Fall River or west of Provincetown.

 See all articles by: ROBERT NADEAU

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2009 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group