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Eclano

Everything you’re looking for — nothing more
By ROBERT NADEAU  |  June 14, 2006
4.0 4.0 Stars


WHY IS ONE NORTH END BISTRO BETTER THAN ANOTHER? Find out at Eclano.
Why is one pretentious and expensive North End bistro better than another? Because it delivers on every course.

Because the music runs smoothly from Sinatra to Sade.

Because the service is genuinely warm and does not constantly interrupt to ask if everything is all right. Have you noticed how often that happens now? I thought I was getting recognized, but not six restaurants in a row — a streak interrupted only at Eclano. Sometimes a restaurant stands out by having, say, what seems to be the one neighborhood server on all of Salem Street who talks about things like how no one used to go to restaurants in the North End “because we all ate at home.” Does anyone besides me notice the difference between servers who have that kind of conversation and servers who take away your plates with food on them, saying, “Are you still working on that?” What is it about serving $30-plus entrées that requires so many server visits to ask how things are? Is it a spiritual exercise designed to remind us that there are some things money can’t buy — such as privacy and dignity?

To digress for a moment: on my recent trip to Spain, I spent an evening at La Maestranza in Seville, a historic bullfight arena comparable to Wrigley Field or Fenway Park. Spanish bullfighting may be brutal and cruel to animals, but it’s the one sporting event with no sponsor logos, no cheerleaders, no halftime show, no souvenir hawkers, and no interruptions. It starts right on time, and bullfighting is the whole show: men in tights getting into the ring with half-ton fighting bulls and killing them with swords. They do this for two-and-a-half hours, walk once around the ring to cheers, and everyone leaves. There are no doping scandals, no corked swords, and no one goes around to the expensive seats in the shade asking if everything is all right.

Back to Eclano, the Wrigley Field of North End bistros. The bread choices are over-complicated, so our server just tongs one of each to everyone. There is a rosemary focaccia, a cranberry focaccia (better than it sounds), and a gray, chewy loaf, salty — what’s that flavor? Ground-up black olives! Even better is the silky, oily eggplant spread — a vegan’s answer to foie gras.

The appetizer of the moment is the chef’s house “salume” and antipasto for two ($18). Considering that Salem Street was all butcher shops only a few decades ago, it’s ironic that chefs up and down the street are stuffing sausage casings in the quiet hours. But at Eclano the results are impressive. In addition to bresaola (air-dried beef), there’s a truffled hard salami and a Tuscan version with juniper berries. There are also some artichokes and cheeses, but the most amazing thing on the platter is eggplant sautéed in lots of incredible olive oil. If they served this eggplant with the bread, no one would order anything else.
The gnocchi ($8) appetizer is actually a single gnoccho. It’s a creamy dumpling the size of a crab cake, grilled on one side, and served with a superb marinara and a vertical sail of Parmesan fried crisp. A hearts-of-romaine salad ($8) has a trick ingredient: fresh lemon juice. With some roasted garlic and salty aged cheese in the dressing as well, it tastes more Caesar than Caesar salad.

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