HEAD NORTH: La Brace Italian Grille, in the North End, is splendid. |
La Brace is a small, splendid North End restaurant featuring grilled foods with just enough red sauce to satisfy the neighborhood. It’s sparsely decorated, a nice contrast to the traditional Italian restaurant Rococo, and yet strongly rooted in Italian foodways. Chef Mark Fredette came over from Mare, so I expected some fine fish, and since La Brace means “hot coals,” it might well be grilled. There was, and it was.We began (after bread with olive oil and balsamic vinegar) with calamari duetto ($13), a handsome rectangular plate with a heap of fried squid, as crisp and sweet as any in town, and a pair of small stuffed squid, lightly grilled. The stuffing was based on a homemade sausage mixture that didn’t overwhelm the casings; neither did a cold dip described as “arrabbiata” (angry) that was actually sweeter and smoother than hot or spicy. Grilled scallops ($13) brought three large sea scallops on another rectangular plate with a balsamic glaze, a light topping of chopped green olive I didn’t entirely like (too much like a pickle with the delicate scallops), and a small but perfect arugula salad. A “fall Caprese” salad ($15), however, had to strain to survive as a winter salad. The grape tomatoes were stewed with a little vinegar to get the maximum out-of-season flavor, and the fresh mozzarella was good, but the basil was down to shreds, and not very aromatic shreds at that.
I also had a half order of the risotto of the day ($9) as an appetizer, which was very, very good. It was flavored with sausage and some radicchio; and while this recipe was soupier and a little more al dente than mine, it was a delicious, lighter style that I may choose to copy. Gnocchi pomodoro ($14) was a simple but flawless tomato sauce on medium-light pillows of pasta, the apotheosis of comfort food.
Moving over to the grill, it’s hard to pass up the grigliata di mare ($27), a seafood mixed grill that changes daily. The night I tried it, it had two enormous shrimp (as perfectly grilled as shrimp can be), a flavorful piece of light fish (perhaps grouper), two nice chunks of salmon, and a slab of cuttlefish that was a bit chewy but fun to eat.
The striped bass ($26) here sets a new standard for farmed stripers. Fredette has skillfully boned the small fish so it can be wrapped around a stuffing of olive, tomato, and greens; then it’s artfully grilled and presented as a remarkably natural-looking stuffed-and-grilled fish (but no heads or fins, don’t worry). The side dish of lemony sautéed greens was also terrific.
On another visit, we had a special on baked grouper ($24), one of the most flavorful of all white-fleshed fish, here served as a square chunk over a broth of leeks and endives. I love leeks and I love endives, but cooked together they produce a slight fishiness that doesn’t complement this dish. I would suggest leeks and shaved turnip instead.