Pages

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Fine Dining at Prezza

My birthday falls a week after Valentines Day - just long enough where another (as opposed to a dual) celebration dinner is warranted. I feel lucky for this week, appreciating that I don't have to share my day with St. Valentine. However, I'll gladly share my day with the likes of Presidents Washington and Lincoln. Allowed a day off work in their honor, my birthday saw a lot of quality couch time wrapped in my bathrobe, leg warmers and fuzzy slippers. To get out of the apartment for a leisurely dinner was a much needed recess.Last year, Adam and I ventured to Cambridge to experience Craigie on Main. This year the frigid temps kept us close to home. My North End restaurant of choice was Prezza - one of many places I have wanted to dine at for awhile now!
Chef + owner Anthony Catuano opened Prezza in 2000 on a quiet side location towards the outer end of the neighborhood. The restaurant is named after the ancient Italian village where his grandmother was born, a tiny town where they cooked with the local provisions of the land. Referred to as the old-world peasant style of Italian cooking focused on creating robust flavors and hearty portions from scratch, Prezza uses this as their base of inspiration. The menu is refined to incorporate foods of the Mediterranean regions as well as fresh seasonal ingredients.
The wine list is extensive and the page long martini menu was terribly hard to pass up. I settled on a glass of Casamatta Sangiovese ($8) but am absolutely returning to the bar to enjoy a Black Fig Martini ($12) sometime soon.
We started off with slices of hearty bread served in an eye catching abstract tin. And just as Adam was noting his olive craving, fresh olives and olive oil accompanied.
The appetizer choices are robust with all of them set at $15. I found the price point to be reasonable based on our appetizer of choice. It was an easy decision for us to share the Wood Grilled Squid and Octopus ($15). You really can't go wrong with wood grilled, and, stemming from a trip to Greece in 2007, octopus has long been a favorite Mediterranean delicacy.
Coils of briny squid and delicate octopus bathe in a light red sauce with braised white beans and toasted parsley. We were extremely pleased with our first course!Forgoing the route of a standard entrée, I was in the mood for soup. Being that it was 10 degrees outside the Mushroom Soup ($12) beckoned to me. This was the only soup on the menu so I assumed it would be really good.My instinctual cravings did not steer me wrong. First of all, the portion was exceedingly substantial. A large bowl serving an elegant blend of porcini cream and roasted tomato with white beans and hearty mushrooms in every bite, warm and earthy, this soup was pure joy by the spoonful.
Two slices of crispy toast delicately balancing atop them a mountain of fresh grated Parmesan cheese laced with pops of parsley were the finishing touch. I allowed them to melt into the soup, becoming softer bites as they soaked up the hearty broth.
Adam feasted on the Crispy Pork Chop ($26) with vinegar peppers, potatoes, roasted red onions and red wine sauce. The bone in pork chop was huge and perfectly cooked. The vinegar peppers were what made the dish in Adam's opinion. Once I took a bite, I had to agree, pungent red and yellow peppers were stellar.

I was full and content after the bread, appetizer and soup course, but upon placing my order opted in for the Ravioli di Ouvo ($10). I appreciated our waiters candid tips, he let me know this is "one giant ravioli" and suggested I might want to order two. I declined the second but felt good about being thoroughly informed on the fact that only one ravioli was going to be served. Could you imagine expecting a plate full only to your complete surprise, getting this:This jumbo ravioli was about six bites, stuffed with ricotta and an intact egg yolk, ladled with a brown butter and sage sauce topped with shaved Parmigiano. Our waiter was prompt to offer fresh cracked pepper, which I accepted. Slicing into the ravioli was was a feast in itself for the eyes. The brown butter with its complex nutty taste and crispy sage marrying the velvety egg yolk was amazing. Admittedly, I wished for a thicker more toothsome ravioli as I felt the amount of pasta wasn't substantial compared to the intensity of the yolk and amount of sauce it was bathing in. Overall, I imagine this is a difficult dish to achieve!
Prezza serves large portions of creative-without-being-overly-complicated dishes (besides the anomaly that is the Ravioli di Ouvo) in a refined and modern atmosphere. The dimly lit, neutral colored dining room with white linen table cloths and a chestnut brown bar area exude tasteful warmth.  Featuring homemade pasta, a wood grill that is fired up daily and an extensive wine and cocktail list, be sure to detour off Hanover Street and visit them on your next trip to the North End!

24 Fleet Street
Boston, MA 02113

14 comments:

  1. I've been a reader of your blog for a little while now and as a fellow North End resident I always enjoy your reviews of the neighborhood restaurants. No blog of my own - yet! - but just wanted to comment and say I've added Prezza to my list of local places to try!

    ReplyDelete
  2. What an impressive meal! You rarely see olive oil that green just served in restaurants. That and the soup are totally calling my name. Glad you enjoyed it!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I have heard so many great things about Prezza and it is another restaurant that I'm dying to try! The wood-grilled squid and octopus looks SO good!

    ReplyDelete
  4. I don't know anything about squid and octopus, but it seems like a really well-priced item... one that I'd never be brave enough to try, but still.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Everything looks awesome!! I had ravioli di Ouvo at a Stir class a couple years ago and I've been dying to make it ever since. I have a pasta machine and all the tools and can't wait to do it. Nothing better than a pasta and egg combination :) I'm so happy you had a fabulous birthday!! :)

    Sues

    ReplyDelete
  6. That ravioli looks awesome! I've never heard of putting an egg yolk inside the ravioli. We went to Prezza for Jeff's birthday two years ago, I think. I remember having an amazing duck pasta course... and then I ordered venison for my meal. I would not mind going back there at all!

    ReplyDelete
  7. The appetizer looks delicious. I'm a big squid fan. The ravioli is huge!

    ReplyDelete
  8. ok, I totally tried to comment here on my iphone and it didn't work... Prezza is one of my faves. I love the atmoshphere and, damn, that ravioli looks spot on. Happy birthday again :)

    ReplyDelete
  9. looks yummy!! a good place for a bday dinner :)

    PS- thanks for calling out the MFA free day. I swear it is Thurs, but you are right, Wed!

    ReplyDelete
  10. I love Prezza - it is one of my go-to recommendations for the North End (love that it is off Hanover). Happy to see it did not disappoint, looks like a great meal, Happy Birthday!

    ReplyDelete
  11. Beautiful photos - that ravoli looks so delicious! I just cooked with egg yolks last nite with carbonara. Prezza is another place I gotta try : )

    ReplyDelete
  12. what an outstanding birthday dinner! I just had an octopus dish at my birthday dinner with Rafe's mom and we decided it was our favorite item of the night.....the soup looks wonderfully rich and delicious....

    and that ravioli?

    Oh man - that is the stuff dreams are made of!

    ReplyDelete
  13. Sounds so yummy - I would especially like to try the octopus appetizer - thanks for the review :)

    ReplyDelete
  14. I love Prezza. I do have to get back to the North End. Your posts are seriously seducing back over there. The ravioli looks delicious but the squid looks a little scary but I do like squid so I would likely order. Happy Birthday!

    ReplyDelete