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This isn’t your old favorite Italian-American restaurant, but if good red sauce what you’re craving this may be your new one. Julian Barsotti, the chef behind the lauded regional Italian cooking of Nonna, goes Caesar salad and meatballs in his newest offering in Highland Park. During lunch, you’ll find a deli with some of the best heros you can get in Dallas. At night the space shifts to a full-service, sit-down restaurant. The pasta upholds Barsotti’s reputation for noodle nirvana, but roast sausage with polenta and other meaty plates are worth a look too. Don’t skip dessert. Light and fluffy cheese fills an impossibly crunchy canoli and a semifreddo put your standard tiramisu to shame.
Inexpensive and cheap are two completely different things. Not everyone has a ton of coin to blow on a lunch now and then, but financial restrictions don't necessarily have to relegate you to the like... More »
See also: *Carbone's: Jimmy's for the 1 Percent Burrata. Say it again. Roll the "Rs" this time. Giada-style. Ooh yeah, that's the stuff. Burrata is kind of like mozzarella, in the same way Moet & C... More »
Dallas has plenty of Italian-American restaurants. The problem is very few of them are any good. While Lucia, Nonna and other regional Italian restaurants pay homage to the Old World with brilliant dishes featuring little fishes, hand-rolled... More »
Did you recognize it? I wouldn't have had a friend not pointed it out while dining at Carbone's, the subject of this week's review. He turned a painting on the wall into a bit of movie trivia at my ta... More »
To prepare for this fall's Best of Dallas® 2012 issue, we're counting down (in no particular order) our 100 Favorite Dishes. If there's a dish you think we need to try, leave it in the comments, ... More »
Texas convention says everything should be ridiculously big. Dallas convention is that all dessert should be sweet. The two combine to result in portions the size of a The Rock's forearm, chocolate that's cloying and fruit that's so saccharine it tastes like a plastic-wrapped freeze pop. It doesn't have to be this way. In Highland Park, a young Italian chef is breaking this convention one dessert plate at a time. Try the semifreddo to see what we mean. The respectably sized quenelles of... More »
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