Del Posto: New York, NY
I didn’t know what to expect from Mario Batali, Joe, and Lidia
Bastianich’s new restaurant. Even after
all of the hype, the Food TV special, and then all of the subsequent chatter on
the internet (mostly, apparently, from people who had never actually eaten at
the place, and oddly, to me, seemed to have no interest in eating at the place), I still
didn’t know what to expect. What I
really wanted was to have a meal as good as those I’ve had at Babbo. That’s a lot to ask of most restaurants, but
it shouldn’t be a lot to ask of Del Posto.
At any rate, given my expectations and hopes, Del Posto delivered: I had a meal as good as those I’ve had at Babbo. I’m guessing that’s not what they’re shooting for, though.
A couple of things stood out, and here's what matters:
Bread was served with butter and pureed lardo. Yeah, pureed lardo. Lardo, for those who don’t know, is basically pure fat. I’ve had lardo at Otto (another Batali restaurant), both on their pizza, and on their crostini, and it’s never as good as the lardo I fell in love with in Florence. Specifically, the lardo at Osteria del Cinghiale Bianco. However, this lardo, all pureed up, scented with rosemary, was as good a lardo as you’re likely to ever have. I was eating with my fingers because I didn’t want to cut the flavor with the bread. The bread was very good, though. Just not as good as the lardo.
The server seemed to push us to order a pasta tasting course in between
the antipasti and secondi, not that it took too much pushing. A pasta tasting course of three pastas, mind
you. But hey, I’m all for three pastas. Unfortunately I didn’t have control over the
choices, but my guests chose a couple of decent dishes. Our favorite was the spicy spaghetti with
crab. This dish had a total of about 4
or 5 elements. Simple. Perfect. The spinach pasta Bolognese was quite good, whereas the goat cheese
tortellini with a creamy sauce, eh.
For an entrée I had another pasta. Why not. After all, my favorite dinners at Babbo have always been the pasta tastings. The veal ravioli with ramps was really super. I was dying for ramps, and they really delivered. I wouldn’t be surprised if they were pulled from the ground that afternoon. Again, this was a seemingly simple dish. Every flavor stood out. I’d order it again in a heartbeat.
The pork loin ordered by a friend was most certainly the best pork loin I’ve ever had. When I read “pork loin” on the menu, I didn’t give it a second look. However, this was well worth ordering. It was like no loin I’ve ever had: tender, flavorful, and really quite delicious
I thought the service was efficient and friendly. The sommelier was working very hard for our large table. I’m not sure how busy he was other than our table, but he certainly spent a lot of time humoring my stupid questions and dealing with the barrage of others’ stupid questions.
They don’t allow dining at the very large and spacious
bar. It’s the only Batali/Bastianich
restaurant that I’ve been to where this is the case. To me, this flies in the face of the spirit
of their restaurants, but I suppose the spirit at Del Posto is purposefully
different. They do, apparently, allow
hookers at the bar, presumably to entertain creepy middle-aged bar patrons and to keep the bar
tabs high. The hookers, and the creepy
guys talking to them, were a definite turn-off and, to me, flew in the face of
the spirit of the place. If they weren’t
hookers, my apologies go out to them. But they looked and acted like hookers. What can I tell ya.
I suppose I’ll return. I dunno. It’s probably going to
be easier to get a reservation at Del Posto than Babbo, so, you know, it has
that going for it.
Del Posto : 85 10th ave btwn 15th and 16th : 212.497.8090
aside: And if Talyor Hicks doesn’t take this thing, I just don’t know what I’ll do. 1 866 IDOLS 10. Vote often.




Yeah, yeah I voted for Taylor. Is there even another choice to win? Got through a few times but got a lot of busy signals too. Hope that's a good sign.
Now how did I miss a special about Lidia on the tv food network? I looked at the site and didn't see anything about it, but the site can be hard to navigate. Do you know if it will be airing again?
The meal sounds yummy (except for the hooker bar part). I've been to Felidia twice -- had a great meal the first time (she was there that night -- and was so nice.) and a pretty good meal the second time (can't remember if she was there.)
Gonna have to add this to my list of restaurants I want to dine at. That list just keeps getting bigger.
Posted by: Beth | May 03, 2006 at 08:24 AM
Beth,
the special on Food TV was actually about the opening of Del Posto. cynics call it a "commerical." but i found it interesting regardless. do you have TiVo? you should if you don't. you could set up a wish list for "del posto" and it'll record whenever it comes on again. here's the info: Mario: Full Boil
Posted by: tommyeats | May 03, 2006 at 08:59 AM
Butcher? A Styx? Song? If I ponder this much more, my head will explode.
Posted by: Priscilla | May 03, 2006 at 02:39 PM
Did you have dessert?
What did you drink?
How much did this envious meal cost?
Posted by: Rosie | May 03, 2006 at 05:49 PM
Leave it to Rosie to get to the important questions. :)
Posted by: Beth | May 04, 2006 at 08:36 AM
what *didn't* we drink should be the question.
most of us started off with prosecco, which is exactly how any italian meal should start off. in fact, it's how most meals should start off.
of the wines i have notes on:
we started with a red from Valle D'Aosta. a 2002 Les Cretes. Valle D'Aosta is way the hell up right next to france, and this wine reminded us of that. very "french."
we had a 2000 cascina la barbatella from Piedmont. this was the crowd favorite.
moved on to a 1998 Guiseppe Mascarello Barolo from Piedmont. sipped on this right through the vertical tasting of parmigiano reggiano. a nice way to finish a bottle of barolo.
to wrap it all up there was a sparkling rose wine whose name i forget (although i think i have it written down somewhere). a beautiful rose, which is actually a mixture of white juice and red juice.
i think the bill was about 260 pp before tip. obviously this included lots of extras, so don't think that you can't have a meal here for less. you absolutely can.
Posted by: tommyeats | May 04, 2006 at 10:49 AM
Eff the food talk on this blog...now I want you to start AI posts! KIIIIIIILLING me. And I'm with you on Taylor. Spastic, yes, but SO talented. And of course, I love that he's not a kid!
Meal sounds yummy too, btw. MUST. GET. TO. BABBO. MUST.
Posted by: Ev | May 05, 2006 at 09:27 PM
Friends of mine attended a special nite at del Posto a few weeks back. It was a wine pairing dinner for 60 guests with Lidia. The dinner was $325 per person, and they raved about it. All I got was signed autographed book.
:-((
Posted by: karen | July 05, 2007 at 03:41 PM