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Restaurant Guide to Naples:
Restaurants & Trattorias

(in no particular order)

Cucina

 

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Mimi Montage
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Da Dora is a tiny, unprepossessing restaurant on a tiny street off the main street that runs behind the Villa Communale, Naples biggest park, which itself runs along the sea. But there’s no need to search your map. Every cab driver knows Da Dora. Every concierge knows Da Dora. It has the reputation of having the most impeccable fish in the city. Without pretensions.

Since there are so few tables, it’s good to make a reservation. They are open for both lunch and dinner. At both meals, you will not only eat extremely well, you may well be entertained by a postegiatore, a traveling musician who plays guitar and sings Neapolitan songs. Your waiter is likely to be Tony, who speaks some English because he was once posted at an American base in Antarctica. Over his desk was a map of the U.S. There was not much to do in Antarctica. He memorized the map, which is how he knows all the state capitols and likes to quiz American guests to show off: “How many state capitols, and which, start with the same initial as the name of their state?” That’s a typical Tony question.

What to eat? Among the antipasti you may want to try new-born fish, neonati, or fragaglie as they are called in Neapolitan dialect, miniscule white things with a faint flavor of the sea, either sautéed with a whiff of garlic in olive oil, or fried into little pancakes, fritelle. All the fried things are wonderful, as they frequently are in Naples. You should move on to the pasta with mixed shellfish – linguine Dora – which is with whatever was best in the market that day. Or simply order spaghetti with clams. Remember that Neapolitans prefer their pasta (in this dish anyway) cooked much firmer than you are probably accustomed to. Ask for it a little more cooked, if you don’t want super-firm pasta.

If you want to eat more, have simple grilled fish. If you are feeling splurgy, take a lobster. Or have the lobster with linguine.

I’d save room for a gelato taken while walking around nearby Chiaia, the fancy shopping district, after lunch. You will certainly need a walk. Oh yes, drink Falanghina, the crisp, mineraly white wine that Neapolitans favor with fish.

And tell them that Schwartz and Baronessa Bellelli Baratta sent you. We often bring our groups here.
Via Ferdinando Palasciano, 28/30 (a block off Riviera di Chiaia)
Tel: 081-680-519, also 081-660-762

   
 

Europeo di Mattozzi is one of Naples’ most beloved restaurants. Businessmen from the nearby financial center of the city frequent it at lunch. You’ll see families and couples in the evening. Only lately, however, through a glowing piece in Travel & Leisure magazine, has it become known to the few tourists who go to Naples. The homey standards of the Neapolitan table are all prepared very well, with the best ingredients. The old-time atmosphere, with copper cookware hanging on one wall, a hodgepodge of mostly mediocre paintings hanging on another, and some ceramics hanging on yet another, make it very much of its place.

The restaurant has been owned by the Mattozzi family for more than 100 years. Currently, you are likely to be greeted by the very welcoming smile of Alfonso Mattozzi, although his equally hospitable daughter, Fabiana, is often present as well. If you haven’t eaten your fill of mozzarella di bufala by the time you get here, then by all means order it as an antipasto. You’ll get a large cheese that is easily split by two or three, although it takes only one Neapolitan to finish it off. Any of the fried items are stupendi, including fried zucchini flowers (in season), fried neonati, newborn fish, also called fragaglie in Neapolitan dialect, or maybe a mixed fish fry, or just fried calamari (a revelation if you have only eaten our tasteless squid). Seafood salad, insalata di mare will also shock you with its sea flavor. The minestra, meaning what I like to call “the pasta and” first courses, are particularly good here – pasta and potatoes, pasta and beans, pasta and lentils, pasta and squash. The pizza is outstanding. The grilled fish are a good choice for a main course -- by no means obligatory if you have filled up on antipasti and pasta -- but follow the lead of Signore Mattozzi. He recommends only what’s best that day. Of course, tell him Arturo Schwartz sent you.
Via Campodisola Marchese, 4 (near Piazza Bovio, also called Piazza Borsa) tel: 081-552-1323

   
  Ciro a Mergellina: An all-around first-rate contemporary, middle class, informal restaurant at the intersection of two of the best neighborhoods in Napoli -- Mergellina and Posillipo. It has the reputation of being where the chic people go, but it's more like where the substantial people go -- in large and small family groups, with dates, with business associates, not to see and be seen but to eat. Recommended: Anything fried, including mozzarella -- ask if they have pasta cresciuta (fritters) with alghe (seaweed) or cicinielli (just-born fish). Some say the pizza is the best in Napoli, but several places have that reputation. Moderate prices. English is spoken by the owners, if not the waiters.
    Via Mergellina 21 (the Lungomare); tel. (081) 681-780 (some tel. numbers have only 6 digits). Closed Mondays
   
  Mimì alla Ferrovia: A very famous and beloved restaurant, a generally bustling place in an old and not good neighborhood near the train station. My experience is welcoming, friendly, helpful service, although they definitely favor their many well-heeled regulars and I have had complaints from tourists about an off-hand attitude toward strangers. Don't expect a menu; although there is one. Take the advice of the waiter. They won't mislead you. Recommended: Leave it to the waiter to make up an antipasto selection. Make sure to have insalata russa if they have it (unless you hate mayonnaise - I love it). Have fish, and pasta with fish, although pasta and beans and other traditional Neapolitan dishes are great, too. Many fish and shellfish on display by the door. A great place for octopus. Moderate prices.
    Via Alfonso D'Aragona 19 (near the main train station at Piazza Garibaldi); tel. (081) 553-8525. Closed Sundays.
   
 

La Cantinella: Fancy (the toilets have automated flushing) and expensive, with a street-level view of the bay from window tables. The food is mostly traditional Neapolitan with touches of "Continental" but beautifully prepared and served. My friend Bruno DeRosa, who lives in Naples, tells me that they lately are doing more stylish food - after the chef and owner recently visited New York and cooked at Tony May's San Domenico. Some Neapolitans consider this the best restaurant -- real restaurant -- in the city. It is, indeed, used much for business at lunch, but it is usually less busy at dinner. Great cakes and desserts are made by the chef. (I'm known here by both the owner and chef. You could drop my name, not that it will get you anything extra. ) Expensive.
    Via Cuma 42 (Via Cuma is an extension of Via Partenope, theLungomare or main sea-side street, but the entrance to the restaurant is on the side street); tel. (081) 764-8769. Closed Sundays.

     
Octopus

Naples is famous for its octopus, most often stewed with tomatoes and olive oil.
  53: This is another traditional trattoria on Piazza Dante (see Dante e Beatrice, above). It also serves a seasonal menu, and you can, again, take the advice of the waiter. Famous for its array of antipasti, you may want to lunch on only the daily offering and then just a bowl of pasta, or a soup. There are outside tables sometimes, but I don't recommend them if the new subway construction is still in progress in the piazza. Moderate prices.
    Piazza Dante 53, tel. (081) 549 9372. Closed Wednesdays.
   
  Ciro a Santa Brigida: A fancyish restaurant with traditional food and good pizza in a separate side pizzeria. Local businessmen and many well-heeled shoppers can be seen here at lunch. It tends to be less busy at dinner. Personally, I think the big reputation of the place exceeds its quality. Expensive
    Off the Via Toledo, one of the main shopping streets and the main N-S street. Via Santa Brigida 71; tel. (081) 552-4072. Closed Sundays.
   
  Pizzeria Bellini: You can't miss Bellini because you'll approach it as soon as you walk through Port Alba, one of the two the main gates of the old city, off Piazza Dante. It's great for people watching and also for antipasti and pizza, but I'm putting it in the restaurant/trattoria category because it serves other dishes, most notably spaghetti with seafood baked in parchment. In warm weather, try to sit outside. Inside, the choice is between a cramped upstairs room or an even more cramped downstairs area, which is too uncomfortable for me. The regulars are a very substantial local crowd, including the arty and highly cultured denizens of this nowadays fashionable neighborhood inside the old city walls. Moderate prices.
    In Piazza Bellini, at Via Costantinopoli (just inside Port Alba); tel. (081) 458-774. Closed Sundays
   
  Masaniello: Small trattoria-like restaurant on Riviera di Chiaia, one of the main streets along the bay and its public park, Villa Communale. Only a couple of blocks from the hub of the fancy shopping area -- Piazza dei Martiri. Ingredients are of the highest quality and the kitchen has finesse with the simplest dishes. Recommended: Order antipasti here -- it will be an array of small plates, including a whole buffalo mozzarella, great seafood salad, some salami and/or prosciutto, and who knows what else. Could be a meal, but save room for perfectly prepared, if simple pasta with seafood and fresh fish. Moderate prices.
    Via Donnalbina 28 -- this is the address given in guidebooks. It's on Riviera di Chiaia, which, as some street in Naples do, has a different name at that point, tel. (081) 552-8863. Closed Sundays, except in December
     
Octopus

Aqua Pazza is a typical method of cooking fish. water -- originally sea water -- is flavored with garlic, parsley, olive oil and sometimes tomatoes, too. Then the fish is cooked in the "crazy water," which may be served as a light broth with the fish, or reduced to make a brothy sauce
  La Sacrestia: This is the city's most famous, glamorous, and expensive restaurant, high on a Posillipo hill with picture postcard views of the city and the Gulf of Naples. A few years ago, after the local government and business community was purged of numerous crooks, the joke was that the dining room was empty. All the regulars were in jail. But, according to my scouts, business is back to usual. Come for the view, the elegant décor, and the house specialties - like folded pasta sheets stuffed with ricotta and chives, eggplant ravioli, and timbali (pastry drums filled with pasta and various delicacies). Very expensive.
    Via Orazio 116; tel. (081) 761 1051. Closed Sunday evenings and Monday lunch
   
  Giuseppone a Mare: The reputation of this seaside Posillipo restaurant is long-standing, and it can't be beat for location - right on the water and facing Vesuvius. How can anyone resist sitting facing a little marina, colorful boats bobbing in the current, the sun's reflection (or perhaps the moon's) on the sea flooding your table with its glow. I have a nostalgic connection here as well. I came here on my very first trip to Naples and, daring all the stories about how dangerous the city was, I took a post-prandial nap on the stone jetty outside. Eat seafood and fish.
    Via F. Russo, 13; tel. 00390817691384
   
  Zia Teresa: Most tourists know this place because it is in the famous little marina called Santa Lucia and directly across the street from the city's three big, internationally known gulf-side hotels - Vesuvio, Excelsior and Santa Lucia. It also can't be missed at such a location -- it has a disturbingly big sign. Santa Lucia is now a collection of restaurants and cafes where many Neapolitans come at night to stroll, see friends, and have a bite to eat. Usually it is a young crowd, but after a performance at San Carlo or other downtown cultural event, you can see a good cross-section of the city. The food at Zia Teresa is fine enough. The people watching is always excellent. They make good pizza at night.
   
  Warning: Don Salvatore and La Cantina di Triunfo are both highly touted in many guide books and in several recent stories about Naples in periodicals. However. I have eaten very poorly at both. I walked out of Don Salvatore after the third disgraceful dish in one meal, and felt no reason to return. It is, indeed, a favorite of Neapolitan businessmen, however. I have eaten at La Cantina twice and was unimpressed, except that it is a charming atmosphere. Once, they actually burned the acqua pazza, a dish that has broth.
     
     
Naples Guide: Pizzerias - Tavola Calda - Paticcerie - Cafes & Sweets - One Day Walking Tour of Naples
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