Dining Out
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When Italian immigrants came to the United States and settled in New
York they brought a gift -- the recipe for pizza -- one with a
cracker-thin crust like you’ll find at Brooklyn Pizza in the Ralph’s
Meadowlark Center.
Owner Lou Scotto learned the business from his uncle who owned 64 New
York pizza places. Opened two and a half years, Brooklyn Pizza looks like
a fast food place but it serves an extensive menu of restaurant-quality
Italian specialties -- beginning with some unusual starters like spinach
rolls (small, $7; large, $11) with fresh sauteed spinach rolled in dough
like a cinnamon bun, toasted and served with dipping sauce.
The calzone, (small, $8; large, $13) which could have been a good
lunch selection was disappointing -- the folded crust, thick and heavy,
held slices of salami and cappicola (rather like sandwich ham slices)
with onions and peppers. Though it looked appetizing, the whole thing was
more crust than filling.
All the baked dishes and pastas begin with soup or salad. The salad is
really big -- “I made it with love,” our server/manager Cindy Lee says as
she brings a serving bowl loaded with greens, sliced onions, black olives
and slivered mozzarella that could have been a light lunch in itself.
Lasagna ($9), hot from the oven with the marinara sauce still sizzling
around the wide, flat pasta, is layered with ricotta cheese and meat
topped with melted mozzarella but was lacking in zest usually found in
Italian sauces. It comes with a basket filled with toasted Italian bread
that is just right.
Handmade ravioli ($9), a dozen meat-stuffed pasta pockets, is the
choice for dinner with the thick tomato marinara. Especially good is the
firm, slightly chewy pasta embellished with plenty of the zesty sauce and
herbs.
Pizza here is “East Coast style,” hand tossed with a thin crust (mini,
$7; Sicilian, $15). There is a choice of 20 toppings -- everything from
the usual sausage and peppers to specials ($2 extra) like artichoke,
spinach and sun dried tomatoes.
There are also low-priced specials ($6) with a salad, a slice from a
large pizza and a drink that are good balanced selections.
There are no desserts at Brooklyn Pizza -- it’s strictly pizza and
pasta with all its variations -- great to eat in (there’s also an outside
patio) or take home to share while watching TV.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have comments
or suggestions, call (562) 493-5062 or e-mail o7 [email protected]
FYI
Brooklyn Pizza
WHERE: 5205 Warner Ave, at Bolsa Chica Street
HOURS: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday; 9 a.m. to noon
Sunday
PHONE: (714) 377-8855
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