Get a Leg Up on the Critics: Sample City Sicilian Before Morandi Opens
2/22/07 at 1:19 PM
Picture it, Sicily, 2007: Dani's octopus with parsley potatoes.Photo courtesy Dani
• Cacio e Vino
The East Village eatery got some love from Rob and Robin – the menu carries dishes you won’t even find in far more expensive restaurants, and they’re all spot-on. If you’re in the mood for pizza, go for it, but don’t neglect the pungent antipasti and the stuffed calzones called farciti. 80 Second Ave., nr. 4th St.; 212-228-3269
Related: Sicily or Bust: Cacio e Vino to Join Minority Representing for the Island [NYM]
• Dani
Don Pintabona’s Hudson Square outpost is one of the city’s bastions of elevated Sicilian cookery. You can’t go wrong with the basics: bucatine con sarde, house-cured meats, and octopus with parsley potatoes. Plus, the bar is nice for hanging out while you digest sardines. 333 Hudson St., at Charlton St.; 212-633-9333
• Joe’s of Avenue U
Even the most dedicated foodies rarely venture out to the very edge of Gravesend in South Brooklyn. But this old-school, ultrafriendly place serves all the Sicilian specialties you could hope for, from the spleen-and-cheese sandwiches known as vesteddi to kick-ass caponata to the mother of all stuffed rice balls, loaded with meat and fresh ricotta from nearby Eagle Dairy. 287 Ave. U, nr. McDonald Ave., Gravesend, Brooklyn; 718-449-9285

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