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Morandi
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Hours
Mon-Fri, noon-3pm and 5:30pm-midnight; Sat-Sun, 10am-4pm and 5:30pm-midnight
Nearby Subway Stops
1 at Christopher St.-Sheridan Sq.; A, B, C, D, E, F, V at W. 4th St.-Washington Sq.
Prices
$18-$26
Payment Methods
American Express, MasterCard, Visa
Special Features
- Breakfast
- Brunch - Weekend
- Hot Spot
- Lunch
- Notable Chef
- Romantic
Alcohol
- Full Bar
Reservations
Recommended
Profile
At this point in Keith McNally’s impressive career, it probably doesn’t matter where he situates his restaurants. The great franchiser of facile, casually racy Euro-style dining could open a brasserie in the Rockaways and people would still show up in their glittering limousines. Plenty of people are certainly showing up at Morandi. I never glimpsed an empty table during my evening visits (for peace and quiet, go at lunch), and the cramped bar area was always brimming with a sea of expectant faces. Indeed, the room, with its close ceiling and buffed brick walls, seems designed to convey a feeling of busyness and density. Small distressed-wood chandeliers hang from the ceiling, and the walls are lined with thatched bottles of Chianti. Sitting at the tiny wooden tables, everyone tends to hunch forward like guests at some diminutive, Hobbit-size ball. This may not be such a bad thing, since the noise in the room reaches such bedlam levels that to ask your neighbor for the salt, you must yell like a lunatic at the top of your lungs. McNally’s singular contribution to the Zeitgeist is, of course, the faux French brasserie meal, which he helped introduce, in the eighties, at Odeon, then perfected at Balthazar. But Italian food is not news to New Yorkers, and there’s not much on the menu at Morandi that any restaurant hound hasn’t seen a hundred times before. The chef is Jody Williams, who specializes in the trendy art of wood-oven cooking, most recently at a trendy little restaurant called Gusto in the West Village. But this is a trendy big restaurant, and the demands on the kitchen are more extreme. Maybe that’s why I tended to like the smaller, less complicated items better, like the salty fritto misto containing crunchy, fresh head-on shrimp, and the frizzled artichokes served with their stalks, just like in Rome.
Ideal MealFried artichokes or fritto misto, octopus with black olives, roasted veal chop, cassata.
Related Stories
New York Magazine Reviews
- Adam Platt's Full Review (4/9/07)
Featured In
- The Breakfast Manifesto - The City's Best Morning Meals (6/9/08)
- Where to Eat 2008 (1/7/08)
- Think Italian at These West Village Restaurants (8/13/07)
- Restaurant Openings: Morandi, Amalia, Miriam, and Nino's Bellissima Pizza (2/26/07)
Recipes at Morandi
- Raw-Artichoke Salad (2007)
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