Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Restaurant Review of Gloria's Little Italy

The majority of Italian restaurants I’ve visited in America have been embellished affairs, with flowers, soft music and reprints of semi-famous paintings adorning the walls. The atmosphere in these restaurants usually consists of every non-table surface being covered with darkly tinted wine bottles and baskets of pasta, tomatoes and garlic. This, however, is not the experience of dining had by most diners in Italy itself. Most Italian trattoria are not nearly this ostentatious, focusing on quality food and value rather than pomp and scenery. Gloria’s Little Italy follows this philosophy, a breath of fresh air in a market drowning in fake Italian music and too many lobster dishes.

Gloria’s is an unassuming, metal-chair-and-plastic-tablecloth kind of establishment. The restaurant, tucked cozily to the side of the kitchen and market section of the store, is lined with shelves holding a wide variety of purchasable imported European goods. The dining room is abuzz with busy staff and regular customers, some holding hushed conversations, some bantering back and forth in both Italian and English.

Upon seating, I asked the waitress (who had neither a Sicilian accent nor a name ending in –a) to suggest a dish for a first-timer. She steered me toward the pesto pasta, a house specialty. While waiting for my entrée, I was treated to a small salad and a few slices of bread. The salad was quite good, with a variety of unusual but tasty lettuces lightly sprinkled with olive oil and balsamic vinegar. The tomatoes, sadly, were rather tasteless and spongy, not unusual considering our location and season. The bread, drizzled with olive oil was warm and inviting, with an unanticipated but satisfying saltiness.

The pesto dish lived up to its billing. Penne pasta, tossed in copious amounts of olive oil-laden pesto sauce, was delightfully smooth and simple. The individual flavors of basil, olive and pine nuts, like harmonies in beautiful music, had been respectfully blended to create a balanced accord bringing out the highlights of each ingredient. The result was eminently rewarding.

The menu at Gloria’s consists almost exclusively of pastas and calzones, ranging in price from $7 - $14. There were select few antipasti or appetizers, one of which, amusingly, is the most expensive item available. There is a range of desserts available: distinctive cakes, flaky pastries and luscious gelato make their appearances, each with unpredictable and varying options. The servings are generous (especially the slices of cake) and the service hurried but friendly. Reservations are suggested for groups and on weekends.

Dining at Gloria’s Little Italy is a great experience. If you’re looking for fancy china, all-you-can eat breadsticks or expensive seafood, you may be better served elsewhere. However, if you want an Italian experience reminiscent of your favorite corner Italian restaurant in Europe, look no further. Gloria’s has the atmosphere, the ingredients and the personality to transport you right back to the outskirts of Florence, Milan or Rome.

Gloria’s Little Italy

279 E. 300 S.

(801) 805-4913

4 comments:

Bradwich said...

Good to finally hear from you again! I like this idea of you testing out restaurants and passing along recommendations. Keep it up.

Tamara Hart Heiner said...

I love Gloria's Little Italy as well...I'm extremely picky about my Italian food and this is the real, fresh stuff. It tastes good for you! Thanks for helping such a great place get known!

Anonymous said...

Fresh? haven't you heard that they prepare their food with frozen vegetables?

Anonymous said...

My wife and I have been going to Gloria’s for more than two years, but after our last visit we will NEVER go back. As my wife took a spoonful of her soup she bit into a rock… I’m not even kidding a rock! Now I understand that stuff happens, and sometimes things like this are totally out of the kitchen’s control, and they just happen, but what disappointed me, and honestly made me crazy angry, was that their manager never apologized for the mishap. She showed no concern for my wife or for us as regular customers. She said that they would take the soup off the check to “make it right with us”. In reality what she was saying was; you could have choked or seriously damaged you teeth, so here is 3 dollars off your 40 dollar tab. I was so mad that I asked to talk with her boss, which just so happened to be Gloria… the “Gloria” the owner. When I told her about how much we had liked going to the restaurant over the last few years and how disappointed we were in how the situation was handled, all she could say is it’s not our cook’s fault. She showed no concern or empathy whatsoever. Even when I told her we just felt like we should receive an apology she refused to do so. This restaurant makes a great chicken parm. But I refuse to be treated like dirt by an expensive place like that.