Week In Reviews: Angelini Osteria, Buenos Aires Grill, Chaya Brasserie, Food Court, Square One and MORE
Wednesday, October 3, 2007

S. Irene Virbila revisits Anglini Osteria, Gino Angelini's casual Italian eatery that made waves when it opened in 2001. It was rustic, inexpensive, casual, stylish; and it still is for the most part, as Miss Irene carefully notes for the good first half of her review. But something's missing:

But on this and on some other recent visits, the food, I'm sorry to say, isn't nearly as good as it used to be. Gino Angelini is cooking mostly at La Terza now, and without the master chef's steady presence, or someone as capable at the helm, the kitchen often loses its focus.

A special pizza bianca with sausage and mushrooms doesn't have enough cheese to weld the toppings to the surface of the dough, and they fall off when you try to eat a slice. An octopus dish is mushy, either overcooked or not the same high grade served at other restaurants around town...The plating can be sloppy too. Angelini's wonderfully earthy dish of tripe simmered in tomato sauce is still very good, but what's that big ugly cuttlefish doing splayed in the middle of the plate? Who thought this was so dashing?

Also noting that prices are higher, the food is hit or miss, service has gone from "warm and professional" to "brusque and charming," and the Mozzas and All' Angelo both nearby, Miss Irene practically asks: So why go? She really liked Angelini Osteria when it opened, giving it two-and-a-half stars; now it's stripped down to one-and-a-half stars. Today the "S." stands for "slipshod." If you're interested, Miss Irene's first review of Angelini Osteria. [LAT]

ELSEWHERE: Northridge's Buenos Aires Grill serves a rockin' parridilla; Chaya Brasserie good lunch alternative to The Grill; Square One Dining still serves a mean breakfast; Madeline Bistro is a Tarzana oasis; Food Court, not so much; Cinco de Mayo has bigger menu, smaller lines next door to Tito's.





Comments (0 extant)





Back to top




photos in Eater LA Photo Pool See more and submit to Eater LA Photo Pool

LA Links
Utility
AOL CityGuide
Citysearch
Dodgeball
Gayot
LA.com
LA Establishment Ratings
Menupages
OpenTable
Social Domain
Yelp
Zagat

Gastro-Communities
Cheww [beta]
Chow
Chowhound
Digesty LA
eGullet
Serious Eats [beta]
ShamelessRestaurants
Urban Spoon

Buzz & Scene
Blackburn and Sweetzer
blogdowntown
Caroline on Crack
DailyCandy
Franklin Avenue
Flavorpill
Juli B
LA City Beat
LA.comfidential
LA Daily News
LAist
LA Times
LA Weekly
Living Large
Losanjealous
Time Out LA
Metroblogging LA
Thrillist
The Rundown
UrbanDaddy

Food Journals
Alan Richman
Amuse-Bouche [rss]
Best of LA [rss]
Bruni Digest [rss]
Clublife [rss]
Colleen Cuisine [rss]
The Delicious Life [rss]
NYT Diner's Journal [rss]
Eat Drink & Be Merry [rss]
Eating LA [rss]
The Food Section
Foodie Universe [rss]
Foodite [rss]
Gastrologica [rss]
Gastropoda
The Great Taco Hunt [rss]
Gridskipper LA [rss]
The Grinder [rss]
A Hamburger Today [rss]
The Knife [rss]
LA Food Crazy [rss]
la.foodblogging [rss]
Oishii Eats [rss]
OMG Food! [rss]
Potatomato [rss]
Rate A Restaurant [rss]
Ruhlman [rss]
Slice [rss]
Snack [rss]
Teenage Gluster [rss]
Triplecreme [rss]
Tuna Toast [rss]


About Eater LA
Eater LA is a blog that covers the Los Angeles restaurant, bar and nightlife scene. From the newest hotspots to the historic rock clubs on the Strip, Eater LA has you covered. Read more about Eater LA...

Tipping Is Customary
Know about a restaurant opening or closing in your neighborhood, or other LA scene gossip? Let's hear it.

Full content feed



Search this site



Eater LA
Editor
Lesley Balla

Los Angeles Editor
Dakota Smith

Eater Eds-in-Chief
Ben Leventhal
Lockhart Steele

Photographer
Alen Lin

Banner Design
Jim Cooke

Publisher/GM
Kyle Crafton

Head of Technology
Eliot Shepard

Other Curbed Sites
Los Angeles
Curbed LA

San Francisco
Curbed SF
Eater SF

New York
Curbed NY
Eater NY
Racked NY
The Beach (seasonal)

Contact Us
Email Eater LA