The 20 Best L.A. Italian Restaurants – Part 4 of 10
Article: Jonathan Gold • Photohraphs: Anne Fishbein - February 12, 2007

Luxe, Calme et Mackerel
Like a Rolex, a Fendi baguette or a fitted Prada shift, Capo is an advertisement for itself, a raw-beamed icon of tasteful luxury so understated that a typical Giorgio Baldi regular might not see it as luxurious at all. The silver is French, the steak knives from an old Scarperia firm, the gaily painted bread plates from a Deruta workshop that has been making them for more than 500 years. The light is nuanced in the soaring, intimate dining room, falling in the glowing sheets that characterize Holbein paintings. The wine list, as rich in Burgundies and old California Cabernets as it is in Italian wines, is stunningly rich, including ancient vintages of Barolo that are basically unavailable anywhere else in town, although you can turn through pages and pages of it without finding much under $100 a bottle.

As at his old West Beach Café, which brought food, art and Westside trustifarians together in the '80s, Bruce Marder may have created a restaurant more about curation than about cuisine, but Capo is one of the most serious Italian kitchens in the United States, assembling peppery chicken alla diavola, cooked in the fireplace, that is as thin and as crisp as a Chinese scallion pancake; lozenges of toasted polenta laminated with cellophane-thin slices of lard; delicate ravioli stuffed with porcini; house-cured duck prosciutto; risottos made from scratch and a warm grilled-mackerel salad that could be the specialty of any two-star restaurant on the Mediterranean coast. You will pay for the privilege — course for course, this may be the most expensive restaurant in Santa Monica — but if you are comfortable shelling out $44 for a plate of simple grilled fish, Capo feels like the most delicious club you could join.
1810 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, (310) 394-5550.

 
Celestino Drago
 
L.A.'s pasta king: Celestino Drago (above) and some of his handiwork (below)
 
Stuffed pasta

Here There Be Dragos
Celestino Drago has been the king of pasta in Los Angeles since the day we all stopped eating Spaghettis, the duke of carpaccio, the baron of squid-ink risotto. His casual, pan-Italian yet rigorous cooking at his various dining rooms helped define the way Angelenos think about Italian food, and the late all-Sicilian restaurant l'Arancino (the Little Orange), which some critics viewed as his mature statement of purpose, is still one of the most ambitious experiments in regional Italian cooking the city has ever seen. A lot of his early successes — beet risotto with goat cheese, spaghetti al cartoccio (cooked in parchment or foil), the supple tortelloni stuffed with sweet pumpkin — live on at the restaurants Celestino, Il Pastaio, Panzanella, all run by his brothers, and at his own elegant wine bar Enoteca Drago. He even supports a bakery.

But you will most often spot his mournful, bearded countenance at the seat of his empire, Drago, working the door, barking at a sous-chef, following a bit of roast venison or stewed boar out into the dining room as if he had shot it himself. Drago is a passionate hunter who can go on for hours about wild pigs in Northern California and birds in North Dakota, the many uses of hare blood and the sweetness of doves who fatten themselves on autumn fruits. Shot game is illegal in U.S. restaurants (except for imported Scottish game for some reason), so he isn't likely to have killed what is on your plate, but the careful braising and sweet-and-sour flavors that are characteristic of Drago's style really come into focus when he is stuffing boned-out quail with dense sausage, cooking pheasant with mushrooms for a pasta sauce or simmering boar until it all but collapses under its own molecular weight.
2628 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, (310) 828-1585.
Also:
Enoteca Drago, 410 N. Cañon Dr., Beverly Hills, (310) 786-8240;
Celestino, 141 S. Lake Ave., (626) 795-4006, Pasadena;
Il Pastaio, 400 N. Cañon Dr., Beverly Hills, (310) 205-5444;
Panzanella, 14928 Ventura Blvd., Sherman Oaks, (818) 784-4400.

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Source: Originally published by L. A. Weekly – ©2007 L. A. Weekly


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