Artwork, Italian cuisine a good match
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DINING OUT
Toscany, the Italian cafe in the long strip mall between Beach
Boulevard and Gothard Avenue, across from the old Huntington Beach
Mall, has had a checkered past.
Joseph Andrew is its most recent owner, but kitchen manager Jose
Hernandez has been there for nine years. The most recent addition is
Ryan Barnett, a cordon bleu-trained executive chef from Oregon. It is
he who has made a big difference in creating a varied menu of pastas
and pizza.
A good introduction is the express lunch (11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday
through Friday), which has nine entree choices as well as the Lunch
Pizza with six topping choices ($7.95).
The lunch begins with a salad with dewy, fresh greens topped with
a handful of ripe olives, a slice of cucumber and a tomato quarter.
The dressings are homemade and good -- I chose seasoned Italian. My
friend chose soup -- minestrone with lots of vegetables in a mild
spicy tomato broth.
Signature rolls, fresh from the oven and topped with sesame seeds
came with the lunch, even though my entree of ravioli came with thick
slices of rather ordinary buttered Italian bread.
The ravioli (lunch $5.95, dinner $7.25), five meat-filled pockets
served in a piping hot casserole just out of the oven, was very good
with two melted cheeses topping the light chewy pasta. The pasta is
thin, which I like since it keeps the calorie-loaded pasta to a
minimum and gives plenty of room for the excellent minced filling,
and served in a rich marinara.
If you’re a traditionalist, the spaghetti ($5.50) is a generous
pile of pasta. It was to have been topped with meat sauce, which
wasn’t available, so accommodating Ryan substituted a great fat
Italian sausage -- meaty, firm, not too spicy with a faint flavor of
anise.
A former owner says the cornerstone of Toscany is the pizza (11 to
15-inch, 8 slices, $10.75, 12 slices $14.95). We went for the special
($10.95 to $15.95), a beautiful thing to behold.
It’s New York-style with all the good meats you’d find in an
Italian kitchen. The crispy bottom and thick texture have enough body
to absorb the flavors of ham, sausage and salami with slices of
earthy mushrooms, crispy bits of bell peppers and onion. Wholly
satisfying, whether you eat-in, take-out or delivered -- pizza knows
no season.
Ah, desert! This too is made in the kitchen -- a
hot-from-the-oven, Creme Brule ($5.50) thick baked custard with
caramelized sugar topping that breaks like glass as soon as you spoon
it into the creamy custard.
We came at the beginning of the lunch hour and the service was
“express” but for patrons arriving at the height of the lunch hour,
service was slower -- an additional helper could be useful.
Toscany is a charming place decorated with original paintings by
Melodie Bell, with the latticed alcoves providing privacy and with
chef Ryan presenting an authentic hard to beat kitchen.
Some times treasures can be found in the most unlikely places as
at Toscany -- intimate and delicious.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have
comments or suggestions, call (562) 493-5062 or e-mail
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