Mama Mias in Saratoga Living
Transcription
Mama Mias in Saratoga Living
Buon Story by NATON LESLIE Photography by TERRI-LYNN PELLEGRI A ppetito! At Mama Mia’s, a mother’s recipes are the secret to success. W Italian lagers and Mama Giovanna’s eggplant parmigiana pizza at Mama Mia’s on Ballston Avenue. ith dozens of great restaurants located on or near Broadway in Saratoga Springs, who would think to discover one in the Price Chopper plaza on Ballston Avenue? Perhaps you’ve spotted the place, wedged between a mattress store and Quarters, a neighborhood bar; its simple electric signs announcing “Pizza” and “Café” in red letters are that visible from the road. Perhaps you’ve seen the other sign, “Mama Mia’s,” and thought it must be one in a chain of pizza parlors, the likes of which can be found in any shopping plaza in the region. As you approach the restaurant, the first tip-off that this might not be one of those all-too familiar pizzerias is the sixfoot-tall plaster statue of a chef standing outside the front door holding a sign that reads “Open.” Except for his size, he’s nothing special either, as this portly puffy-cheeked chef-figure has become ubiquitous as a restaurant-decorating motif. But then you spy “Giuseppe” printed neatly on his hatband. That’s the name of the owner, Giuseppe Grisio, from Bari, Italy. And a picture of his 78-year-old mother Giovanna, who lives in Italy, is depicted on the restaurant window. This is the real deal: Italian food just like Mama used to make. Inside, you leave the sterile, over-lighted hustle of the busy plaza parking lot for a spacious dining area, elegant but cozy, with intimately partitioned dining areas S a r at o g a L i v i n g • 31 Left: The menu offers something for everyone, which makes Mama Mia’s popular with small groups and large families alike. Below: Crostino pizza (at left) and spaghetti with marinara sauce (at right) are among the best-sellers on the menu. and jazz playing softly in the background. Photographs of Umbria, Florence and Rome dot the walls, and wall sconces and pendulum lighting further mute and soften the warm wood paneling. It is quiet, yet there is the pleasant ambient noise of dishes, silverware and low conversation, wafting with the whole note aromas of marinara sauce and pizza dough baking in their brick ovens. Mama Mia’s is much more than a pizza parlor, though it has been ranked twice in The Saratogian as offering the best pie in the area. Instead, this is a full-service family restaurant, with every one of the dozens of entrees priced under $20. Here you can get a plate of spaghetti and meatballs for under $10, or lobster ravioli with pan-seared scallops 32 • W i n t e r 2 0 0 9 / 2 01 0 for $17—the most expensive item on the menu. Other items are rarely seen on traditional family-style Italian menus, such as straciatella, an egg-drop soup with fresh spinach and cheese tortellini; or a cranberry, feta and pear salad on a bed of arugula, endive and radicchio. The extensive menu is accompanied by an equally impressive wine list, with 36 vintages offered—31 of them by the glass—from all over the wine-making world, from New Zealand to California, though a healthy selection of Italian wines are included. “And we have good Italian beer,” Giuseppe reminded me. Mama Mia’s serves the Italian beers Peroni and Moretti, both pale lagers, and Moretti darker ales as well. Great entrees and wine list aside, Mama Mia’s is still homey. Quart jars of their sauce are for sale, in four different varieties, and you can get pizza, calzones or a hero, whether you dine in or do take out. There is genuinely something for everyone, which makes it popular among families; we saw several enter and take up huge tables in the front, three generations eating together. Against our judgment, having eaten at plenty of full-bodied Italian restaurants, my wife Susan and I decided to venture with both an appetizer and an entrée, a combo usually requiring an appetite of mythic proportions. We started with the cold antipasto for two, which came out heaped in a deep-dish, 12-inch platter. The salami, prosciutto and ham were excellent, but the standout ingredients Luigi Dalisa is the pizzaiolo (that’s Italian for “the guy who makes the pizzas”) at Mama Mia’s. were the chunks of fresh mozzarella, roasted red peppers, marinated eggplant and artichoke hearts. After this ample repast, we both expected to be defeated by the entrées we had ordered, but it was not to be. While presented in the same generous portions as the antipasto, each was simply too good, too delectable, to leave unfinished. Susan had the chicken saltimbocca, two chicken breast fillets layered with sage and prosciutto and served over sautéed spinach in a savory garlic sauce. The ingredients complemented each other, balancing the sage, an herb that often overwhelms my palate. My entrée was tortellini alla boscaiola, tortellini in a white sauce with peas, thin strips of prosciutto, and as the name suggests, mushrooms. This dish was the epitome of Italian comfort food, with a rich cream sauces and dense, al dente tortellini—a pasta that is always more filling than it appears, and which I suspect (without real proof) actually expands after it is eaten. Both entrees were standout examples of good, honest home-style Italian served in full, eatyour-fill proportions—no trendy “small plates” here! Owner Giuseppe Grisio has been in the United States for 12 years, coming here from the Puglia region of Italy, on the Adriatic coast. He personally oversees all aspects of the business, from the kitchen to the dining room, and began working in the food business in his family’s restaurant in Italy. From there he traveled to New York, where he worked at Bicé, which he described as “one of a chain of good Italian restaurants” found in major cities of the United States. He arrived in Saratoga Springs five years ago to meet the parents of his future wife Lauren Grodsky, a Saratoga native, and fell in love with the city. “It’s beautiful,” he said, remembering how when he first saw Broadway it reminded him of European cities. “It felt like I was going back home,” he said, resting his hand lightly over his heart. He decided to remain in Saratoga Springs and open a restaurant, and so he began Mama Mia’s at the former location of a Chinese eatery. “The Chinese Palace,” he said, pointing out where the centrally located buffet had been. The space was transformed and now comfortably seats 70 to 85 people. Giuseppe and Lauren own and operate the restaurant, and Lauren’s sister, Kristine Grodsky, and brother-in-law, Scott Grodsky, are co-owners. “Sometimes even my wife’s parents stop by to help— it’s a family business,” he said, beaming. In 2004, when he opened Mama Mia’s, other Italian restaurants “were going upscale,” he said. “I went back. I went the opposite way,” offering the food he remembers eating at his mother’s table in the 1950s. “Some restaurants forget about the simple stuff,” he said, proud of the fact that his restaurant is not as fancy as some, and certainly more affordable than most. “You don’t need to spend $100 for dinner.” Giuseppe insisted that we could not leave until we tried two of his signature desserts, both made in-house from Mama Giovanna’s original recipes: a ricotta cheesecake adorned with a raspberry drizzle and a tiramisu—a S a r at o g a L i v i n g • 33 Tuscan confection favored by European royalty. Both came in sizes proportionate to our meals, but they were so dreamy they vanished in minutes. The ricotta cheesecake was lighter, less dense and sweet than an American cheesecake, and had a lemony edge. The tiramisu was perfect, the biggest hunk I’ve ever seen, but so delicate it was like eating a chocolate cloud. Together with the friendly, attentive service, Mama Mia’s proved to be a delightful alternative to upscale fine dining on the one hand, and the traditional pizza-to-go on the other. If you are looking for a delectable, readyto-please selection of food and drink without breaking the bank, Mama Mia’s is undoubtedly a place the entire family would enjoy. SL Mama Mia’s, 185 Ballston Avenue, Saratoga Springs, (518) 583-7783, www.mamamiaspizzaandcafe.com. Owners Giuseppe and Lauren Grisio (in front) with chef Serafino Zaccone (in the black shirt) and pizza-maker Luigi Dalisa (in the white jacket). 34 • W i n t e r 2 0 0 9 / 2 01 0 Naton Leslie writes a food feature for every issue of Saratoga Living.