Mangia Mangia’s kitchen calls ‘Come to Sicily’
Mary Furr
Mangia Mangia beckons like a siren to sailors, drawing you into the
kitchen of chef-owner Pietro Cefalu to taste the great pasta and sauce
dishes he learned from his Sicilian grandmother in Palermo.
Mangia Mangia is housed in an ordinary L-shaped store front, but there is
nothing ordinary about the food -- it sparkles with freshness.
The feeling at Mangia Mangia is that everyone from server Kirsten to chef
Pietro cares about the food and the diner.
A great appetizer is bruschetta ($4.95), wonderful deep, red Roma tomato
pieces piled on warm slices of toasted Italian bread, shiny with virgin
olive oil and basil, and tiny bits of fresh garlic.
Perhaps it’s the closeness of the small, open kitchen right at the door
that makes you feel as if you’ve just stepped into a Sicilian home, with
its warm, welcoming aroma of garlic.
The island of Sicily, off the western coast of Italy, has many fish
dishes. A recent lunch special was albacore portofino ($11.95), a high
fat, white-fleshed, mild, flavored tuna sauteed in white wine and topped
with rustic-style chunky red tomato pieces, zesty black Italian olives
and pearly capers served beside bow-tie pasta with tomato-rich marinara.
It is wonderful, rich but light, every ingredient at its peak of
freshness, lovingly prepared.
Another special is one of the best I’ve ever had -- poached salmone al
basilico ($11.95), a pale pink, tender as satin, fish in a creamy, light
green pesto sauce, a mild contrast to the more rustic albacore
preparation.
Chicken also comes in a variety of preparations. Award-winning chicken
calabrese ($13.95), has chunks of tender chicken sauteed with thick
slices of grainy sausage, black olives and onions with a basil tomato
sauce. The mild sausage, a great addition to the chicken pieces,
dominates but does not overwhelm the dish.
Another is chicken pappagallo, ($13.95), a less complicated dish of
deboned chicken breast sauteed in marsala wine and cream gravy. It’s
topped with slightly astringent artichoke hearts, large, thinly sliced
mushrooms and strips of red bell pepper. The mix of tastes is seductive.
It lures you beyond what you have come to expect of chicken.
Desserts are traditional -- only three -- with tiramisu ($4.50), an
intoxicating choice of liquor-soaked cake layered with mild Italian
marscapone and sprinkled with powdered sugar. Spumoni ($4.25), is a cool
slice from a mold of two-layered ice cream with a center of candied
fruits.
According to Pietro, “if you use fresh products, half the work of cooking
is done.”
But the diners who fill Mangia Mangia seem to believe the talent of the
chef has something to do with it, too.
FYI
Mangia Mangia
Where: 16079 Goldenwest St.
Hours: Monday-Friday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., Saturday 4-10 p.m., Sunday 4-9
p.m.
Call: (714) 841-8887.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.