Tonight Dani and I tried out a new-to-us Italian restaurant,
La Cucina Flagrea in Squirrel Hill (Murray between Hobart and
Phillips). I hadn't noticed it before, but it's kind of small so
that doesn't mean it hasn't been there a while. (I was unable to
figure out what store or restaurant it replaced. If I'm on that
part of Murray I'm probably heading for either Chaya or Sushi House/Dumpling
House and not paying much attention to the stuff in between.)
They had two specials, black sea bass and a gnocchi dish, so we
decided to share those. (Each was around $27 -- not something
we'll do often. Pasta dishes on the menu were around $15; I didn't
look at the meat dishes.) Each special came with a (specified)
appetizer, along with the choice of soup or salad that accompanies
all their entrees.
I got the minnestrone soup (after confirming that it was vegetarian)
and Dani got the mushroom soup. We both thought our soups were quite
good. The gnocchi (in a tomato sauce with basil and cheese, though
I forget which cheese it was) was tasty. The two appetizers,
foccacia with cheese and peppers and red peppers stuffed with cheese
and parsley (I think it was parsley) were decent.
The fish special was, err, unfortunate. They brought a whole fish
(black sea bass isn't very large, it turns out; I'd be surprised if
it had as much as 6oz of meat on it), which left us with the
bones problem. I don't recall how they described the flavoring (they
certainly claimed some), but what we got was very bland. It was
supposed to come with asparagus but they ran out, so we got green beans
instead; I thought they were ok and Dani thought they were decent for
green beans (which he isn't generally fond of).
All portions were on the small side for the prices being charged.
Overall, we've gotten better food, in better portions, at slightly
lower prices, from Il Viletto in Oakland. And that's still in the
space of "fancy enough that you'd take guests there", rather than
some of the lower-end tasty places around.
Service was somewhat inattentive and clueless. Each entree came
on a huge platter (inefficiently used, and they weren't making that
up in presentation); there was no room on the table for both platters
and anything else. (Our waiter moved the bread, the flower vase, and a
couple other things onto an adjacent surface.) We'd said we would be
sharing (the menu suggests this), but they didn't bring plates for us
to use on the first pass.
The fish and beans were part of the same special, but more than five
minutes elapsed between getting the fish and getting the beans.
(I started to eat the fish so it wouldn't get cold;
Dani waited for the complete meal.) It took somewhere between five
and ten minutes for Dani to get the hot water to go with the teabag
they brought him right away. The gnocchi came without any utensils.
We were offered "mineral water" when we sat down (presumably this had
a price), but we were not offered just plain tap water.
It took a while to get the check. Overall, while I didn't especially
feel badly served, I did feel ineptly served.
(Also slowly, but some of that appeared to be a kitchen problem
rather than a waiter problem.)
The restaurant is smoke-free, which is a pleasant surprise. (It's
small; they're definitely under the threshold where they're required
to provide a non-smoking section.) The decor was inoffensive (which
is all I ask for). One thing I don't usually notice, though: I sat
in the most uncomfortable chair I've experienced recently. (And we
were there for about an hour and a quarter, alas.)
I wonder how long they'll survive. Squirrel Hill isn't cheap,
though I gather that commercial rent for the first year is deeply
discounted.