June 11, 2009 | 
Ask Gael
Best Italian New York Has to  Offer
 
Share this quail starter followed  by outrageously rich pasta at Convivio.  Photo: Steven Richter
        My favorite spot for Italian  food right this minute is Cesare Casella’s Salumeria Rosi.   That has to be obvious to readers of my newsletter Fork Play and  my journal BITE.  Small tastes and at small prices, mostly  delicious tastes, changing with the market – it’s my favorite way  to eat.  The Road Food Warrior and I go there with or without friends  once a week. It’s just a
    
        
            |  | 
        
            |   Salumeria Rosi’s cured meats.  Photo: Steven Richter | 
    
small café with 24 seats (a few of them high perches at a counter or smack in the window – Casella says people love that window table) and often booked far in advance.  (Full disclosure: I do say it’s me when I call and come at a time they suggest). 
 
        But from the tone of your query,  I am sure you are looking for something grander, a real restaurant.  Convivio with a sleek new design by Vicent Wolf and rustic southern  Italian dishes lovingly recreated by chef-co-owner Michael White is  obviously no secret – so you may want to book right now.  We  order sfuzi (little tastes of things) for the table and a much-too-lush  pasta. A bowl of  orecchiette with tripe, sausage, and wild fennel, or the homemade fusilli  with pork shoulder and a rich creamy melt of cacciocavallo cheese to  stir in makes it a meal for me. But there is also a $59 four course  prix fixe.  For my Convivio review, click here.  
        Locanda  Verde in Robert De Niro’s Greenwich Hotel in Tribeca with Andrew  Carmellini in the kitchen is my newest favorite but neophiliac lemmings  and cogniscenti as well are pouring in so it will also be tough to book.   And alas, it’s very noisy. Go to my BITE on Locanda by clicking here. 
        You might want  to check out my favorite Italian spots collected in a roundup I wrote  called Loveable Italians. 
Break an egg,
Gael    
Click here for the Ask Gael Archive.