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Mediterraneo: 16 Years of Success in Greenwich

Lively atmosphere and great food add up to a reliable combination for a night out.

Mediterraneo is one of those fall-back restaurants that always comes through for you. You now the scenario. Chinese? Naw. French? Too rich. So-and so’s place? Too stodgy. How about …? Too expensive. The one that just opened? C’ mon already — we tried that one last week. Okay, let’s do .

We recently found ourselves sitting at an outdoor table just as dusk was gently descending and a sweet breeze whispered up Grigg Street. The bronzino, a sweet relative of sea bass, was anchored with an earthy artichoke and potato hash and the yellow fin tuna with its lush butter beans side was tempered by a bracing puddle of broccoli rabe. Both dishes were satisfying and delicious. Veal medallions, judiciously napped with a mere hint of sauce, were fork-tender, and the mussels, ah the mussels, tender, juicy, a bit briny, perfect.

The Monday night after Irene whistled down our lane and in a nasty bit of business cavalierly took down power lines and worse of all, knocked out cable and satellite, home cooking was not to be despite the piles of food we lugged home from before it shuttered the day before. Who could believe that there would be empty shelves in that market where an exaggeration of riches normally has cans and boxed goods perilously packed high.

So here we were, again, on Greenwich Avenue, five of us at 8:30 p.m., debating the merits of this restaurant and that kitchen. What about Mediterraneo, someone asked. It’s bold and brassy, someone said. Silence. Okay, let’s do it.

True to form, the place was jiving when we got there, with a line out the door. Behind the bar, boxes of pizza piled up waiting for pick up and patrons squeezed between the handful of bar stools to order Stoli on the rocks. The tables were packed together as tightly as sardines in a can and voices were raised in a boisterous cacophony that ricocheted off the sea map painted on the ceiling. There is always a happy, loud, very loud, merriment in Mediterraneo. You either go early to avoid the crescendos or you wait for a later sit-down. Or ignore the noise, relax and just enjoy.

There was plenty of frenzied goings-on in the tiny open kitchen on the Monday après Irene — its wild pace would have had Linguini the cook in “Ratatouille” and Remy, his mentor rat, hightailing the culinary world for a sail on the high seas.

At 9 p.m., when we were finally ensconced at a table, the kitchen had run out of bread, sea bass, yellow-fin tuna and bronzino. Talk about a run at a popular restaurant!

There was plenty of dishes left from which to choose, however, and undaunted, two of us ordered halibut. It came as four small tender medallions with a browned parmesan crust surrounding a pond of sautéed spinach. It was a dish to rave about — it’s one of their signature entrées. Succulent chicken, a great comfort food, caused one of our friends to exclaim, “This chicken has changed my opinion of the Amish!”

The wild card was the buffalo tenderloins one gent at our table thought might be interesting. He greedily hugged the dish to his chest, it seemed, for we got nary a bite. Must have been good because the plate was clean within minutes.

We ordered wine by the glass and though the Pinot Noir was too warm by far (the waitress did not charge us for it after our complaint), the Sauvignon Blanc was nicely chilled. Two desserts to serve the five of us, the oozing chocolate cake and the apple bread pudding, had us purring. A lovely ending.

Earlier during the summer, when the July sale days were in full swing, we lugged our purchases to our favorite corner restaurant for nourishing pasta and found ourselves seated near friends at the next table, a common occurrence here. The eatery is as social a gathering place as the aisles of Whole Foods.

Perhaps that’s the point about the success of Mediterraneo. In this post 9/11 era, we seem to eschew the grandeur — and haughtiness — of times past in restaurants of old. We want constancy, reassurance, familiar faces and food we recognize without flourishes and swirls and potato slices tortured into cartoon shapes. New restaurants are welcomed, but it’s the old friends who never disappoint us. We want strawberries that are fragrant, squid that is succulent and shrimp with flavor. We crave good tasting food made with high-quality ingredients. It’s a formula that has worked for Mediterraneo for 16 years.

 

Mediterraneo

366 Greenwich Ave., Greenwich, CT. 

203-629-4747

Lunch: Monday through Saturday

Dinner: Monday through Sunday

Reservations highly suggested.

About this column: Good food is a great reason to venture out of town. "Restaurant Road Trip" discovers some tasty spots around the region.

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feo mesics May 23, 2013 at 10:50 am
Where DIDN'T you learn to write?? Jane Himmel May 22, 2013 at 01:27 pm "This has CONVINCED MYRead More GROWING CONVICTION that Patch has moved complete..."
Jane Himmel May 22, 2013 at 01:40 pm
I just called Staples. This is really disturbing to me. If I don't get a satisfactory answer, IRead More will let people know and I will also decide whether to continue shopping there. I do not like to give my money to unethical businesses.
Jane Himmel May 22, 2013 at 01:27 pm
This has convinced my growing conviction that Patch has moved completely away from any pretense ofRead More being a news source and is simply an electronic bulletin board. By abandoning their prior procedure of approving posts before they go up, they are letting anything go on and then taking them down if they're reported. By then, it's too late: the poster has gotten their message across during the time it's in the lineup. I only check in with Patch occasionally now and so many people in town won't read it at all anymore. I think we need to be honest with ourselves about what kind of a public forum this venue is. This doesn't reflect well on Staples if they are using subterfuge and violating Terms of Use on Patch either.
Lauren May 24, 2013 at 10:29 pm
Tom, the tree warden doesn't just "put in trees and take them down" just like that. ThereRead More is a reason behind every tree that has come down or gone up. Whats with this town and trees anyway? It seems like a huge source of controversy...they are TREES.
Lauren May 23, 2013 at 08:09 am
if they had done it at night at least it wouldn't have been smudged. BUT, i happen to think itsRead More nice, and especially with the flags hanging. we forget we are a small new england town, and small things like the red white and blue stripes remind me that we still are! :)
Hollywood2 May 22, 2013 at 10:05 pm
Somebody is pretending to be me again. On June 6 we remember D-Day. Thanks again to all our vetsRead More on Memorial Day and D-Day. That's a real reason to celebrate the week.