Tag Archives: pasta

Busy chefs cooking at the Seafront Pasta Bar in Naples, Italy.

Naples, Italy Restaurant Review: Seafront Pasta Bar

As a travel writer, I hope my readers trust the destinations, hotels, restaurants, and tours I recommend. I stand by my word, not praising a site when it doesn’t deserve a compliment. Recently, I was headed to Naples and asked a fellow travel writer. Gina Di Meo, for some advice. Gina is a native, a Neapolitan, though she no longer lives there.

Side streets in Naples are narrow and colorful.
A typical side street in historic Naples, narrow and colorful.

Gina recommended the Seafront Pasta Bar for dinner. She even helped me get reservations, which, by the way, are needed. Though the name is nothing special, this is not just any pasta restaurant. It ranks as one of the best meals I have ever had. No wonder the establishment earned a spot on the Michelin Recommended list for the city.

A view of the Seafront Pasta Bar Restaurant.
The Seafront Pasta Bar before dinner time!

FYI: The MICHELIN Guide provides curated selections of the best dining experiences in a given area, covering more restaurants than only the starred establishments. While inclusion alone is a pretty big deal in demonstrating quality cooking, the guides help steer travellers and locals alike to recommended restaurants that suit their personal tastes, budgets and preferences when exploring a city. 

I found the Seafront Pasta Bar located across from Castle Nuovo, near the waterfront harbor, but not exactly overlooking it. Diners mainly sit upstairs, around a sushi-style counter, watching the chefs work directly in front of them. There are also a few tables to the side of the bar without the cooktop view. The eatery uses Di Martino pasta in all forms from appetizers to desserts.

Two happy chefs working at the Seafront Pasta Bar posed for me!


It’s a great place to pick up kitchen techniques. However, the other advantage of sitting by the action is the delicious aromas wafting from their saucepans.

An attentive chef at the Seafront Pasta Bar in Naplea.
A chef watches the pasta while it cooks at the Seafront Pasta Bar in Naples. .

I chose the three-course wine-paired tasting menu, which is really four courses if you count dessert. The price is a reasonable sum of 65 euros. (It’s a bargain for Americans.) Each dish was painstakingly prepared and beautifully plated on carefully chosen dinnerware and a different silver place setting for each course. Of course, each was paired with a wonderful glass of wine.

Artfully arranged breadsticks await diners at the Seafront Pasta Bar.
An arrangement of breadsticks begins the meal at the Seafront Pasta Bar.

The meal began with a display of artfully arranged breadsticks and dipping oil, followed by a seafood amuse-bouche. I’m not positive, but I think it was langoustine in a sauce covered by a thin, flaky crisp. The starter wine was Colle Lepre by Porto de Mola.

The amuse-bouche at the Seafront Pasta Bar.
The amuse-bouche naturally featured seafood.

Linguini with garlic, extra virgin olive oil, and anchovies “colatura” from Cetara arrived next. I later found out that colatura is a sauce made only with anchovies and salt from the nearby town on the Amalfi Coast. While I’m not wild about anchovies, I loved this linguine and ate every bite. Al dente perfection!

The linguini with garlic, olive oil, and anchovies.

The second entrée was hand-broken Ziti Genovese style with ‘ramata’ onion from Montorio (northern Italy) and a prime beef cut. The sauce is prepared by sautéing beef with onions and slowly cooking for two to ten hours. This scrumptious dish definitely had beef flavoring throughout.

Ziti Genovese style, the second course.
Ziti Genovese style at the Seafront Pasta Bar, Naples.

La Devozione is spaghetti with tomato sauce –an iconic Neapolitan recipe that dates back to the early 1800s and has been a symbol of Italian cuisine ever since. The old traditional tomato sauce is made with just three ingredients: tomatoes, olive oil, and garlic.

Spaghetti with tomato sauce, a Neapolitan classic.
Yummy spaghetti with tomato sauce, a Neapolitan classic recipe.

Neopolitan treats were the dessert, but I was so full that I took them home. The famous sfogliatella is beloved as a snack, breakfast, and sometimes even dessert. What is it? In Naples, there are two main variants of sfogliatella: sfogliatella riccia and sfogliatella frolla. Puffy golden pastry shaped like a rounded triangle or clamshell that enfold the custardy cheese filling. It derives its name from una sfogli—a leaf referencing the dozens of tiny pastry leaves (or sheets).
I loved the contrast of crisp pastry and cool, soft filling.

An array of desserts that I ate the next day for breakfast.

If you visit Naples, I highly recommend a meal at the Seafront Pasta Bar.

Cooking pasta at the Seafront Pasta Bar.
Busy chefs cook many forms of pasta each night.

Painting with Pasta in the Keys

Art by Pasta Pantaleo

I am not an artist; the closest I come is through photography.  However, I recently found myself in Key Largo and was offered a painting class with Pasta.  Hmm. My thoughts ran to my grandkids and those colorful necklaces and bracelets they make with painted pasta shapes.

No noodles here. I entered a fabulous artist’s studio and gallery where I met Roberto Pantaleo, a.k.a. Pasta, my instructor.  Pasta is an artist who paints vibrant scenes of the Keys, mostly fish and marine life. I adored his lines and design in the above fish and was drawn to the peacefulness of this mangrove tree with criss-crossed  roots.

Pasta Pantaleo and the Mangrove Tree

I was to paint a Leatherback turtle–okay!  First, I sketched oval egg shapes on a piece of paper and Pasta showed me how to blend those into the turtle’s head, body and limbs.  Next, I drew a similar animal on canvas.  So far so good.

Painting the water

Now it was time to pick up the brush- a daunting task.  “Just mix blue and green together and drab them onto the canvas like Monet,” said Pasta.   Sure, I thought.

“Lovely colors,” he said. “Do the same thing with beige and browns to create the beach.”

Amazingly, my little turtle was coming to life better than I expected and the thing was — I was having a blast.  I forgot about time and felt like I was floating in the water with my tortoise.  I was literally living in the moment.

When I tried painting my turtle’s shell, my efforts didn’t achieve much depth. But, a few strokes from the master greatly helped the cause. I ended up with a painting I’m rather proud of. Sure, I know it’s a  primitive work but I had fun. Wish I could take another class.

Turtle by Debi

Pasta Pantaleo is the ideal teacher; he’s encouraging and helpful, never demeaning and an all-around happy person. Might be the island’s aura, but the Keys seem to bring out art in everyone.

Pasta Signature Gallery

Mile Marker 81.5

Islamorada, Florida 33036

www.ArtByPasta.com

305 849-3968

954 290-4262

Teen Holiday Party: How to Have Grinchy Fun

Grinchy Green Deviled Eggs & Seuss Spirals
Grinchy Green Deviled Eggs & Seuss Spirals

Done gingerbread houses and Nutcracker teas,

Candy cane reindeer and trim-a-trees.

Gone neighborhood caroling, hosted family gatherings,

Two open house buffets and brunch on New Year’s Day.

Dr. Seuss claims the “who’s” like Christmas a lot,

But this Mom is beginning to think she does NOT.

“Why, for 50 some years I’ve put up with it now.”

I must stop this holiday madness from getting to me… but how?

Continue reading Teen Holiday Party: How to Have Grinchy Fun