ekreider wrote:Note that there are three D'Amato's bakeries. HarvesTime carries bread from the Victor D'Amato's wholesale only bakery, which is across the street from the bakery under consideration here. Treasure Island has carried bread from Frank D'Amato's bakery from the 1300 block of Grand.
JeffB wrote:If one looks back to the golden days of LTH (which for me includes a fair amount of Antonius and Hungry Rabbi), you will find a trove of commentary about the merits of D'Amato's pizza and where it fits into the pizza pantheon. I make a point of getting "bakery pizza," schiacciatta, focaccia pizza, sheet pizza, grandma pizza, or whatever you'd like to call it wherever it continues to exist. It's an old-time Italian American curiosity to me. D'Amato's with sausage (from Bari, possibly?) is my overall favorite anywhere. And don't forget the cherry bars.
I'm 100% behind the D'Amato's nomination.
aschie30 wrote:Any lack of written commentary on D'Amato's (if there is) is due solely to the fact that D'Amato's is so ingrained in our collective LTH psyche that you forget that you need to mention it from time to time. I know I do; I've been a regular D'Amato's customer when I want Italian bread (which is most of the time) since I moved to West Town in 2001. Just the other night, I mentioned to someone that I don't think my Thanksgiving stuffing would taste the same without D'Amato's bread; their round peasant boule is the most versatile of sorts (make sure you give the crust a knock first), and their long loaf is perfect for pizza parlor-style garlic bread, as the crumb becomes perfectly light and airy after toasting for 20 minutes in the oven. I don't think that a road trip to Michigan on a Saturday would be complete without first stopping in for an assortment of cookies (I really like the fig version) and olive focaccia as sustenance for the weekend. Saturday mornings in summer are the best with lines out the door as the old folks who used to live in the neighborhood come in and buy whole sheet pans of pizza to bring to picnics and 4 lb. boxes of cookies (thus, indoctrinating the younger generation to D'Amato's goodies).
I heartily support D'Amato's for a GNR(esource).
geno55 wrote:try the "inis", which are fried or baked dough filled with the cannoli filling and only served on weekends.
GNR Guidelines wrote:Surprisingly, what seems like the simplest term has been the most contentious. Every year, a new nomination would further stretch the definition of Restaurant, until in the new nominations of 2008 it broke. A nomination was excluded because it did not logically fit into even the loosest definition of the term restaurant.
As a result, starting in 2009, we decided to codify the definition of this word. For the Great Neighborhood Restaurants, a Restaurant is any place where we go primarily to get ready-to-eat food or drink. Specifically, it is any place that fits into the categories defined by the places that were already GNRs as of January 1, 2009. While we generally wish to leave it to the posters and nominators to determine the category of a place, based on tradition so far, bakeries shall be considered Restaurants for the GNRs.
ekreider wrote:Note that there are three D'Amato's bakeries. HarvesTime carries bread from the Victor D'Amato's wholesale only bakery, which is across the street from the bakery under consideration here. Treasure Island has carried bread from Frank D'Amato's bakery from the 1300 block of Grand.
JeffB wrote:If one looks back to the golden days of LTH (which for me includes a fair amount of Antonius and Hungry Rabbi), you will find a trove of commentary about the merits of D'Amato's pizza and where it fits into the pizza pantheon. I make a point of getting "bakery pizza," schiacciatta, focaccia pizza, sheet pizza, grandma pizza, or whatever you'd like to call it wherever it continues to exist. It's an old-time Italian American curiosity to me. D'Amato's with sausage (from Bari, possibly?) is my overall favorite anywhere. And don't forget the cherry bars.
I'm 100% behind the D'Amato's nomination.
Dmnkly wrote:Gosh... had I realized that the love ran so deep, I would've nominated them myself two years ago
ekreider wrote:
Note that there are three D'Amato's bakeries. HarvesTime carries bread from the Victor D'Amato's wholesale only bakery, which is across the street from the bakery under consideration here. Treasure Island has carried bread from Frank D'Amato's bakery from the 1300 block of Grand.
Elfin wrote:The long french baguette alone makes this a great GNR. Best bread outside of Paris! Not a fan of their cookies-Palermo is better.
Elfin wrote:The long french baguette alone makes this a great GNR. Best bread outside of Paris! Not a fan of their cookies-Palermo is better.