Drawing upon 15 years in Sarasota running a downtown Italian-American
trattoria, the locally famous five Caragiulo brothers have now opened a
Caragiulo's in Bradenton. The new place seems roomier and the menu offers a few
more options than the original Palm Avenue location, but the friendly service,
comfortable surroundings, good wines and engaging movie posters on the wall are
all the same.
The biggest difference is that this building (in a strip mall) came with a
wood-burning pizza oven. The brothers were quick to capitalize on such an
embarrassment of riches, and the pizza makers adjusted their technique to the
luxury of the flame of wood. The wood oven produces a slightly smoky and quite
crispy pizza on the top as well as bottom that cooks fast, in about four
minutes. The Caragiulo style is to add a little semolina flour to the pizza
dough, which means the pizza can stand up to the "tough" fire of wood. A
traditional oven cooks pizza at 550 degrees. A wood-burning oven is roaring at
700 degrees. The resulting pizza pie is as good as it gets. Although the kitchen
offers half a dozen pizzas with unusual combinations, such as Fredo's white clam
concoction, guests are welcome to compose their own weird pizzas from a list of
ingredients including feta cheese, broccoli, caramelized onions, even
artichokes. Individual pizzas are $9, and you can add a house salad for an
additional $3.
The brothers in charge, from oldest to youngest, are John, Mark, Robert,
Anthony and Paul (the opera singer and bridegroom-elect). They've expanded the
menu for the new location with the input of Bradenton general manager Randal
Roulette, who's been an honorary brother for over a decade. But at the new
trattoria women have a prominent place in the open kitchen. Kelly Pool is the
chef de cuisine and Perette Cannady is the pastry chef. The desserts at this
big-portion restaurant are well worth having, especially the bread pudding.
"Lobsta" pasta is one of the house specialties. A velvety basil-sherry cream
sauce lightly hugs angel hair pasta and nuzzles lobster chunks, shitake
mushrooms and bits of Roma tomatoes for a dish that's rich and toothsome for
$18. Other entrées dressed for success include the piccata-style halibut with a
risotto cake ($19), red snapper with garlic spinach, or the balsamic glazed pork
tenderloin with mascarpone sweet potatoes for $17. Fine comfort food. There are
about a dozen pasta dishes ($12-$18), including a nightly vegetarian
preparation. All entrées and pasta dishes are served with a house salad.
Don't look for fusion experiments or "new" Italian cuisine at the Caragiulo
table. The brothers' restaurant kitchen excels at traditional Italian-American
favorites with a few seafood specialties that take advantage of the local catch
and tourists' hunger for fish and shellfish.
Expect about a dozen wines by the glass from the Cal-Italia list that
features bottles from about $29 to $70. Caragiulo's has a full-service bar
separated from the dining room by a half wall, and live entertainment most
nights. Like the Sarasota restaurant, this new enterprise is a lively place that
promotes good food and good times at reasonable prices in a casual atmosphere.
While the Sarasota place is usually bustling with young and middle-aged people,
the Bradenton place appears to attract a wider generational sampling. We saw a
fair amount of families with children at the newer Caragiulo's, all of them
looking like they'd found just the place they wanted to be.
Caragiulo's
4726 Cortez Road W., Bradenton
792-7878
Dinner: nightly, from 4:30 p.m.
Reservations for parties of six and more
Credit cards
Parking in mall lot
Wheelchair accessible