Value Veal

Milan it ain't, but this basic Italian joint is a downtown deal.

Ristorante Fratelli Milano's umbrella-shaded tables are tightly clustered together on pinched, pedestrian-clogged SE First Street. Two dozen indoor seats are just as closely cramped in the windowless aisle of a room, where harried waiters squeeze through impossible spaces with oversize white bowls of pasta in their hands. This ain't exactly the Piazza del Duomo.

Joe Rocco

Location Info

Ristorante Fratelli Milano

213 SE 1st St.
Miami, FL 33131

Category: Restaurant > Italian

Region: Downtown/Overtown

Details

Ristorante Fratelli Milano: 213 SE First St., Miami; 305-373-2300. Open for lunch Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

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The staff speaks Spanish and English — not Italian — and, though eminently friendly, does not possess those subtle service skills espied in small European eateries. The wine list isn't as sophisticated as might be found abroad either. It reads, "Bottle wine red/white ... $20." And Milano's menu doesn't mine much Milanese gastronomy, playing it safe instead with a short list of predictable pizzas, pastas, panini, and main courses mostly composed of simply grilled items. I just have to come to grips with the grim reality: It is summer and I am not meandering through Milan on a whirlwind vacation but eating lunch in downtown Miami. In this context, Fratelli joins Soya y Pomodoro as a real find for affordable Italian.

Fratelli's cuisine does mimic the Old World in that it is fresh and cooked fresh-to-order. I know the latter is true because reheating food couldn't possibly take this long. On one visit, we waited about 20 minutes for an order of fried calamari. The crisply battered squid rings ultimately arrived cleanly fried, if a bit rubbery. A few logs of fried zucchini get tossed in too, all accompanied by a smooth, slightly spicy tomato sauce.

There aren't a whole lot of starter choices, the others being an antipasti misto of prosciutto, coppa, salami, Parmigiano-Reggiano, mozzarella fior di latte, olives, and roasted peppers; bruschetta atop toasted ciabatta bread; soup of the day; and a quintet of paper-thin pizzas. We selected a Margherita pie, blackened along the rim and boasting a slim topping of tomato sauce, mozzarella, fresh basil, and dried oregano.

A half-dozen salads encompass the usual suspects — Caprese, caesar, chef — along with pasta, spinach, and arugula assemblages garishly garnished with too many ingredients to list. The only one we tried was the caesar, which should be buried, not praised. Ribbons of romaine came tightly packed into a small bowl, with generic croutons sprinkled on top and anchovy-anchored dressing in a small plastic container on the side. Because of the confining presentation, the dressing couldn't be tossed with the leaves, but had to be drizzled on top; not the same. Plus the salad was as untimely as it was unwieldy: We requested it be brought after the main courses, but instead it was placed on the kitchen pick-up counter for the lengthy duration of the calamari cooking — and then was served with the entrées. It might also be noted that tomatoes fanned upon a neighboring table's Caprese salad looked unfetchingly pale.

A dry, charmless eggplant parmigiana panini on toasted ciabatta bread was yet another underperformer (costarring insipid potato sticks), but almost everything else warranted praise. Especially pastas. A thick, wide square of lasagna came piled with four layers of noodle interspersed with sausage-laden meat sauce, béchamel, mozzarella fior di latte, and Parmigiano-Reggiano. The same sweet Italian sausage played a more prominent role when tossed with broccoli, garlic, and chewy tubes of bucatini pasta. Firm, bright yellow rings of cheese tortellini mingled with peas and regular old American ham in a mildly sweet sauce of reduced cream and Parmesan, and a daily special of linguine with clams came chock-a-block with tender littlenecks in their shells.

Fratelli Milano's apt signature dish, veal alla Milanesa, brought a huge, meaty, heartily breaded cutlet marred only by an overly greasy crust. Lemony arugula leaves beneath the veal helped cut the oil but were too heavily salted; a sprightly toss of diced mozzarella cheese, tomato, and basil piled on top helped cut the salt. Grilled skirt steak, mahi-mahi, and chicken breast represent a lighter cooking approach that is perhaps more suitable for the torpor of Miami summer. The last — a succulent, assertively char-grilled slab of white meat with lime aioli lined across the top — impressed most. All entrées except the veal come accompanied by vegetable du jour (often broccoli) and moistly roasted, savorily seasoned potatoes.

Diners can size up their potential desserts through a glass display case that forms part of the front counter. Lemon tart lured me with its pale golden custard capped with wispy slices of citrus leaning upon a puff of freshly whipped cream. A buttery crust contributed to it tasting as good as it looked. The tiramisu appeared tired under the lights, so we nabbed a napoleon — a simple sandwich of puff pastry and vanilla cream that proved neither the Waterloo nor watershed of the meal. Like all of Fratelli's offerings, however, it was freshly made and popularly priced ($2.75; entrées under $15; pastas less than $10). Such attributes are considerable consolation for downtown Miami workers who won't be stretching their legs over the cobblestones of the Piazza del Duomo anytime soon.

 
  • alice 06/06/2008 3:02:00 AM

    Mr. Klein, Working in Downtown Miami is a troublesome affair. The City is in grave disrepair. The homeless make use of the sidewalks as public toilets and as temperatures heat up, the air is ripe. I have walked the streets alone for over ten years and have witnessed assaults in midday, stabbings, muggings - you name it. The Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau would have you believe it's all high rises and HEAT games. It is not and Downtown is seriously not ready for it's close-up! Fratelli Milano is owned and operated by young, Milanese twin-brother chefs and managed by their families. The staff is youthful and unpolished. The place is small but all they could afford as first-time restaurant owners. They must make their living only during the daylight hours when office workers with cash to spend wander the stinking streets seeking refuge from the bleak reality that is the daily Downtown grind. I am one of the grateful grubs in the City who can tell you from personal experience that your review seems uncharacteristically cruel. Where was your sparkle? I read your work and find it clever and entertaining and I often quote you to my friends. It's just strange your usual light touch and charming style seem absent from this piece. While the moniker "Fratelli Milano" does in fact refer to the birthplace of the chefs, I am certain they fully understand that First Street is nothing like the Piazza del Duomo. A half-day restaurant business is tough going and their menu is crafted to appeal to a broad range of working customers with particular tastes and budgets. Generally speaking, the restaurant is very successfully working out a formula that fills the room (as you noted) and pays the rent. If their pockets were deeper, I'm certain the square footage would be greater. Sadly, opening a business in Downtown is daunting and they wisely did not bite off more than they could chew. Speaking of chewing, you mentioned ordering some staters and a pizza but little about the taste. I find the food is always good and sometimes surprisingly delicious. While I can see you found merit in a few things, the impression overall is that the restaurant should be buried, not praised. While it's not aspiring to the heights of Milanese gastronomy, there are often many high notes nonetheless. As a daily diner in the gritty city, I can tell you it's really refreshing to find a place like Fratelli Milano striving and succeeding in our Town Without Pity. I just wish you saw what I see and felt a bit more benevolent about their extraordinary efforts. They are sweet and genuine and doing a laudable job creating a pleasant oasis in an increasingly underperforming area. Most of the good guys aren't winning Mr. Klein. Frankly, it's really frightening out here. Your review was a bit ...tu Brute.

 
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