Recently I dined at two very good mid-priced Italian restaurants: Via Veneto on Lincoln, and the new Anna Maria Pasteria on Clark (on Montrose).
At Via Veneto, my husband and I went halfsies on a huge portion of gnocchi in a marinara sauce (good gnochi, underseasoned tomato sauce) and on a "bifteca vesuvio" - a nice twist on the classic Chicken vesuvio complete with those yummy roasted potatoes. The steak was perfectly medium rare with a boost of garlic and rosemary flavor.
At Anna Maria's, I had a standout bowl of tomato cream soup with scallops - so so good. The soup was not too tart nor too sweet, well-seasoned, and the scallops were perfectly done, tender, and subtle.
My pasta dish at AM's was Pollo Canneloni; it was OK, if underseasoned. (I love that Anna Maria's has homemade pasta, which is toothy and never mushy.) I was expecting some small pieces of chicken in the "roll," but it was ground chicken mixed with cheese (I think) in a creamy sauce (called balsamic, but I couldn't really detect it), with mushrooms.
My husband had old-school spaghetti and meatballs with bolognese sauce, but it was not a true bolognese - just a tomoto-y meat sauce.
Which brings me to my first question - which restaurants serve true bolognese? I've made bolognese at home (when I used to eat pork

) and seen it made on cooking shows, but I've rarely had a true bolognese at a restaurant. It's slow-cooked, creamy and meaty, with only a small amount of tomato and no discernible vegetables pieces as they all cook down. I wish restaurants would just say "tomato meat sauce" or something like that rather than tar the bolognese style.
And, next, what is with the underseasoning, especially the light hand on salt? It seems in the last few years, even at very fine restaurants, I'm reaching for my salt shaker. Have my tastes stayed the same but restaurants have changed? Anyone else notice this?
Via Veneto Il Ristorante
(773) 267-0888
6340 N Lincoln Ave
Chicago, IL 60659
Anna Maria Pasteria
(773) 506-2662
4400 N Clark St.
Chicago, IL
"You should eat!"