If you want to get to know marinara sauce the way that marinara sauce ought to be, I recommend getting it from a man who makes it by the five-gallon bucket. If that man happens to be Bill Silvio Melillo, you are definitely on the right track.
Melillo, patriarch of the family that brought us the eponymous Melillos back in the 00s, returned the family back to the restaurant business last October, opening Silvios in the short, eatery-loaded strip center just opposite Trinity High School. Bad luck hit just a few months later, when a January fire that destroyed two nearby restaurants dealt Silvios sufficient smoke damage to shut it down for a month or so.
But Silvios bounced back, and it has become so popular that youve got to do a little planning to grab a table and a scarce parking spot any night of the week.
Im pretty sure that toothsome marinara is a big part of the draw. Its thick and smooth but retains sufficient texture for an interesting mouth-feel. Its sweet and tangy, but its skillfully balanced: not too sweet, not too tangy. Ditto for the breath of garlic and rich caramelized flavor that pulls back from the cliffs edge that separates comfort-food tomato sauce from cloying caramel. Its herbal flavors add delicate grace notes without leaving the impression that the chef overdosed it with commercial Italian herb mix.
No, this is quality stuff, and Melillo is justly proud. Youre going to work if you want to put together dinner without this basic ingredient. But then, why would you want to?
About a dozen appetizers and salads range in price from $3 (for a cup of pasta fagiole, tiny ditalini pasta and white bean soup) to $13 (for fried calamari, with marinara, of course).
A dozen entrees a good half of them blanketed in tasty marinara are $13 (for fettuccine Alfredo, with an up-charge for chicken or shrimp) to $22 (for seafood pasta with shrimp, mussels and scallops in a creamy wine sauce; no marinara here).
Settle in, enjoy a glass or a bottle of wine from a short, largely Italian list thats conveniently divided among light, medium and full-intensity wines to help you make an informed choice. (I was happy with a couple of $7 glasses of Coltibuono Chianti, served in small tumblers, trattoria style.)
Inside, theyve done a good job of turning a St. Matthews storefront into somewhat that, if not quite Little Italy in style, is certainly reminiscent of family Italian eateries on Long Island and in New Jersey, New York Citys outer boroughs or the citys cultural exurbs in South Florida. Walls are colored in discrete shades of cappuccino and sage, decorated with a gallery of old black-and-white family photos and a few colorful art prints. Tables are draped in white and set with good flatware rolled in black cloth napkins.
We started the march of marinara with two first-rate appetizers.
Rice balls ($9 for a generous serving of three) got dinner off to a great start. Visualize a golf-ball size sphere of creamy risotto with a ration of molten mozzarella at the center, rolled in Parmigiana, deep-fried crispy brown, and served with plenty of, you guessed it, marinara.
The flatbread is first-rate, too, resembling rectangular appetizer pizzas on a very thin, crackling flatbread crust. We chose margherita style ($10) and enjoyed the traditional topper of discreetly spread marinara, melted rounds of fresh mozzarella and snipped leaves of fresh basil.
Salads ($6 as dinner sides; $9 for an entree-size portion) were both served very cold and crisp, and both were excellent. Caesar was classic in style: fresh romaine with a creamy, tangy dressing, toasted croûtons, grated Parmigiana, and, on request, fresh anchovies. The Melillo house salad boasted a tart-sweet Italian dressing over romaine and mixed salad greens, with cucumber and tiny halved grape tomatoes and chunks of good Italian bread.
The calamari ($13, an appetizer order served as a main) offered the evenings only disappointment: It was breaded and competently fried, not greasy, but it wasnt crisp, and the tentacle bits were tough and rubbery. The accompanying marinara was the best part. (Dammit, Mary said later. I really wish I had gotten a meatball instead. Maybe next time, dear.)
The eggplant Parmesan ($13) more than made up for that one disappointment. Three thick rounds of tender eggplant, crisply fried to a delicious creamy interior within a crunchy crust, were piled atop spaghetti, generously laden with fresh mozzarella and grated Parmigiano Reggiano, and a thick blanket of marinara, of course.
Dessert? It made no sense after all that food, but we couldnt say no. The cannoli ($5 for a serving of three small) ranked among the best weve ever eaten, not excepting New York or South Florida. Or, for that matter, Italy. Lemon mascarpone ($8) was a layered lemon sponge cake layered with fluffy, thick lemon icing and a sweet mascarpone cheese frosting.
With excellent espresso ($4 each) at the end, dinner for two came to $92.22, but we could certainly have gotten out for less with a bit of self-discipline. Friendly, competent service earned a $20 tip.