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Blu -- Burrata

Burrata at Blu. Photo:Simon Hare

Blu Pizza e Cucina

  • $$, $10 - $20
  • Italian, Pizza
  • Menu

A fine stop for a deliciously authentic pizza with a thin, chewy crust of the kind that only can come out a big, wood-burning oven. This causal Italian from the owners of Trattoria Sole is a find in Mary Brickell Village if you order right. Despite a maddeningly designed menu with pages and pages of nearly unreadable text, there are some real winners to be had. Farro salad with shrimp and big salads go well with any of the pizzas or sandwiches. Desserts, too, are divine. Service is super friendly but a bit slow and spacey. Décor is subdued.

There are lots of things to like about the new Blu Pizza e Cucina in Mary Brickell Village -- a friendly staff, a comfortable dining room and some very tasty pizzas.

To get to them, though, you have to negotiate a massive, maddeningly designed menu filled with so many typesetting tricks -- stars, moons, diamonds, forks and knives, red flags, chartreuse boxes, nutrition notes, unattributed quotes -- that you can barely discern whether you're ordering a meal or navigating some distant, dizzying land.

Fortunately, the restaurant is more subdued, with flat-panel TVs over the bar, cozy upholstered booths and hanging lamps with woodsy shades.

Owners Maurizio Farinelli and Agustin Sanchez, the duo behind South Miami's enduringly popular Trattoria Sole and Blu la Pizzeria del Sole, know how to run a restaurant. They know how to put together a wine list, too. The well-selected and fairly priced collection (generally less than double retail) includes bargain Sardinian finds and a couple of nice barolos. There are also draft beers from Italy, Germany and Belgium and bottles of Italy's smooth Menabrea golden lager, among others.

Beer makes a nice pairing with one of the cremosa pizzas covered in thin, salty ham and tangles of spinach. Its crust, like all those here, is authentically Italian -- at once thin and doughy, chewy and crisp, with a touch of char from the wood-burning oven.

There are more than 25 pizzas to choose from, and most are fantastic. Creative toppings include huge strips of seared and peppered tuna loin, but it's the basic mushroom or margherita that transport.

The puffy, crusty, flour-coated rolls are also delicious, but the accompanying odd, orangy, bean-and-olive dip does not inspire.

Also tasty is anything with the chewy faro grain, including a tangy, perfectly balanced, lemon and salt shrimp dish with diced red peppers, tiny cubes of sautéed zucchini and sweet golden raisins served cool with three exquisitely seared shrimp with a slightly caramelized edge.

Other salads, though occasionally overdressed, are hearty, fresh and worth a try. The spinach with dried apricot and almonds in a citrus dressing makes a fine meal with the addition of grilled steak, chicken or fish.

A huge Italian burger is another almost-great proposition. The inch-thick patty had an appealing topping of gooey mozzarella over sun-dried tomato slivers, but was cold and raw in the center when ordered medium-rare. The steak fries alongside were some of the most delectable Ive had lately, though.

We sampled two pastas with mixed results. The fettuccine with duck sausage, cherries and pistachios in a slightly creamy sauce was pretty competent. But a strozzapreti with hazelnut-mint pesto that should have been divine was dry as a feather duster because the gummy pasta had soaked up all the emerald-green sauce.

Desserts are more consistent. Best are the coconut flan, a cool custard with thick coconut shavings in an almond tulle cup alongside a densely creamy ice cream topped with fresh mint, and the warm apple tart with a luscious caramel ice cream.

Hours

11:30 a.m.-midnight daily

Details

  • Yes
  • Yes
  • Italian, Pizza
  • Yes
  • Both
  • Lunch, Dinner
  • Cheerful din

Location

Get directions from:
  • Current 71.6 °F
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    • It's a beach day
    • Head to 8th Street Beach

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