Review Article

Girasole Review: Restaurant Revival

Girasole makes its second Center City debut

By Joy Manning

Philadelphia’s Avenue of the Arts is studded with lackluster restaurants geared toward hungry ­theatergoers. They’re a captive audience, a steady stream of dollars that depends on location, not culinary achievement. During its tenure on Locust Street from 1988 to 2004, Girasole catered to the pre-theater crowd with curtain-time-friendly specials and attentive service to match. In the ’90s, it also brought in the locals with homemade pasta and then-trendy dishes like beef carpaccio. In March, the restaurant reopened in a shiny new space in the Symphony House, with gold banquettes and a hand-painted mural of its namesake, the sunflower. But the hodgepodge Italian menu and inconsistently executed dishes won’t draw Philadelphia’s most devoted diners.

You could do worse for your pre-show meal. Unlike its corporate neighbors, Girasole is a family affair. Angela Iovino, wife of co-owner Franco, is executive chef, and most of Girasole’s dishes have a homey soulfulness: Her light potato gnocchi in tomato sauce are as good as you’d expect from an Italian nonna. A plate of house-made sausage, broccoli rabe and cannellini beans is comforting, the rich meat softening the rabe’s bitter edge. A salad of sharp arugula topped with roasted beets and creamy burrata is satisfying, even if it feels like a pastiche of once-trendy ingredients that don’t necessarily fit together.

The dated menu would be forgivable if dishes were reliably executed. The frittura mista, a simple basket of fried shrimp, calamari and veggies, arrived limp and greasy, with overcooked seafood. Risotto is supposedly cooked to order, but the mushroom version I sampled lacked the dish’s essential creaminess. Even the restaurant’s signature carpaccio was a disappointment — the slices of beef are set on a heated plate, sapping the distinctive flavor and texture of what should be a raw dish.

Girasole’s new trademark should be its crudo menu, something that’s been a crowd-pleaser at the restaurant’s Atlantic City outpost. Tuna is paired with thyme, endive and balsamic vinegar to great effect; branzino works surprisingly well with mozzarella and mustard. The update is welcome, but if Girasole hopes to recapture its old fans and lure in new ones, this level of care and creativity must seep out to the rest of the menu.   

Originally published in Philadelphia magazine, June 2009
 

Change text size
Print

Email

Write a comment
 
 

User comments

Mr Amatino
Posted by john | May. 26, 2009 at 1:45 PM
COMMENT:
Funny you say there signature carpaccio was served warmed just to give the writer a heads up this is my favorite dish and is not raw. It's suppose to be warmed read the menu better writer!!!!
Girasole back in town
Posted by Anonymous | May. 26, 2009 at 3:29 PM
COMMENT:
Personally I loved the menu and food.We had dinner one week after they had opened and weren't lacking anything. They will lure in new comers and we will be back also.
Certanly Not American-Italian
Posted by Elena | May. 27, 2009 at 1:24 PM
COMMENT:
I love Girasole's carpaccios! As the user above noted, Girasole's signature carpaccio is not raw! It is supposed to be warm! I also happened to love love love apple tart! It is not an American Apple crisp, which I also love, but when I travel to Europe I order tarts all the time! So, yeah, Girasole is certanly not American - Italian restaurant and it is delicious!
overall a very good restaurant
Posted by Anonymous | May. 28, 2009 at 12:39 AM
COMMENT:
My overall experience was good while dining there.Service was great so that's where the b plus comes in and I agree.But the b-on food is just wrong.I don't agree sorry.

Posted by sandy | May. 28, 2009 at 3:10 PM
COMMENT:
i agree food is fare and i have a sweet tooth after good wine i found nothing good to go back for even when staff smells like a pak of smokes the fish over cooked I dine in phila about 2 time a wk and clints love to see the new spot iam off to this is one i will not re turn to sorry and good luck

Post a comment

(* = required field.)
  • Please check to make sure that your referer is not blocked.


Subject line of your comment*
Your comments (200 words max)*
Email*
First name*
Last Name*
Enter the code shown below.
Visual CAPTCHA
This helps prevent automated form submissions.
Philadelphia It List

Lets Do Cocktails: Recipes

Take a sneak peak into the latest, mouth-watering cocktails that will be featured in Philadelphia's area restaurants this season.
 
 

Philadelphia Magazine Daily

Follow Philadelphia Magazine tweets on twitter.com/phillymag