[Close]

You'll do well to dine in The Italian Valley


The Hamilton Spectator

(Dec 21, 2007)

On a night winter turned from merely cold to bitter, some gnocchi was a major comfort.

The little potato pillows were lush on the tongue, even after a half-hour in transit, as we experimented with holiday-season take-home food. The silky buds ($12.95) in a light tomato sauce were the triumph of an order from The Italian Valley, a Dundas restaurant located where the main drag, King Street, begins.

The restaurant has three-metre-high windows facing King, caramel walls with black wainscotting and a peasant mural of an Italian village on one wall.

Things got off to a stuttering start when two items I ordered, vegetable lasagna and a seafood platter, turned out to be not available.

But the restaurant, by way of apology, waived the price of a tomato-bocconcini salad ($7.95) when the bill arrived. And no time was lost in the reordering. The takeout bag arrived not long after I tried an appetizer in-house. The garlic shrimp ($8.95) came in a different form than anticipated, perhaps two dozen small shrimp instead of the dozen medium you might expect.

And while they tasted fresh and weren't overcooked (something of a feat with such small specimens) they made for finicky eating with shell skirts still attached. With a basket of thick and ultralight Italian loaf slices, it was nonetheless a decent snack.

That tucked away, I sped into the night with the gnocchi, salad and Tuscan chicken fettuccine ($17.95). Thirty minutes later, the pasta dishes were still hot and the salad cool as they were opened at home.

After the velvety gnocchi, the marks dropped. The tomato/bocconcini portion and fettuccine serving seemed small for the price.

There were about eight buds of the soft cheese in a mass of tomato, and the chicken component in the fettuccine was light.

The Tuscan treatment, with a dark cream sauce, was a rich feature that scored well. But some more meat in the latter item would have elevated the dinner.

Service for the in-house part of the meal, by the way, was attentive and engaging.

jkernaghan@thespec.com

905-526-3422

The Italian Valley

2 King St. W., Dundas

906-628-6863

The look: Warm and bright

The feel: Relaxed

What you'll pay: The lunch menu opens with bruschetta for $4.95, mozzarella sticks are $7.95 and calamari is $9.95. Panini sandwiches are $8.95 with choice of soup or salad, pasta dishes run from $9.95 for penne and tomato sauce to $11.95 for fettuccine Alfredo, and pizzas with two items are $9.95. Dinner antipasti includes garlic bread at $6.95, mussels for $12.95 and an antipasto platter for $14.95. Salads range from $4.95 for mixed green and caesar sides to $8.95 for a full caesar with chicken. Pasta dishes include cheese ravioli at $13.95, eggplant parmigiana at $14.95 and fettuccine carbonara for $16.95.

Entrees open at $16.95 for grilled veal or chicken breast and rise to $19.95 for a 12-ounce French pork chop and $23.95 for a 10-ounce rib-eye steak. Desserts include cannoli for $2 and $2.50 and tiramisu at $6.95.

Hours: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Tuesday and Wednesday; 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., Thursday to Saturday; 5 to 9 p.m., Sunday. Wheelchair accessible.






Business Web Studio © Copyright 2007 Metroland Media Group Ltd. All rights reserved. The reproduction, modification, distribution, transmission or republication of any material from www.thespec.com is strictly prohibited without the prior written permission of Metroland Media Group Ltd. Metroland West Media GroupTorstar Digital