3 months ago 18

New York’s Rezdôra Opens Sicilian Sister Restaurant, Massara 

Massara Pasta

New York City is hardly short on Italian restaurants. While it's impossible to count each and every one of them, estimates put the total of Italian joints in NYC at around 2,000, with Michelin narrowing that down even further, suggesting around 50 that are worth your time – and appetite. 

Counting the total number of osterias seems enough of a challenge, there at least seems to be a consensus on the best. Beloved by critics and consumers alike, chef Stefano Secchi’s Rezdôra has been serving specialties from the Italian region of Emilia-Romagna since 2019.

Bedazzled with a star from Michelin and another three from the New York Times – and a feature on our own list of the city’s Best Restaurants – Rezdôra has gardened a lesion of neighborhood fans, and even received a nod of approval from the motherland, with Top50 Italy ranking it within the top 10 of the best Italian restaurants in the world.  

Can the city still be hungry for a secondi serving of Italian delicacies? Secchi seems to think so, opening a sister restaurant on New York’s Broadway. And since its opening in early June, Massara's wait times and blacked-out Resvy forms would suggest the city is starving. 

Chef

While his house may have been in Texas, Italo-American Secchi’s upbringing was very much rooted in Italian culture. His strong sense of Sardinian heritage – inherited through his father’s bloodline – led him to Modena, where he learned to hone his skills at the famed Osteria Francescana under Massimo Bottura.

It was later under the tutelage of Nonna Laura Morandi at Hosteria Giusti, that he perfected the art of handmade pasta, which would later take center stage at his Flat Iron establishment. Now, Massara takes a more nostalgic look at Italian cooking. Here Secchi plates up servings inspired by childhood memories of visiting Southern Italy and the region’s rich abundance of farms and fisheries. 

“Massara celebrates our deep exploration of regional Italian cooking, with a focus on Southern Italy,” the chef said in the announcement of the restaurant’s opening. “From the fresh seafood sourced on the Amalfi coast, peppered with hillsides covered in lemon groves, to iconic pizza from Naples, to its bountiful farmland, home to the native water buffalo – Campania is one of Italy’s richest agricultural regions.”

Menu

Of course, this wouldn't be a Secchi establishment if we didn’t mention the pasta. Yet, as a man in search of culinary pleasure but with well-drawn principles, in both restaurants, Secchi has made a clear commitment to only serving food from his set region.

That means at the Campania-centric Massara, don’t expect the likes of agnolotti, tortellini or pici. Instead, the menu is filled with the likes of corteccia with sausage ragù in bianca; candele with ragù Genovese; and “Cheesemakers Raviolini”, filled with buffalo mozzarella and layered with passata. For those feeling more adventurous – or the New York heat – there’s also a cold spaghetti dish, dubbed "If Pasta Fredda was Eaten in Amalfi," which pairs the chilled noodles with raw red shrimp and almonds.

If you can make it through the Italian’s customary four courses, ensure you leave space for dessert, where executive pastry chef Dominique Canvin presents a menu inspired by pastries including warm Sfogliatella with fig, pistachio and citron fillings; Bocconotti tartlets with sweet filling; and Baba au Rhum. 

Drink choices are similarly disciplined but nonetheless delectable. The wine menu only features bottles from regions like Sardinia and Sicily, meanwhile, cocktails and spirits put the spotlight on the citrus and herbs that grow along the country’s sunny southern coastline. 

Interior

Designer Sarah Carpenter & Studio transformed the two-story site on Broadway, marrying the building’s rich New York heritage with natural Italian materials. The open-concept kitchen positions the wood-fired Acunto pizza oven (shipped in from Naples) to take center stage, which can be framed in raw Italian limestone and tiled in travertine flagstone. 

In the daytime, natural light pours in through the three-story atrium windows, and as the night draws in, vintage Murano pendant lights hanging above the classic Carrara bartop turn the mood to seductive.

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