Category Archives: Restaurants

Babulas Taverna in Mykonos, Greece

Fresh from a high-speed ferry ride from Santorini where we hit some turbulence and caused half of the ferry’s passengers to turn green and perform feats of projectile vomiting (nice visual, eh?), the gang was starved and was ready for more Greek fare. Walking to the town of Mykonos we passed by a taverna marked by a boat and hanging octopuses.

 Babulas Taverna hit the spot with its grilled octopus, sardines and the usual sampler of tzatziki, salad and bread and olive oil. If you didn’t read it in a previous post, may I just say that olive oil in Greece is absurdly good, even in hole-in-the-wall restaurants. It must be the air and the soil. At least that’s my theory.
Ouzo is the local liquor, made from fermented grape leaves with a very strong anise flavor that I wasn’t particularly fond of. I had more appreciation for its predecessor tsipouro, which is similar but without the strong anise, clove or coriander flavor.
More on Greece:

Kiki’s Taverna at Agios Sostis in Mykonos, Greece

For the more adventurous traveler to Mykonos, Greece, the barren strip of Agios Sostis might be more ideal, with its silence and B.Y.O. nature seeming more genuine than the 8-Euro umbrella rentals and surrounding internet cafes of its more famous counterparts. On a summer day as you are scorching from inadequate shade, an old man peddling homemade pastries will try to sell you some, and you’ll regret not taking him up on his offer as soon as he leaves.

There is only one source of food and refreshments bathrooms in the whole of Agios Sostis, and that is the infamous Kiki’s Taverna, where the line is long but you can drown your impatience in a dented copper-plated pitcher of white wine, handed to you with a couple of shot glasses whose authentic feel matches only the Greek chatter of locals waiting for their turn to be seated.

On that afternoon we were sitting on wooden chairs lined up outside the taverna along with several other parties who seemed to know the deal there at Kiki’s, so we just followed suit. Our Greek friend had recommended the taverna and we had started to drink the wine from the copper pitcher when she struck up a conversation with a single mother holding a place in line for her son, a friend and her daughter. We raised a glass to each other and shared squash seeds we had saved from our ferry ride to the island.
Inside as we got seated, the lady introduced us to her friend, the epitome of classic Greek goddess beauty if there ever was one. Suffice it to say our jaws dropped and we spent the rest of the meal elbowing each other because of the eye candy. To repay the graciousness they bought us dessert, and we toasted to our meeting, exchanged numbers, smiles, promised each other we’d write…

The food at Kiki’s Taverna is everything you would expect from a secluded, popular and secretive hole-in-the wall without even a sign or electricity. Food is served fresh and fast off a grill you can stand before and choose the fish of your liking. There was definitely nothing to be desired after a salad with the sweetest and juiciest tomatoes, artichokes, porkchops, and octopus.

Greek…errr…garden salad…should I tell you about Greek tomatoes*?

Artichokes in Olive Oil

Grilled Porkchop

Grilled Octopus

After our meal we were taught about the Greek ritual of telling fortunes based on the coffee sediment left at the bottom of one’s cup. Our new friends from the line bought us dessert to return the gesture of the pumpkin seeds we offered while we waited.  “I will visit you in New York!” is such a common thing we hear when we travel, and people almost never follow through (and we rarely want them to). What we did want to take with us was that meal, its warmth and the experience of copper pitchers, wooden tables, and waddling out of a nameless taverna to jump in clear saltwater and wade any remaining worries away.
 
An old church on top of a hill at Agios Sostis

A basin with calm water where we took a freezing post-lunch dip.

* Our Greek hostess said that only three things can be grown in most Greek islands: grapes, olives and tomatoes. The tomatoes are supposedly from a hybrid strain orginating from Egypt and require no watering – it gets its water (and all its flavor!) from the air and the soil. I couldn’t find any reference to these Egyptian strains but did find a lot of information glorifying Santorini’s grape tomatoes for being very flavorful, sweet and not requiring a lot of watering.

About Kiki’s Taverna: NY TimesFood & Wine

More on Greece:
Alternative Views
  Babulas Taverna in Mykonos
Kiki’s Taverna at Agios Sostis
A Mykonos Meow: Photo Essay
The Daily Applause at Oia
No Name Taverna Delights, Santorini & Mykonos
Mykonos and the Taverna at Agios Sostis
Oia: The Taverna at the Bottom of the Cliff

Pizzeria da Baffetto, Rome

Pizzeria da Baffetto seems to have earned prime real estate in all the Rome guidebooks for what is considered the best pizza in Rome, and with good reason. Often packed and very busy, the best time to come is before it opens at 7pm, and with an open mind around the less-than-gracious staff that seem well-versed in the rush that accompanies a famous pizza restaurant. Having said that, the flavors are distinct and the dough is tasty and crisp from a brick oven.
Da Baffetto is not a place to linger and chat but to eat and run. Locals know this, and tourists, whether they like it or not, quickly learn this fact.


Will not refuse the house red.


A shared table is not uncommon during busy hours.

Mushrooms and onions.

Plain pie.

Cheese and prosciutto.

Trattoria da Enzo, Trastavere, Rome

It was our last day in Rome and we decided to explore Trastavere, Rome’s Jewish neighborhood composed of narrow and winding cobblestone streets. On our way home, we noticed a restaurant that was bursting with local diners and, upon seeing a plate of fried artichokes shuttled across the floor, decided to to the unthinkable. We waited over an hour for a table in an unknown restaurant in the middle of nowhere. Actually, that’s something we usually do and often with great reward. Lunch at Trattoria da Enzo remains one of our most memorable meals in Rome. Its warm and homey atmosphere coupled with authentic Roman cuisine is worth the wait and getting lost for a while.

Plenty of time to stare at people already seated.

Sauteed vegetables and sardines.

  Fried artichokes and meatballs.

Vegetables, meatballs and a house white.

A simple ziti for the table.

 Spaghetti with clams and mussels.

Strawberries and cream.

Alfredo e Ada Restaurant, Rome

Since Ada died in 2009, her son Sergio has been the sole waitstaff of this five-table hole in the wall called Alfredo e Ada (Via dei Bachi Nuovi 14, Tel 06 687 8842). Reservations are recommended because of the space constraints, but it is all worth the hassle. There is no menu, but nonna Lucia will serve you whatever she has made for the day along with a carafe of house wine. The food is authentic and homemade with no frills other than the flavors you can only find in an Italian grandmother’s kitchen. A great break from the large touristy joints in Rome.


Sergio serves some wine.


The day’s pasta is a simple ziti in tomato sauce.

A pork loin dish with vegetables that tasted like it had been cooking the whole day.
I mopped up the sauce with my bread.


Lucia was the nonna in the kitchen.
We didn’t have to ask her to smile.
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