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    La Sosta

    2.5 (2 reviews)
    ModeratePizza, Cucina campana

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    La Cantina di Baffone - Cheesecake

    La Cantina di Baffone

    5.0(2 reviews)
    15.4 km

    An agriturismo in my paternal grandfather's hometown, we discovered La Cantina di Baffone a few…read moreyears back and I have never gone for a visit without at least one meal there. Just down the hill from downtown Montecalvo, a small, hillside town 60 miles east of Naples, the restaurant seems to be far from civilization in a relaxed and peaceful setting surrounded by olive and cherry orchards ... AHHHHHHH! Owned by the lovely and very kind Daniela Racioppi, who does most of the interacting with guests, she greeted me warmly as usual and quickly gave us the menus. Knowing the menu very well, we quickly ordered some mineral water and a liter of the local red wine for the four of us as well as some bruschetta (€1.50/$1.75 - FYI: the "ch" in Italian is pronounced like our "k', so it is pronounced brew-sket-ah, not brew-shet-a) and a Caprese salad (€5/$5.75). The bruschetta was delish and the Caprese salad was bigger and better than most places that charge between €7/$8 and €12/$13.75. Having been born about 15 miles away, my grandmother's cooking was very similar to the dishes found in this region, so I always feel right at home here. None of the pizzas are over €5 ($5.75) and they are the cheapest I have seen in recent memory, here or in Naples, and the most expensive thing on the menu is just €7 ($8). Naples is chock full of fabulous pizzerias, so my focus on this occasion was on the cucina tipica (local cuisine), Montecalvese in this case. For our first courses (primi), my cousin Gino, nephew Francesco and I all had the Cicatielli e Broccoli (€5/$5.75). Cicatielli (dialect) is a local pasta that is known as Cavatelli in other parts of Italy. With just the right amount of perfectly cooked pasta, the broccoli leaves were not overwhelmed by the light, olive oil sauce holding the pasta together. Top it with some grated Parmigiano Reggiano and you have a delicious pasta dish that would easily cost two to three times the price elsewhere. As they say, "great minds think alike", so the three of us also ordered the Patane e Pupini (€5) for our secondi (second dish), a traditional combination of roasted sweet sausage, chunks of stewed beef, red and green bell peppers, and potatoes. My grandma used to make this and it was one of my dad's favorite dishes, and Da Baffone always does an excellent job in their preparation. Along with some local bread, I had to "fare la scarpetta" (to do the little shoe) with the leftover sauce, using a small piece of local bread to mop up the wonderful juices I could not possibly have left behind. My Italian-born wife always tells me that it is frowned upon in public, but I could not resist. Thoroughly stuffed, I had no room for dessert, but Gino and Francesco order the cheesecake (€2.50), a house specialty, one drizzled with caramel and the other a fresh fruit sauce with strawberry, raspberry, and cherry from trees in the adjacent grove. The graham cracker crust was perfect and the filling as good as any stateside restaurant, a dessert easily fetching twice the price at most places. Cantina di Baffone is a rarity and a place you can only find only off the beaten track in a place only locals know. The prices are ridiculously cheap, the portions big, and the food incredible. For a party of four, we ate extremely well for €15 per person, including drinks, making this restaurant an exceptional value. We only see my relatives once every year or two, but the next time we are in Montecalvo we will return to Cantina di Baffone for another inexpensive and delicious meal. This is as good as it gets folks! CombatCritic Gives Cantina di Baffone 10 Out Of 10 Bombs ... TravelValue Does Not Get Any Better Than This Folks ... More Bombs Are Better!

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    La Cantina di Baffone - Patane e Pupini (€5)

    Patane e Pupini (€5)

    La Cantina di Baffone - Patane e Pupini (€5)

    Patane e Pupini (€5)

    La Cantina di Baffone - Patane e Pupini - €5

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    Patane e Pupini - €5

    La Pignata - Parmigiana con caciocchiato

    La Pignata

    4.0(2 reviews)
    16.1 km

    The restaurant was quaint, but warm and inviting. A pignata, by the way, is a simple, tall clay jug…read morewith large handles on both sides used to drink wine or other liquids. The walls and shelves were adorned with pignate (plural for pignata), copper pots, a double bass (like in an orchestra), an antique wine press, books, bottles of wine, fresh fruit and vegetables and a large blue stained glass wall with the scene of a dear in nature. We started with mineral water and wine as is tradition in Italy. I asked for a vino locale (local wine), which is normally the house wine, likely made by the family or friends, and routinely quite cheap. What we got was a rather expensive looking bottle of wine, a Benito Ferrara 2014 Aglianico Campania I.G.T. "Passo del Lupo", a dry, smooth wine that is a deep ruby red with the "fragrance of cherries and violets". Made in Tufo, a small town of less than 1,000 between Benevento and Avellino about 30 miles away, I would hardly call that "local". Oh well. The server told us there were no menus, so he started suggesting antipasti. I understood that he was bringing us a simple prosciutto, salame, and cheese board, but what arrived was much more than I was expecting. He first brought us a simple pizza fritta, a small flattened pizza dough that is deep fried and topped with a dollop of tomato sauce. The massive wooden platter that soon followed was full of antipasti, including crostini (toast) with pancetta cinghiale (wild boar), salsiccia (sausage), salame (salami), prosciutto crudo (raw, cured ham), three types of cheese (fresh mozzarela, a goat cheese, and another I did not recognize), and pancetta lardo (a delicacy of very fatty lightly cured pork belly). He soon followed with a large dish of artichoke hearts marinated in local extra virgin olive oil (EVO) and red onion agrodolce (a sweet and sour vinegar and sugar reduction). It was nearly a meal in itself with the accompanying fresh, local bread. Then the next antipasto arrived. Beautifully presented in a bowl was a deep fried arancino filled with rice, funghi (mushrooms) porcini, pecorino (goat) cheese, sausage, and truffle carefully placed atop a base of a rich and decadent corn and saffron sauce. It was like no other arancini I have eaten, and I have eaten quite a few, being crispy on the outside, soft and slightly moist on the inside, and the saffron sauce was to die for. Then the next antipasto arrived. Another one? This was one I would not have ordered, had I ordered it in the first place (which I did not), paccheri (a large tube shaped pasta designed for stuffing) filled with a mixture of bacala (salted, dried cod), yellow tomato, bread crumbs, and "grano Senatore Cappelli" (a hard, old grain originally from Foggia). It tasted like dried cod, not one of my favorite foods because I do not like anything that tastes "fishy" and this was very fishy. Finally, the primo (first course) arrived, a hand made spinach papperdelle in a porcini mushroom sauce topped with an abundance of very expensive black truffles. It was a small serving, thank God, and was tasty, but somewhat bland and not very hot. I love all of the ingredients, but this dish did not rock my boat. To top off this massive lunch, Ezio insisted on bringing us their signature secondo (second - meat - course), agnello alle brace (braised lamb chops) in EVO and topped with fresh ruccola. We told him that we were stuffed, but he insisted that I (just me) at least try a small porzione ("portion" - aka one small piece) of their specialty. He arrived shortly thereafter with a plate FULL of braised lamb chops, there must have been at least eight of them and not at all what I would call a porzione. They were delicious as advertized, charred and basted in olive oil, eaten with the hands like fried chicken, never a knife and fork. The total came to €140, so €35 per person is not a bad price for such a massive and delicious meal at a Michelin Guide rated restaurant. We do not eat at such expensive restaurants every week (hence the blog's name ... TravelValue), but when we do splurge stateside or anywhere else, the bill normally comes to about $100, including a bottle of wine, making La Pignata a pretty good value. The thing that bothered me most was that the waiter brought us much more food than we wanted or ordered, resulting in a deduction of one BOMB in my rating below. CombatCritic Gives La Pignata 7 Bombs Out Of 10 ... More Bombs Are Better!

    Photos
    La Pignata - Rossa con salisicchio pomodori basilico melanzane provoline affumicate dop e olio di ravece. Eccezionale.

    Rossa con salisicchio pomodori basilico melanzane provoline affumicate dop e olio di ravece. Eccezionale.

    La Pignata
    La Pignata

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    Pizzeria da Alfredo

    Pizzeria da Alfredo

    5.0(1 review)
    15.9 km

    All locals here. This is the pizzeria to visit if in Montecalvo Irpino (Italy), my grandfather 's…read morehometown. With a nice, homey feel, the pizza oven was blazing when we entered, adding additional warmth to the room. There were just a few people there when arrived at 8pm, but the place was packed with a long wait by 10pm when we left. We were with my cousins who live just down the road and we had pizza, wonderful pizza, just like those served at the best pizzerias of Naples. My wife had the Pizza Provola e Speck (€4.50) with smoked provola and speck which is a thinly sliced, smoked, cured ham. The provola was generous and the dough perfectly prepared and baked. My pizza had tomatoes, mozzarella, and fresh, local sausage and salame Montecalvese (€5). It also was perfectly baked and delicious. They did not have olio piccante (EVO soaked in pepperoncini), but the brought me four bottles of crushed red peppers of varying intensity (11 - 17 on the hot meter) and some EVO, so I improvised. My cousin Rosanna had a grilled veal steak and salad, surprising me because I somehow missed the meat options on the menu. At just €3 l'etto (200 grams), an Argentinian steak just under a pound (14 ounces) will run you only €6 ($7.20). At Pizzeria da Alfredo "pagha poco e mangia molto bene" ... "pay little and eat very well"! The bill came to just €68, including wine, water and after dinner drinks, but they rounded down to €60 (a common practice in small Italian towns), not inluding tip. The quality of food and very reasonable prices here (and elsewhere in the area) are unbeatable, making this a DEFINITE TravelValue. CombatCritic Gives Da Alfredo 10 Bombs Out Of 10 And A Spot On My WALL OF FAME ... More Bombs Are Better!

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    Pizzeria da Alfredo
    Pizzeria da Alfredo
    Pizzeria da Alfredo

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    La Sosta - pizza - Updated May 2026

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