South Wales Echo

Italian restaurant a far cry from typical pizza joint...

- By Ed Gilbert

I’VE been a long-time fan of Cardiff city centre’s Casanova but it’s a place which flies under the radar compared to glitzier and trendier restaurant­s which sit nearby.

In fact, when it was described on social media by someone as “the underrated gem of Cardiff food”, there were chimes of agreement.

Opened in 2005 by three Italian friends, Casanova is a far cry from your typical pizza pasta joint. They import much of their own produce directly from Italy, their compact menu changes with the seasons, there’s no pizza and usually only a couple of pasta dishes on offer.

They also have an excellent new chef who worked at the Hardwick in Abergavenn­y before spending the last eight years cooking around Tuscany. He certainly knows his onions when it comes to Italian cooking.

On the Saturday night we visited, it was a full house in the restaurant’s cosy twofloor dining room. Whilst we waited for the backlog of orders to clear through their tiny five-hob kitchen, we munched our way through a bowl of fiery black pepper rich taralli biscuits.

To start, a special of wild mushroom risotto (£9) was an absolute cracker. Neither too loose nor claggy, it delivered a huge hit of savoury and funky wild mushroom and a rich decadence of cheese.

Caponata (£8), a sweet and zingy Sicilian stew made with soft long-cooked aubergines, was topped with a good wodge of creamy and tangy grilled goat cheese. A drizzle of truffle honey and a scattering of crunchy pine nuts made it a deliciousl­y indulgent combinatio­n.

Onto mains, and an excellent crisp skinned fillet of grey mullet (£22) tasted of the sea; it’s unsurprisi­ng as the chef selects the freshest fish from Cardiff market on a daily basis.

It was accompanie­d by a mix of asparagus, new potatoes and broad beans bathed in a butter sauce fragranced with roast garlic and the punch of caper.

Welsh lamb rump (£25) was treated with the respect it deserves.

Pink fleshed, supremely tender, big in flavour and capped with well-rendered fat, it was served with soft caramelise­d courgette, a silky and delicate celeriac puree, wellcrispe­d new potatoes and a glossy lamb sauce.

But, it was a couple of blobs of intensely savoury anchovy puree which gave the dish an extra dimension – it’s a classic pairing with lamb for a reason. Desserts maintained the meal’s very high standard.

A properly creamy panna cotta (£8) with a textbook wobble was fragranced with the merest hint of liquorice. Accompanie­d by a rich chocolate crumb, a toasty sesame caramel crisp and an intense liquorice puree, it was a flavourpac­ked creative dessert.

A cannolo (£6) was more traditiona­l in its constructi­on but every bit as delicious. A crisp pastry shell was loaded with smooth chocolate chip studded sweetened ricotta and capped at either end with whole pistachios and warming stemmed ginger. We had an absolutely belting meal at Casanova and their high end Italian cooking is certainly some of the best in the city.

Handily, they’re also open on Mondays when not too many other places in the city are. If you haven’t visited this underrated gem yet then you’re missing out.

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 ?? ?? savoury mushrooms
savoury mushrooms
 ?? ?? Welsh lamb rump
Welsh lamb rump
 ?? ?? Taralli biscuits
Taralli biscuits
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Grey mullet
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Caponata
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