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Latest Review:

Portable pasta
When Ciro Maione added frittata di pasta to the menu at Domenic's, his Waltham sandwich shop, he had al fresco dining in mind. ``It was something from my childhood," he says. ``We always had it for picnics, or at the beach." It's easy to see why. The dense pie made of long tubular pasta bound together with eggs and studded with smoked mozzarella, romano cheese, sopressata, and prosciutto cotto is portable, satisfying, and meant to be served at room temperature. ``It's like a plate of carbonara to go," says Maione. This ``pizza maccherone" -- that's what it's called in Neapolitan dialect -- is basic home cooking. Customers responded with such enthusiasm to the dish that Maione continues to carry it, though not every day. ``Just when I have time," he says. A wedge of frittata ($3.95) makes a substantial lunch, consumed at the beach or at a desk. Call ahead to make sure it's on the menu. Domenic's, 987 Main Street, Waltham, 781-899-3817. -- JANE DORNBUSCH
Phantom Gourmet:

Old School Italian When Phantom craves a no-fuss Italian feast with rustic pastas in red sauce splendor, it’s all about the classics.
Phantom salutes eight great old school Italian eateries.
Domenic's Italian Bakery (The Greatest: Panini)
987 Main St. Waltham, MA 02451
(781) 899-3817
www.getdoms.com
Domenic’s
Italian Bakery and Deli sells the best freshly baked Italian bread, transformed into fabulous panini sandwiches, like the Parma ham stuffed with mozzarella, tomato, and basil. The bread is lightly misted with olive oil and grilled so that the cheese melts and the insides are warm. Domenic's
also features hearty soups, homemade pasta, calzones, Sicilian style pizza, and crackly cannoli. The hopping take-out operation has a few tables, but most action happens across the counter.

FoodAdventures.org
May 2004
Domenic's Italian Bakery
Sandwiches: $7-8
987 Main St / Waltham, MA 02451 / (781) 899-3817
Review date: May 2004
Unless you work in or near Waltham you probably never heard of Domenic's. It's a barely noticeable
tiny Italian bakery that only opens for lunch Monday through Friday. Their only advertisements
are their sandwiches. I could not resist asking someone at work where they got such a great
looking sandwich. Next day, I went to Domenic's and tried one of their creations. It was the
best sandwich in the world. They only make one type of bread -- ciabatta. The crust is crisp
and breaks easily when you take a bite. You don't have to tug and pull at it with your teeth.
The flavorful and elastic crumb is full of huge holes. This bread is a notch above every other
bread I had in Boston (including Iggy's, Clear Flour, and High Rise). The sandwich fillings
are delicious too. Tuna with olive spread, artichoke hearts, and roasted peppers is my favorite.
Domenic's also offers hot pasta and gnocchi--all wonderful, but not life changing like their
sandwiches. They sell cannoli and cookies for dessert, but I never have any room left. There
are no tables at Domenic's, so get your sandwich and head over to Prospect Hill Park for a
picnic, or bring it back to the office and be the envy of the lunch table.

Article
from:
Tastingmenu.com
April 1, 2004
Domenic's, Waltham, MA.
After college,
I stayed for a time in my college town - Waltham, Massachusetts. Lacking
any actual
skills despite my expensive college education I worked at random jobs trying
to figure out what to do with my life. For awhile I worked at a copy shop (you
can call me Sir Speedy - actually... please don't). The copy shop was slowly
being run into the ground as a business, so the employees ended up with less
and less to do each day. That meant plenty of time for lunch. Luckily there
was never a question of what to eat. Next door was a small Italian bakery called
Domenic's. Almost every day I would go to Domenic's, get a stromboli, some arancini
rice balls with little bits of pork in them, and a Clearly Canadian soda. (Remember
that? I'm not sure if it was just a Northeast phenomenon. It was colorless fruit
soda in cool bottles. But I digress.) The stromboli were these incredible baked
items filled with meat, cheese, and tomato sauce. They were served steaming
hot, and had this incredible balance both in terms of robust flavor as well
as texture. The arancini, were more subtle but still delicious. For years after
I moved away I thought often about Domenic's and their incredible home-cooked
food.
And while I'd been back to Boston several times since moving away I'd never
gone back. I was determined that on this trip I would get a chance to eat there.
I started to wonder whether Domenic's could be as good as I remembered, or whether
I'd mythologized my food experience there because it was a discovery I made
when I was just starting out on my own. Either way I was determined to see what
was left of my memory. Coming from Seattle just exacerbated my longing. Salumi
is an excellent Italian sandwich shop in Seattle, and I really do love the food
there. It's very good. Aside from the easy public relations boost Salumi gets
as its proprietor is Armandino Batali, father of celebrity chef Mario Batali,
Salumi mainly benefits from the fact that it has this entire city (and entire
state for that matter) to itself. There are at least dozens of Italian bakeries
and sandwhich shops on the East Coast that are in the same league as Salumi.
But on the east coast, they are often taken for granted. More on this later.
I walked into Domenic's just before the lunch rush with gray skies hanging
over Waltham and local folks hanging out in front of their storefront. I went
there with a mission to pick up a couple of sandwiches for us to take out. But
I ended up spending over an hour trying various dishes, and bringing back an
enormous amount of food. This is not hard to do given the wide selection of
delicious Italian homestyle items. The decor is unassuming. A simple green awning
hangs over the front of the bakery. The inside is spartan with yellow walls
decorated with pictures of family members from the bakery's early years as well
as signs relating to the food. Sizes of takeout containers are announced by
affixing the containers themselves to the wall. Prices are announced via printed
signs clipped to the glass fronts of food tables arranged around the front of
the bakery. Much of the food is on display behind this glass. The bakery feels
right. You couldn't create this kind of atmosphere if you tried. And even if
you've never been there, walking in makes you feel like your home.
I started off by ordering a sub. Large Ham and Provolone with Lettuce, Onion,
Hots, Oil, and Spices. As they made this I started looking for some of my old
favorites. The arancini were there but the stromboli were no longer on the menu.
The arancini are Rice Balls with Ham, Salami, Prosciutto, Eggs, and Mozarella.
These deep fried beauties have an almost crusty outside and are filled with
a risotto like concoction studded with various small and delicious pork chunks.
They are little balls of pure goodness. The flavor is subtle so they're a good
thing to start off with as the flavors coming from the back of the bakery get
progressively brighter and stronger as you go.
The sub was absolutely delicious. Like so many other instances in the world,
back to basics serves it well. The freshness of the ingredients conspires to
give you a sandwich that's bursting with flavor and freshness ensconced in a
crusty yummy cave of bread. The crunch from the lettuce and onion, the almost
sweet baseline of the meat, and the spark from the hots, salt, and pepper are
all part of what makes it great. The fresh roll, baked in house of course, is
almost creamy in its flavor and is the perfect home for all the fresh ingredients.
It's so simple, and so good. The other classic Italian sub we got was the meatball
sub. Also deceptively simple, it can be incredibly easy to screw up. You can
get too fancy with seasoning the meatballs, the bread can get soggy if there's
too much sauce, etc. It's a delicate operation and timing is key. The fact that
we were eating everything takeout didn't make it easier. But it worked nonetheless.
Just the right amount of sauce, and great bread guaranteed that the sandwich
was juicy, not soggy. The meatballs themselves had clear accents of garlic and
herbs. But they were in perfect balance, still supporting players to the meat
itself. They didn't dominate. The sub was excellent.
Domenic's opened in 1979 by Domenic Maione as a bakery. Over the years various
non-strictly bakery items were added. While Domenic passed away his son Ciro
runs the establishment today. Ciro's mom, Enza, still works there, baking, and
helping out. It was Ciro who started doing food beyond the basics back when
he was in high school. And today Domenic's includes items like Ravioli alla
Vanessa - Ricotta cheese ravioli with cream sauce with fire roasted peppers,
prosciutto, and peas. This was absolutely excellent. Simple, savory, fresh,
and delicious. Why countless Italian restaurants in the U.S. can't keep it simple
and fresh like this pasta I don't know. The gnocchi with simple tomato sauce
followed the same principles with the same delicious results.
Ciro is not just assembling ingredients and placing them on his bread, he
is baking and cooking up a storm in the kitchen of his bakery. The individual
ingredients that make up his dishes are all being given equal care and tenderness.
Racks are lined with cooling big doughy rolls, with floury soft crusty outsides
and soft chewy airy insides. Huge pots of freshly made sauce stand in the kitchen
ready to be consumed. Some of this sauce made it onto our gnocchi. It was essentially
perfect. It had tons of flavor and was so smooth and sweet. Silky. Eggplant
and broccoli are cooking in various pans destined for a variety of dishes. High
quality ham is being sliced extra thin for sandwiches. Beautiful marinated tomatoes
are not made from pre-dried tomatoes, Ciro starts with fresh and dries them
himself. The poor design of the baking oven at Domenic's has resulted in a pilot
light that's simply too big. It's a lucky mistake as it's the heat generated
by the pilot, that is just low and steady enough to dry the fresh tomatoes on
premises. These oven-dried tomatoes are then marinated for a week to soak up
the olive oil and flavor that makes them what they are. Ciro offers me a sample
as he would for any interested, enthusiastic, and soon-to-be regular customer.
The flavor is oozing from the tomato. It's bright, tart, sweet, spicy, and exciting.
Any sandwich this ends up on lights up with flavor. This particular one didn't
quite make it as far as a sandwich.
Don't think savory items are the only fare at Domenic's. Plenty of sweets
grace the menu. The star (for me anyway) are the beautiful and delicious cannolis.
The perfect thick cream filling, the crunchy shells, and the powdered sugar
all make for a wonderful combination. You can't help but smile after you take
a bite of one of these beauties. There are also various pastries and cookies
lining the glass units around the bakery. Also excellent.
I don't know whether I embellished my memory of Domenic's. But I know that
when I returned, roughly 12 years since I'd last been there, not only did it
live up to my memory, but it exceeded it. I think back then I didn't really
discriminate as much between food that was great and food that wasn't. I definitely
knew I loved Domenic's back then, but there was lots of food I ate on a regular
basis that was mediocre. And for some reason back then I never asked myself
the question of why I'd waste another moment eating something mediocre when
a gem like Domenic's was nearby. And now today, having spent quite a bit more
time focused on food than I used to, it's clear that while I really enjoyed
Domenic's, I didn't really know just how good I had it. And the truth is that
I think that the residents of Waltham, and of metro Boston nearby, have no idea
what they have in Domenic's. I think the Waltham locals mostly take it for granted.
(No doubt there's a few fans who understand how special the dedication to flavor
and authenticity is, but I bet this is not true for most Walthamites.) And I
bet that the people who live in nearby Boston, don't even know it exists. When
I was talking to Ciro he confided at one point that he was really only using
a third of his capacity to in terms of the items he was putting on the menu.
Imagining a menu three times the size makes my head spin and my mouth water.
Maybe the folks in the area will start frequenting Domenic's even more so that
Ciro can start expanding his menu and treat us to more delicious food. I know
that whenever I'm in town, that's what I'll be doing.
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