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Location: 2100 Broadway Ave., Beechview. 412-531-7422
Hours: Lunch: Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; dinner: Mon.-Sat. 4:30-11 p.m., Sun. 4-9 p.m.
Prices: Appetizers, $7-15; entrees, $15-29
Fare: Traditional, gourmet Italian
Atmosphere: Nana’s dining room
Liquor: BYOB

Like it or not, one of the most dependable truisms about the city of Pittsburgh is that it’s really a small town. If you’re looking for that kind of freeing anonymity that people enjoy in big cities like New York, well, you can keep on looking. Because here, you hop on the bus, and there’s your colleague. Go to the ballgame or a reading, and — hi, neighbor! And at your corner bar, they know not just your name, but also your favorite draft.

For the restaurant version of this small-town experience, dine at Davio. The night we went to this tiny Italian restaurant on Beechview’s main drag, our waitress was amazed to have three tables — in one night! — that had not been there before. With not much more than a dozen four-tops, you need a reservation. With a cozy interior ornamented with family photos, the grandchildren’s lovingly preserved baby shoes and eclectic oil paintings, you may also want an introduction.

Yet, as strangers, we were warmly welcomed. The service was friendly, helpful when needed and unobtrusive when not. The menu is a large card with appetizers and salads on one side and pasta and meat entrees on the other. Twin specialties of the house are crab and veal, with each offered in a variety of dishes, together and separately. The menu manages to be simultaneously classic — no wacky ingredients, no pretentious preparations — and unique. Of a couple dozen entrees, only a familiar few were lifted from the Standard Italian Restaurant Repertoire; the rest were the kind of dishes you might expect to discover on a luxurious Italian vacation.

While we perused the choices, our waitress delivered a basket of hot, soft, crusty bread along with two tasty dressings: olive oil infused with garlic and herbs, and a spread of crushed white beans and escarole. Rather than being redundant, this only primed Angelique’s palate for her appetizer of escarole and beans, one of her very favorite Italian dishes. Davio created a memorable version with greens braised until they were just barely wilted and tossed with tender white beans boldly flavored with salt, pepper and garlic.

Jason’s Portobello stuffed with crabmeat was like a huge mushroom sandwich. Two firm, flavorful grilled caps hugged a sort of crab salad, with diced bell peppers and celery lending a fresh crunch to the sweet shellfish.

Davio’s signature dish, a double-cut veal chop, is always available, even though it’s not on the printed menu. Jason was sorely tempted, but the promise of crab and melted cheese drew him instead to the fazzoletto alla Tosca, veal cutlets wrapped around fontina and crab, and topped with an asparagus cream sauce. The whole was then broiled, resulting in a crunchy crust surrounding tender meat while the crab seemed even more decadently rich in its medium of molten cheese. Inch-long spears of asparagus provided a vegetal contrast of texture and flavor, and the veal itself exemplified the mild but distinctive character that makes it an irreplaceable base for such a riot of culinary creativity.

Crab featured once more in Angelique’s entrée, this time paired with poached salmon and accented by sautéed spinach and toasted pignoli. The salmon was simply prepared in butter, salt and pepper, which formed a lovely light brown crust on the moist, flaky fish. Over this fell a generous cascade of jumbo lump crab and toasted pine nuts. Disappointingly, the spinach was so scant, it could have been mistaken for an herb, not a featured ingredient. Still, we called the dish a success, with the beautifully toasted pignoli adding warmth and depth to the tender, sweet seafood.

Like the rest of our meals, our dessert was a peerless preparation. Russian sable flourless chocolate cake had a posh name and a consistency to match, smooth like a mousse but more creamy and dense. Its chocolaty richness was punctuated by a distinctive tang that we conjectured might have come from sour cream. Would it have been so inappropriate to have licked our plates?

Like Pittsburgh itself, Davio is a small place full of friendly faces. With superb Italian food, an intimate setting, and excellent service, this little restaurant in Beechview has more than earned its devoted clientele.

Jason: 3.5 stars
Angelique: 3.5 stars

3 replies on “Davio”

  1. My boyfriend made reservations at this restaurant for our Valentine’s Day. We could not celebrate it on the 14th, so we decided to go the night before. As we walked into the establishment, there were several other couples & parties waiting. As we were waiting to be seated, we were crammed into the dining area (standing over top of people who were already seating having their meals) and asked to stay out of the way. After 45 minutes of waiting for a reservation at 8:30, we were the last couple to be seated and a woman (owner, manager?) approached us. She explained that she did not feel that any parties would be leaving soon because everyone seems to be staying later than expected, so we should go somewhere else. She even recommended that we go to the restaurant next door. Despite our reservations, we were pretty much asked to leave.

    I was appalled at the terrible service, and how my celebration of the holiday was treated with such disregard. Did I find it upscale? Absolutely not. I have been to “upscale” restaurants where customer service is of utmost importance, which is not apparent at Davio. I do not recommend this restaurant, and I will make sure that I let many other people know about my experience.

  2. I would like to post a comment to respond to “danad’s” review…As a server in an upscale restaurant…not Davio’s…Valentine’s Day, and the days before and after it, are the WORST days of the year for restaurants. What do you expect…the manager to ask another guest to finish up and leave? Put yourself in their shoes for a moment. It is out of their control on how long a guest sits at a table. Davio’s only seats about 30-40 people. And I find it unfair to Davio’s servers for you to judge them like this, saying that the service was terrible. You never even experienced their service. I live about two blocks away from Davios, and have eaten their a couple of times, and let me tell you, it was some of the best food that I have ever eaten, and some of the best service that I have ever had. I have been a server in fine dinning for about 15 years now, working every where from the Grand Concourse to the Le Mont, so I know what I am talking about. No one in their right mind should ever judge a restaurant on service or food on one of the busiest days of the year. I bet you were never a server. And for those of you who have never tried Davio’s, I highly recommend it. I have eaten the food!!!!

  3. I think that it is important to treat your customers well despite being busy. Good service is just as important as good food. I have eaten at Davio’s before prior to my bad experience and the customer service was not outstanding, even in that visit.

    I was also a server at a restaurant and a bar before I obtained my real job.

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