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Luca's Of Somerset

Luca's Of Somerset

2019 State Highway 27NJ 08873, Somerset, United States

Wine • Meat • Pasta • Italian


"Definitely one of our favorite restaurants in the area!! We love Luca’s and have taken many friends there and now they request we go back when we see them! Staff is very professional and friendly. To start the meal they bring over a ceramic box filled with warm, small triangles of foccacia with a filling between the layers. The type varies and is always my absolute favorite! You also get round delicious rolls, also warm. It is served with a sundried tomato pesto and a flavored olive oil. Yum! Too many restaurants serve cold bread. Always a pet peeve of mine!Two of us started with the polenta app and the other two had the degree Bruschetta! Delicious! The polenta was four nice size squares of polenta with a peach agridulce, which has a sweet and sour note, topped with hazelnuts and ricotta salata. The bruschetta is like a nice size pizza covered in heirloom cherry tomatoes! My friend thought the cheese that was melted under the tomatoes was the best she has had! She said it was so much better than what she has had on pizzas. The brick oven crust also adds another dimension of flavor and texture!For entrees one had veal saltimbocca, which he loves and gets almost every time he goes, two had pasta dishes which are always excellent because they make all their own pasta and I had an amazing special! It was a lobster tail split and served over a homemade papparadelle pasta with corn and peas in a truffle cream sauce! OMG was that delicious! For dessert we had the passion fruit sorbet and my friends the tiramisu. Also excellent. Matt was our server and he was very attentive ! All was wonderful and I can’t wait to go back!!"

Matthew's

Matthew's

2107 Hendricks Ave, Jacksonville, FL 32207, United States

Wine • Noodles • Desserts • Cocktail


"I hate to use the hackneyed term World Class as it sounds more appropriate to a basketball team or some smarmy condo project with Don Trump 's face on it than to a tasteful and discreet dining establishment like Matthew 's. But how else to explain it? Matthews can stand up and be judged alongside the best dining in London, Paris...well, maybe Lyon, or New York. Without wanting to denigrate Jacksonville (a city I love one might well ask, What on earth is this thing doing here? I mean, Come on! Let 's try those 'gator bits is not spoken in Matthew 's tasteful Temple of Comus. Light wood paneling, modernist fixtures, high-style designer finishes would make you think you 're dining in a great world capital instead of sitting down to the epicurean delights of Jacksonville, Florida. And epicurean they are: let 's get that out of the way at once. The food is, in my opinion, splendid and far-and-away in another league than that offered in the best local fern-joints, bistros and Fine Dining spots I 've been to here. I will not continue to wax euphoric over the food because this is an amateur review and anyone might reasonably question my competence to judge of these matters. Suffice it to say that in my misspent youth I dined nightly at the very finest top-tier restaurants in New York and Paris and nothing is wrong with the stuff Matthew 's puts on your plate by that standard. Like any inspirational American restaurant, the menu is of the recipe rather than inspirational style. Dishes are identified by a highly wrought-up list of ingredients rather than in the classic vocabulary, so a dish might be called, Northern Italian Broadleaf Mambo Noodles, sauced with Hypo-Organic elastomeric spinach reduction and served with Tyrolean mad-boar sausage bits instead of, say, Fettucine Florentine or the like. You know what I mean, they don 't even call it Caesar salad, and instead you get a list of what went into it. Your waiter helpfully explains to you, It 's like our Caesar salad when you inquire. Being a bit past my prime I find this disconcerting in a really upmarket joint, especially when modifiers like Diver are applied to shellfish (Did the scallops dive or were they harvested by divers or neither? . I 've come to conclusion that it is a sign of the great leveling of our society despite so much political rhetoric about class-warfare etc. Evidently in the old days only people with sufficient grounding to know the terms of the art could comfortably order in a high-tone place like this. Now in a more egalitarian spirit things are simply translated out into ingredients lists rather than dishes. of course this makes for a kind of stultification of the art: there will be no shorthand for emulators to use to offer, say, Crab Matthew 's in their own establishments. But I make reference to this by-now 30-year-old trend in menu-writing only to try to show objectivity by picking on some meaningless detail. From the moment we arrived and opened the car door to their friendly, cooperative and fluently English-speaking valet, to the moment we staggered out into the street after a variety of superb food and good wines, Matthews was a case study in good attitude and the proper management of a genuinely high-class restaurant. Because a sign of genuine class is a willingness to treat decently with all guests in your home. Valet, Maitre d ' (or whatever they call them these days , hostess, waiters, and food runners it made no difference: everyone was genuinely friendly, welcoming, accommodating and professional. Here you find no stories about your reserved table being unavailable, no shenanigans about waiting around in the bar to churn a few cocktail orders and an entire and welcome absence of the supercilious tone that so many restaurateurs believe establishes cred or serves as a warning to the hoi polloi to forget about a second visit. Gracious is the word I came away with. Moving on in those management touches that separate the sheep from the goats, the menu is printed daily. No chalk board, no little cards and, most importantly, no unwritten list of complex specials that must be learned through recitation and memorization. Although our waiter offered to expound on the virtues of this dish or that, there was no endless list of off-menu, unpriced items with which to ensnare a host and his/her guests into possible embarrassment. Questions were fielded with evident knowledge and requests to share small items, even single glasses of wine were met not with a song-and-dance, derision or a wagging finger but with immediate cooperation and understanding. You get what you want here if they can give it to you. Service was fast, bread and water were refilled as a matter of course, and although I suppose our waiter did indeed inquire as to how things were, he did not do so every five minutes or break into a conversation to ask if we wanted any more butter etc. The wine list is extensive and long on alternative wines. The big-time vintages (Bordeaux, Burgundies, and Barolos are represented by a modest (in scope but well-chosen selection although pricing for the serious items is on the extreme high-side. But there 's plenty of good wine to choose from that would meet any budget. Well, it 's hard to keep rambling on like this about so elevated an experience. I feel like my trip to Matthews would easily warrant a longer drive than just across town. An airplane ride, even. You can cut down that carbon-footprint by skipping that weekend in Paris and chowing down at Matthews over a long weekend."

Luca Osteria

Luca Osteria

116 Giralda Ave, Coral Gables, United States Of America, 33134

Pasta • Italian • Terrace • Seafood


"Although it was an anniversary celebration, the evening came to a sour end when the manager displayed very poor social skills allow me to explain. My husband son and girlfriend dined here tonight and Francesco was our server who was amazing he not only knew his recommendations, but was extremely charming and subsequently apologetic for the lack of courtesy the manager displayed. We were given a gift card in the amount of $150 for our anniversary to dine here and we ended up spending $450 Plus, which is totally normal for us as we are total foodies. All was going well and all plates were delicious 2 bottles of wine, 4 appetizers with an a la carte charge truffles on 2 of them) and 4 entrees. Sadly, my entree, the seafood risotto was extremely salty and was the last entree to arrive so I was looking very forward to it. All other entrees, short rib parpadelle, the truffle pasta specials and the pasta bucatelli all extremely delicious. When I told our server about the risotto Not being liked by anyone, even though I removed the mussels and added them in to it to see if it helped, when the manager came to Al’s what happened, he had the rude and unprofessional oda city to insinuate we were trying to dupe the plate by remarking that 1/2 of the risotto was gone, which was completely inaccurate and I was livid. I explained that the mussel wheels were all separate and on a separate plate in addition to the tasting portion we set aside untouched due to its inedibelity I was livid because I have NEVER felt so downgraded, as if I were trying to dupe them after spending sooo much money. Thank goodness we had the appetizers and at least I was able to eat something but otherwise, I went without a meal and totally ruined my anniversary celebration. I spoke with the server and mentioned how my husband and I love to dine out and have never felt so humiliated we are generous and good tippers and all the restaurants we dine in remember us for our acknowledgment."