Boston: Orfano (November 2019)


Orfano – Okay Food, Bad Service

My spouse and I visited Orfano for dinner on a Sunday evening in late November 2019. We dined at Chef Faison’s Tiger Mama the evening before, and we ate at Sweet Cheeks back in May 2017. (See our other individual reviews of the Big Heart Hospitality Group restaurants.) Orfano is open for dinner daily. You can reserve a spot using the online Open Table reservation system. 

Orfano opened in 2019 on the street level of the Pierce Building in the Fenway Triangle area near where Boylston Street meets Brookline Avenue. We stayed nearby at the Residence Inn Back Bay-Fenway, which is a short walk from the restaurant. The high-ceilinged space contains two areas: the elegant bar and the dining room (with its grape-colored padded booths and stand-alone tables). Décor features lots of wood, zig zag-patterned floors, big chandeliers and hanging pendant lights, strategically-placed mirrors, and framed black-and-white photographs. 

Orfano serves Italian cuisine with a twist. We ordered the warm hand-pulled mozzarella as a snack dish. Our server encouraged us to order some garlic bread to accompany the cheese, but we shy away from the idea that dishes should be sold as “pieces”; if the chef felt that bread was necessary to complement the cheese, she would have plated it that way. The restaurant delivered two long thin crispy breadsticks instead (every table receives these). The cheese was tasty, but we feel that it would have benefitted from a sprinkling of sea salt, in addition to the smidge of olive oil that was present in the small dish. As an appetizer, we shared the salt-and-pepper calamari, which was served with a dipping sauce; however, the dish consisted primarily of fried onion petals (which reminded us of what is served at the Outback Steakhouse [which I’m sure is not the impression Chef was hoping for]) and fried fennel slices, with just a few meager calamari pieces mixed in. As our entrees, we ordered two pasta dishes, the cacio e pepe (which consisted of about seven tortelloni cups rather than the traditional long spaghetti noodles; this dish was delicious and creative, but it did not remind us at all of cacio e pepe in any way) and the black pepper maltagliati (squash and maitakes with pasta that resembled broken pappardelle). Our server warned us that the pasta dishes were not entrée-sized and were instead intended to be shared by the table as a mid-course. (She did not lie about the portion sizes; fortunately we were not starving, or we would have left hungry.) We did not order dessert: nothing sounded particularly unique except the panna cotta (which sounded similar to the dessert we had tried but not liked the previous evening at Tiger Mama). The restaurant delivered two tiny slivers of multi-colored almond cake as a complimentary sweet treat while we paid our bill. Service was perfunctory; we seemed like an afterthought because our server was more interested in her other larger tables that yielded bigger bills/gratuities. 

We liked the elegant Orfano space, but the food quality, portion size, and service left a bit to be desired.




















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