Carbone. Iconic upscale Italian New York Italian restaurant (with outposts in other major cities now too). The place to be seen ... as if you can get a reservation. And, well, actually known for having great food (although they *did* lose their Michelin star).
But this isn't about Carbone. It is about Parm. wIf you aren't from the New York City area, you probably haven't heard of Parm. It is a small chain of casual sister restaurants to Carbone. Yes, they have a similar version of the famous spicy rigatoni vodka, where you can get it for $18 rather than $37. But besides perhaps that shared sauce recipe, the establishments are quite different. No ridiculous ordeal to get a reservation. No celebs frequenting the place. No hand made pasta. Fast casual. You can get it delivered. The business does get its own accolades though, earning a place on the 101 Best Places to Eat in North America list by Newsweek."Since the original location of Parm opened in New York City’s Little Italy in 2011, the restaurant’s takes on Italian-American soul food have reached iconic status. From the prized Chicken Parm to the homemade meatballs to the Rigatoni Carbone, the menu is inspired by the cooking Michelin-Starred chefs Mario Carbone and Rich Torrisi ate growing up. The goal is to make the best versions of these recognizable dishes while remaining faithful to their history—and to serve them in a fun, familial environment."
The menu focuses around mostly sandwiches/heroes, parmesan platters (chicken, eggplant, meatball), and basic pastas. Cannoli, brownies, ice cream sundaes. A very approachable, quasi generic, American Italian menu.
I've been tempted to order that famous rigatoni Carbone on Doordash a few times, but red sauce pasta just isn't something I prioritize most of the time. I grew up eating a lot of it, and I've kinda moved on. And then I attended an event at Barclay's Stadium, where Parm has a stand. I studied the venue map in advance, so I knew exactly where to head immediately. This was my top choice of food to check out!
For our event, the Parm stand had only two items: chicken parm sandwich, and spicy rotini. Given that the spicy rotini is what I had my eyes on anyway, this was fine with me. The rotini is sold at all their locations as a side dish, and uses the same sauce as the rigatoni Carbone.
"Rotini pasta tossed in our spicy vodka sauce."
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| Barclays Stand. |
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| Spicy Rotini. |
I was so excited to try this, even if from a food stand at a stadium and obviously not prepared fresh.
The sauce was certainly the interesting part. It truly did have some heat to it. I was impressed that it was legit spicy (not overwhelmingly so, but, certainly not just regular mild tomato vodka sauce). The sauce was creamy and well seasoned, and really was good. That said, it didn't necessarily taste fresh and vibrant, and could have been just a good jarred spicy vodka sauce.
The pasta was fine, but not great. Not fresh pasta obviously. Rotini is a great shape for 1) holding sauce well and 2) just being kinda fun to eat. It was on par with generic restaurant anywhere pasta, no more, no less. Not too mushy, not overly al dente, fine, but not special.
So put it together and this was an enjoyable side. I think it would indeed go well with their parm sandwiches. It didn't really feel like main dish action though (even if portion was bigger) without some kind of mix-in or even fresh parmesan on top. For the setting, as a side dish, yes, maybe low 4/5, but more objectively probably really just a high 3/5.
At the regular Parm outposts, this is $8 for the side dish, not sure of Barclay's pricing.


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