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THE BEST
Nibble on a thin-crust pizza, blistered from the wood-burning oven. The namesake number, with sunny eggs and prosciutto atop a trim Margherita, stands out: consider it a breakfast pie, tasty anytime. The fontina-arugula-prosciutto combo also delivers. Spaghetti alla carbonara and rigatoni all'Amatriciana head the pastas, along with four-cheese ravioli with asparagus in cream sauce. Baked clams oreganata and Waldorf salad: dependable. Fino Rosso's big catch is the whole baked branzino, or sea bass, drizzled with herb-flecked, garlicky olive oil. The red snapper simmered with tomatoes, garlic, olive oil, herbs and clams comes close. And chef Paul Vuli sends out a terrific, tender filet of bison, as basic to Italian cuisine as mozzarella di bufala is to the Great Plains kitchen, finished in a red wine reduction. His roasted rack of Colorado lamb: rosy, juicy, excellent. Chicken contadina, backed by sweet sausage, red peppers and roasted potatoes, would be better on the bone, but it's still savory. Topping the finales -- a wine glass full of frothy zabaglione on strawberries, and a tiramisu to make you remember why the dessert always stays on top.
THE REST
The watery crabmeat salad is engulfed by tartar sauce; and the salad of goat cheese, potatoes and French beans looks as if it were molded in a Campbell's soup can. Baked shrimp in caper-anchovy-mustard sauce surprisingly define bland. Dry cheesecake, carrot cake.
THE BOTTOM LINE
Roman candle.
Reviewed by Peter M. Gianotti, 7/2/08.
Hours: Dinner every day, from 3 p.m. Monday to Friday, 5 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday; lunch, noon to 3 p.m., Monday to Friday.