NYCReview
photo credit: Kate Previte
San Sabino
Included In
It’s hard to nail a sequel. But San Sabino, the seafood-centric spot from the folks behind Don Angie, isn’t just the original wrapped in big sunglasses and a floppy beach hat. It feels like the reverse of a Spaghetti Western: a laid-back Italian cafe imported to 1970s Malibu, perched above the Pacific Coast Highway.
This is the West Village, not the West Coast, so you’ll have to swap out the ocean vistas for a view of uBreakiFix phone repair. But with the help of some colorful, spritzy cocktails, and a few knockout dishes, San Sabino’s limoncello-washed room and surf rock soundtrack lulls you right into a seaside state of mind.
photo credit: Kate Previte
photo credit: Kate Previte
photo credit: Kate Previte
Like Don Angie down the block, this is a tough table to reserve. So unless you know someone who knows someone, you’ll most likely end up as a walk-in, seated at the curved bar, your feet dangling alongside shiny pairs of Aimé Leon Dore New Balance sneakers, and your shoulder bumping against someone’s cashmere cardigan. You’ll lose the street corner view, but it’s still fun to watch bartenders pull falso spritzes from the tap, or pour bright, prickly-pear pink margaritas into cactus-stemmed glasses.
Stick with the light and easy theme while ordering, and you can’t go wrong, especially if you focus on playful smaller plates. Pair your cocktail with some cheesy, airy frittelle before moving on to 'nduja rice-stuffed mussels, or the chessboard-like octopus carpaccio with alternating circles of tender octopus and spicy capicola. A buttery crab and mortadella dip comes with Ritz crackers, and a pepper jelly that might have been ripped right off a recipe page of Good Housekeeping, circa 1963. It’s delicious.
photo credit: Kate Previte
photo credit: Evan Sung
photo credit: Evan Sung
The pastas and mains are less exciting, but still worth dabbling in—and nothing is priced over $40. For heavier, cheesier dishes, stick to Don Angie. At San Sabino, get the stuffed farfalle with chili crab. Topped with buttermilk foam and tobiko, it looks like something you might find washed ashore on a morning beach walk, and tastes like a salty sea breeze.
Food Rundown
photo credit: Evan Sung
Cocktails
photo credit: Kate Previte
Stuffed Mussels
photo credit: Kate Previte
Crab & Mortadella Dip
photo credit: Kate Previte
Lobster Triangolini
photo credit: Kate Previte
Stuffed Farfalle
photo credit: Kate Previte
Shrimp Parm
photo credit: Kate Previte
Steak Magazzino
photo credit: Evan Sung