Agata, generous Neapolitan pizzas in Saint-Germain-des-Prés

Published by Manon de Sortiraparis · Photos by Manon de Sortiraparis · Published on January 2nd, 2023 at 03:11 p.m.
In Saint-Germain-des-Prés, Italian restaurant Agata unveils its generous, carefully-crafted Neapolitan pizzas, and it's a hit.

It's not easy to stand out from the Neapolitan pizzerias that are now legion in Paris, and yetAgata has opened its doors in Saint-Germain-des-Prés, giving the plump, quilted-edged pizza back its letters of nobility. Behind the place are Italian cuisine pros Gabriel Kalinowski and Raphaël Tadres, ex-partners of Iovine's, along with Bruno Ferrari and Jean-Baptiste Maillet, who have imagined a chic and refined temple to pizza in the tumultuous boulevard Saint-Germain.

And in the kitchen, who better than a Neapolitan pizza chef himself, Gennaro Esposito, to bring out pizzas in the purest Neapolitan tradition, in collaboration with chef John Damasco, formerly of Eataly. With, of course, a focus on good, high-quality ingredients, such as Sardinian pecorino, Pugliese tomatoes and Calabrian spianata, all sourced from the other side of the Alps.

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As expected, Neapolitan pizza is the queen of the menu, with classic recipes (12€-18€), led by margherita and 4 cheeses, but also more unusual recipes (17€-21€), like this Di Zucca pizza (pumpkin cream, fior di latte, guanciale, parmesan fondue, olive oil ; 18€) or this Pistacchiosa pizza (focaccia, mortadella, stracciatella di buffala, pistachio granella, pistachio pesto, basil; 20€).

Let's face it, generosity is the order of the day at Agata' s: the pizzas are all copiously topped, the dough, airy and slightly elastic, is perfectly cooked - unlike the vast majority of Neapolitan pizzas, which bathe once the straciatella has melted - and the ingredients, chosen with care, reveal their flavors without taking precedence over one another.

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But there's more to the restaurant than its pizzas, with a focus on the antipasti you'd expect from an Italian restaurant: vitello tonnato, arancini, eggplant stuffed with ricotta, and a selection of Italian cheeses and charcuterie, burrata from Puglia with black truffle cream (16€) or a generous plate of crispy fried calamari (18€) to dip happily in a homemade basil mayonnaise while sipping one of the clever drinks on the menu, such as the Agata 168 cocktail (dark rum, white peach purée, elderflower syrup, cointreau, soda water ; 14€) or the Etna Margarita cocktail (thyme-infused tequila, lime juice, bergamot purée, mandarin syrup, Amara; 14€).

Unfortunately for us, we break down before the desserts. But we can already see ourselves savoring one of the restaurant's sweet creations (Paris-Bronte, tiramisu) on its large terrace , sunny on sunny days and covered when it's cold, or even opting for the exclusive pastries created by pastry chef Jeffrey Cagnes for Agata.

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Agata is already proving to be one of Saint-Germain-des-Prés's best-sellers for anyone dreaming of fine Neapolitan pizzas.

Practical information

Location

168 Boulevard Saint-Germain
75006 Paris 6

Accessibility info

Official website
agata-pizzeria.com

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