Homemade pasta, classic entrees, vintage charm, and wine carafes

























69 MacDougal St, New York, NY 10012 Get directions
$50–100
"Villa Mosconi opened in 1976, the year Jimmy Carter was elected, Taxi Driver was released, and the New York Times included “zeppole vans” on their list of 101 things to love about New York City. The zeppole vans are gone (alas), but this lively Greenwich restaurant remains. There’s a narrow bar room in front, an enclosed garden room in back, and a big dining room that would look like a hospital lobby if it weren’t for the white tablecloths and ornately framed oil paintings. The best thing about this place is the way the long-time waiters hug and cheek-kiss the regulars good night, but the hearty, unpretentious northern Italian dishes, carafes of wine, and fresh, housemade pastas will serve you well for a throwback group dinner." - willa moore, will hartman, sonal shah, neha talreja
"Villa Mosconi opened in 1976, the year Jimmy Carter was elected, Taxi Driver was released, and the New York Times included “zeppole vans” on their list of 101 things to love about New York City. The zeppole vans are gone (alas), but this lively Greenwich restaurant remains. There’s a narrow bar room in front, an enclosed garden room in back, and a big dining room that would look like a hospital lobby if it weren’t for the white tablecloths and ornately framed oil paintings. The best thing about this place is the way the long-time waiters hug and cheek-kiss the regulars good night, but the hearty, unpretentious northern Italian dishes, carafes of wine, and fresh, housemade pastas will serve you well for a throwback group dinner." - willa moore, will hartman, sonal shah, neha talreja
"At the mouth of MacDougal Street, Villa Mosconi dances to its own tune, several steps out of time with the rest of the neighborhood. This old-school Italian restaurant opened in 1976, and it still gets pretty lively (Monte’s, down the street is older, and owned by the same family). There’s a narrow bar room in front, an enclosed garden room in back, and a big dining room that would look like a hospital lobby if it weren’t for the white tablecloths and ornately framed paintings. The best thing about this place is the way the long-time waiters hug and cheek-kiss the regulars good night, but the hearty, unpretentious northern Italian dishes, carafes of wine, and fresh, housemade pastas will serve you well for a throwback group dinner." - willa moore, will hartman, sonal shah, neha talreja, arden shore
"Carbone is a party trick. Villa Mosconi is the real deal. The Greenwich Village restaurant is a place stuck in time, with comforting Northern Italian food and plenty of wine options under $40." - bryan kim
"Behind Villa Mosconi's red awning and dated cursive sign, men who are likely lifetime members of the Tiro A Segno Italian heritage club next door slouch over veal marsala. Women wear floral dresses that recall couch upholstery from 1976, the year this Greenwich Village restaurant opened. A Carol Kane sound-alike does a very good impression of her impatient cat, waiting for her at home while she waits an hour for her check. Across the room, servers send regulars off with a hug, a doggy bag, and two cheek kisses. At the mouth of MacDougal Street, Villa Mosconi dances to its own tune, several steps out of time with the Negroni drinkers walking by on their way to Dante. The reservation stalkers a block away at Carbone seem unaware of its existence, and the celeb chasers around the corner at Emilio’s Ballato will probably never hear of Villa Mosconi either, unless they get tired of waiting in line and search for “Italian near me.” photo credit: Alex Staniloff From the wooden bar area up front to a dining room that feels welcoming despite its hospital-like drop ceiling and white floor tiles, Villa Mosconi is a party in its own pocket universe. The Northern Italian cooking is as charmingly uneven as the service, ranging from “it exists” to “pretty good.” Waiters pop up to spout the day’s specials, then disappear, forgetting to bring the wine until you’ve finished studying all of the oil paintings ringing the room. It's a little chaotic, and, once that wine appears, a lot of fun. The menu is short and to the point—some dishes are labeled simply “Bolognese,” “Tomato Sauce,” “Marinara Sauce”—but ask about specials and homemade pasta, and you’ll discover plenty of variety. Nothing on the table makes an urgent argument to return, yet a plate of pillowy gnocchi with pesto is intensely comforting. And if you order the tender osso bucco in a lumpy, saffron-scented mattress of risotto, a server will carry it hoisted above his shoulder, so everyone in the room can see. photo credit: Alex Staniloff This isn’t exactly high-finesse dining, but it is endearing, right down to the all-season garden room out back. Come with friends who have a soft spot for obsolescence and don’t expect to be entertained by a self-referential schtick. Villa Mosconi is really just a second home for gently eccentric neighborhood regulars, disguised as an old-school Italian restaurant. (Monte’s, down the street and owned by the same family, is a bit more touristy.) Share some wine poured out of painted ceramic carafes. And if your white tablecloth gets splattered with drops of Chianti by the time a plate of big, gooey tiramisu arrives, that’s just the mark of the good time you've had here. Food Rundown Free Bread You can safely ignore this cold bread and the sesame breadsticks it comes with, but it does help pass the time while waiting for your food. Baked Clams These are nice little morsels of clam, thick with breadcrumbs, and our favorite of the starters we've tried here. Gnocchi With Pesto The fresh pasta dishes here are pretty reliable. This plate of plump, soft gnocchi is our top pick—it comes with an herbaceous pesto and is big enough for two to share. It's topped with spoons of cheese from a bowl—no fussy table-side parm grating here. Veal And Spinach Ravioli In Sage Butter Back before supermarket ravioli existed, this kind of pasta must have seemed especially luxurious. Now it’s merely tasty and satisfying, but it does have a good strong sage kick. Osso Bucco With Saffron Risotto Is this the most tender baby beef you’ll ever eat? Is the risotto cooked to that perfect point of sticky starchiness? Maybe not. But we did scrape up every last bite off the plate, and then extracted the marrow from the bone. For $50, we'd probably do it again. But we’d be more interested in trying the veal marsala, or parmigiana, as everyone else here seems to be doing. photo credit: Alex Staniloff Tiramisu A large, very soft and creamy slice of tiramisu, this can be safely split between at least three people. Tartufo Bigger (and more edible) than a Magic 8 ball, this tartufo has a nice thick chocolate shell and chunks of candied cherry." - Sonal Shah