My latest kick is eating lots and lots of Neapolitan-style pizza...I love spacca, new-guy-in-town Forno Rosso, and the other usual suspects in this category are all great, but I still love to try new places in the name of research....so, I dined at Macello after a reading an (old) Dolinsky review claiming it was top 5 in the city for Neapolitan pies.
Upon arriving, I had super high hopes. The space, as others have noted, is absolutely gorgeous!

Old vintage detail on the bow-truss ceiling, cooler-flap entry door, great lighting/decor - and my, oh my, their pizza oven is gorgeous - full of character and clearly custom built by a mason - not off an assembly line...



We ordered a few appetizers, and a pizza to share.
1st - Barese Sausage - with bietole e fava beans - cooked in their wood burning oven.
Looked nice upon arrival, and I liked the idea of the soft flavors of the fava bean being countered by a punchy/well seasoned sausage - except the sausage had no flavor, which ruined the dish.

Our other appetizer was Carciofi Ripieni | stuffed artichoke. A few bites of this were good - some strong parmesan cheese/garlic bites were definitely tasty.

On to the pizza, the reason we came:
We ordered a Pizza Bianca - fresh cherry tomato, mozzarella, E.V.O.O, basil, & arugula

The pie looked fine,( the arugula was quite excessive - perhaps by design), but this was different than most other "Bianca" pizzas I have had, with the use of cherry tomatoes (thus no longer being "bianca", no?) and the excessive amount of arugula on top of the pie. I also noticed that
a) it was pre-sliced
b) no char on the underside of the crust (bubbled/charred on top, just not underneath)
c) the center of the pie was quite firm - not soggy/soft as is tradition with these pies
This pizza had more of a cracker-crust feel than Neopolitan (not sure if this was a problem with the way they are cooking it, or the crust dough itself). I did hear the manager/head server tell some kids that the pizza oven was piping hot - about 550 degrees (which is a bit low for this style of pizza). This made any charring simply hard/crispy rather than chewy with that toasted flavor that I love so much in these fast-fired pies. Toppings were fine, average restaurant depot quality ingredients.
To sum it up:
I would bring a group back here for a fun lively wine-soaked night out. They have a menu full of other italian dishes (meat/cheese/pasta) that seem hard to mess up. I wouldn't order the pizza again (or the other apps we had), but would try other dishes now knowing the ingredients aren't top-quality. The room is large, well-designed, and comfy. The pizza oven in the center of the space is just awesome, however - the quality of the food didn't live up to the expectations set by the decor.
Next up - probably today for late-lunch "
Elio Pizza On Fire in AddisonPS - I did take some delicious house-made cannoli to-go that I happily munched on while driving home (and the cappuccino they made us to go were great too).