With a wood-burning pizza place popping up on every other corner these days, you have to admire the chutzpah of people who would open a place offering gourmet pizza cooked in a conventional Blodgett oven.
Three-month-old I Monelli is also located in a semi-fabled space at Western and Winnemac, as you'll read when perusing
this thread.
I didn't have a chance to sample much of the menu (having dined on Food Network leftovers at WASC earlier in the day), but started with the baked scamorza over an arugula salad. The lightly dressed arugula was a nice offset to the richness of the slightly-melty cheese, and having greens on the plate helped me convince myself I was being healthy.
The pizza we ordered (actually a half-order, 9" rectangular pizza) with artichoke, olives, onion, and IIRC bacon, ordered with extra garlic) arrived in a rustic square shape on a pizza peel, cut into rectangles.

The crust was unlike any I've ever had. Slightly charred and crackly on the outside, ethereally light with a nice crispness in the interior. I later learned that one of the unusual things about making the crust is the dough's remarkably high water content - around 70%. Apparently, the dough has to rest quite a while before the semolina soaks up all that moisture, to get to anything resembling a workable stage. It's a technique I'll have to try sometime.
The bright, fresh flavor of the uncooked tomato sauce also showed through. The only disappointment was the extra garlic, which had a definite jarred flavor. With the pedigrees of the owner and chef (Pizza Metro, Pizzeria D.O.C.), you'd think they use fresh garlic. Still owner and chef were very friendly, making the rounds of the few occupied tables (about 25% occupied on a Friday night), and chatting freely.
It's worth another visit, when I have more room to sample the other offerings.
edit to add: BYOB
I Monelli
5019 N. Western
Chicago, IL
773-561-8499
Last edited by
nr706 on July 13th, 2008, 3:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.