Whenever I travel out of my normal radius, I always check online to see if there are any interesting restaurants or grocery stores near where I'm going. In that lackadaisical week between Christmas and New Year's Day, when most people don't get anything done, I took a long-overdue drive to Clermont, a town south and west of Orlando that I never have any reason to visit, to check out a restaurant I had been meaning to try for years. And on my way to eat a solo lunch at that restaurant (more on that some other time), I took the scenic route through quaint, picturesque downtown Clermont and discovered another restaurant, an Italian restaurant with a small deli and market attached. Of course, I had to stop in and get some stuff to bring home with me!
This Italian restaurant/deli/market I stumbled across was Corelli's Pantry (https://corellispantry.com/). It is a teeny-tiny space, although the dining room in the back might be more spacious. When you enter, you order at the counter, whether you are planning to dine in or take things to go. I wasn't sticking around, but I should have stuck my head into the dining room to scope it out. Sorry.
Up front, they had your typical glass deli cases full of cured meats and cheeses to slice and sell by the pound, some ready-made sandwiches and other prepared foods, and lots of Italian bread, cookies, and other baked goods.
I wasn't in the market (no pun intended) for anything sweet, especially with the recent addition of D'Amico & Sons Italian Market & Bakery so close to home, but things definitely looked good here. There were also some arancini (rice balls) in this particular refrigerated case.
Corelli's Pantry serves pizza by the slice, which is my favorite way to order and eat pizza. I had to get a slice to eat on the premises, which is the ideal way to gauge a pizzeria. Don't bring up that other Jewish guy who rants, raves, and rates slices of pizza -- I'm aware, and I am not a fan. But from my first taste, I definitely became fan of Corelli's New York-style pizza. This was a damn near perfect slice that I enjoyed back in the car: HUGE (the odd angle of this photo definitely doesn't do its size justice), thin and crispy, not floppy, robust sauce, nice melty cheese, not dripping with orange oil, crust was neither too doughy nor too dry. If I don't mind eating the plain crust at the end, I consider it a very good slice, and this one was.
They also had half of a muffuletta sandwich in the display case, already assembled, with the ingredients all mingling and marinating. I had not had a muffuletta anywhere in years, so I brought that home with me, planning to cut it in half and get two sandwiches out of it. The wide, round, flat loaf of bread wasn't as good as the legendary, flawless muffuletta served at Central Grocery in New Orleans, but I haven't been there since 2001, and beggars can't be choosers. The bread was drier and more crumbly, but it held up well against the multiple layers of Genoa salami, ham, provolone cheese, and olive salad (made from some combination of green and black olives, carrots, celery, onions, roasted red peppers, herbs, spices, red wine vinegar, and olive oil). I am not always the biggest fan of olives, but this Sicilian-inspired relish is what makes the muffuletta special and sets it apart from other Italian sandwiches. You can also buy jars of it, including from Central Grocery itself, but it isn't that hard to make at home.
Here's a dynamic view of a quarter of that marvelous muff. It really hit the spot.
I also ordered an Italian combination sub with ham, salami, capicola and provolone, topped "David's way," with house dressing, shredded lettuce, tomato and thin-sliced red onion, plus I asked for balsamic vinegar and hot cherry peppers. I stuck it in a cooler I brought with me and enjoyed it hours later, after it had a chance to chill out in the fridge back at home.
The roll was great quality -- most likely baked in-house at Corelli's Pantry, but I did not confirm that. They stuffed the sub generously with high-quality ingredients, just like that muffuletta. It was a tremendously good (and just plain tremendous) Italian sub -- one of the better ones I've enjoyed anywhere in Florida. It was up there with the namesake Stasio sub from Stasio's and the Capone from Bad As's Sandwich, two all-time favorites.
With Stasio's in Orlando's Milk District, D'Amico in Oviedo, and Tornatore's Italian market next door to its College Park restaurant (where you can also get a very nice Italian sub), I don't know when I'll ever make it back to Clermont to visit Corelli's Pantry again, since it was over an hour away from home. But I'm so glad I discovered it, almost accidentally, and even happier that I stopped there and tried so many things. Nothing disappointed. Everything exceeded my expectations. If you are anywhere near downtown Clermont, or even if you aren't, please stop there for a slice, a sandwich, or maybe even take a load off and enjoy some Italian food in the dining room, and then let me know how that was.
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