Top 5 eateries in Sydney's Little Italy
The shell-breaking tools at Filicudi makes seafood finger-licking goodIn Sydney's Little Italy, all things Italian permeate life like garlic in a ragu, and a journey reveals the real taste of Italian cooking. From pizzas to espressos, the delissimo grip on Sydney's gastronomic landscape is as entrenched and authentic as ever.
Long synonymous with Italian life in Australia, Leichhardt has been attracting hot-blooded Mediterraneans to its terraced streets since the 1940s and 1950s. Branching out from the epicentre of Italian-ness on Norton Street, the march soon spread around the inner west to Haberfield and Five Dock.
Italian businesses thrive in the area and none more so than cafés and restaurants. As well as the crowd-pleasers on Norton Street, there's a colony of gelato-dripping, pizza-dough flinging, espresso-soaked eateries that put Italian food across the rest of the city to shame.
Rome may have fallen, but things seem alive and well in Sydney's inner west. Here’s the best.
1. Pizza at Napoli in Bocca

The enormous wood-fired oven is a wonderful thing in itself, but the real art of juggling 250 pizzas every weekend evening is something that can't be taught. Each base is hand-flung then shuffled around varying heats of the cavernous oven before emerging golden, puffy and steaming.
The trick, apparently, is utter simplicity -- using fresh tomato sauce, bocconcini, basil leaves, a glug of olive oil and nothing else -- on a Caprese ($19). It lets the freshness of the garlicky tomato and sweet yeastiness of the dough sing a lyrical duet.
In true Neapolitan style, the crust is pliable rather than crunchy, so that the pizza can be folded and eaten from paper, as sailors' habits in the city port dictated. Mamma mia, those seadogs were onto a good thing.
Napoli in Bocca ,73 Dalhousie St., Haberfield, +61 (0)2 9798 4096
2. Whitebait fritters at Little Sicily

Consistent best sellers are the whitebait fritters ($17.80): golden, eggy and full of the saltiness of the tiny fish. They're simple and packed with wholesomeness, with a zesty hit of lemon juice.
Five nights a week at Little Sicily, a whole suckling pig is roasted, the tender flesh falling off the bone and its salty crackling inducing sighs of happiness. An antipasto caldo is a different take on the cold classic starter: seafood, mushrooms, tomatoes and asparagus are flash-fried and served over rocket and mozzarella, the juices turning the lot into a warm, vinegary salad.
The Don of Haberfield will show you how real Italian food is done.
Little Sicily, 194 Marion St., Leichhardt, +61 (0)2 9560 2255
3. Penne Grauchi at Filicudi

Penne Grauchi ($18.50), a rich crab pasta, is a clear favorite with trusted locals and good value, too. Al dente penne has a deep tomato and cream sauce with blue swimmer crab: it’s heaped high and steaming and is enough for two to share. Get stuck in with the shell-breaking tools and you'll end up messy and finger-licking, which adds to the rustic appeal.
Octopus in tomato sauce is also worth the trip, proving that old-style cooking endures for all the right reasons. Molto bene!
Filicudi, 11 Ramsay Road, Five Dock, +61 (0)2 9713 8733








