© Rao’s 2024
LA Eater
The 16-ounce bone-in veal chop parmigiana at the LA outpost of New York City’s famous Rao’s (prounounced RAY-ohs) is big. Hang over the plate and $50 big.
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Rao’s: Frank Pellegrino’s Harlem Hangout
Rao's offers a glimpse of an earlier, somewhat grittier, cityscape in East Harlem, run by the late, great Frank Pellegrino.
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No Place Like Rao’s
A legal tussle between co-owners (and cousins) Frank Pellegrino Sr. and Ron Straci has brought storm clouds to Rao's, the fabled Harlem family restaurant where many would love to eat and very few can get a table. But as the place turns 120, its patina--equal parts garlic and glamor--endures, while Pellegrino's son, Frank junior, has taken the Rao's experience to Las Vegas and L.A.
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The Tonight Show
Jimmy Fallon gives actress Katie Holmes a Rao's care package.
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LA Eater
Frank Pellegrino Jr. has a hard time getting into his own restaurant, the East Harlem Italian-American legend Rao's. The classic ten table red sauce joint is notoriously finicky about guests securing seats, but to hear Pellegrino tell it, that's due more to decades of loyalty than any sense of exclusivity.
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Gayot
A coveted seat at one of the limited tables at the original Rao's in New York is only made available to VIPs and invited guests.
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Sawasdee
The hard-to-get-into NYC transplant Rao's, famous for its old-world elegance and uncomplicated cooking, is the new A-list haunt.
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The New York Times
Seward Street runs through a patch of film production studios and empty lots in Hollywood.
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LA Magazine
Whether it's pizza or Billy Crystal, Hollywood loves a good NYC transplant. The latest is Rao's, a West Coast outlet of East Harlem's 117-year-old Italian restaurant famous for impossible-to-book tables and celebrity regulars.
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