I'm embarrassed to say that it took me close to twenty-five years before walking into Joe's Superette on Smith Street for the first time.   Carroll Gardens had always been a neighborhood peppered with Italian  groceries, and I guess I assumed that Joe's was just another one of  those shops where you could pick up your can of beans or a package of  spaghetti on your way home.  And it is - so feel free to do  just that - but I'm going to venture to say that beans and spaghetti are  not what's keeping Owner Leo Coladonato in business.  
So there's this thing called a rice ball.  These are why  you go to Joe's.
In the tiny kitchen towards the back of his  dusty store, Leo has been making his signature golf-sized rice balls  every day since 1976.  "As you can see," he says, and pats his stomach,  "I've been snacking on them since then as well."  You can't blame him.   They are the best, most underpublicized rice balls around and thanks to  his regular customers ("Gimme a dozen prosciutto!" they bark), he manages  to sell about a hundred a day to walk-ins while the bigger orders  (think Superbowl platters) are delivered around the city.  
"When  I started making them, everyone was doing the gigantic ones... so I did  miniatures," Leo says.  Served hot from the fryer and wrapped in a  french fry paper tray, you've got three kinds of gooey goodness to choose from:  arancine (chopped meat and tomato sauce), suppli (rice and mozzarella  croquette), and the infamous prosciutto and ricotta - a recipe inspired  by the calzones his mother used to make as a kid.  The calzones were an  Italian specialty of Mola di Bari in Apulia where he was born.  "It's  not really prosciutto," he admits.  "It's boiled ham.  But in Italian,  ham is called prosciutto... so I say prosciutto.  It sounds nicer than  ham ball."  For 65 cents a piece, I'll let Leo call it whatever he  wants.  
Behind the counter, scotch-taped photographs of  customers and customers' kids decorate his deli case window (as does a  signed picture of Bensonhurst native, Steve Schirripa, the actor who  played "Bobby Baccalierri" on The Sopranos).  "I've been coming  here my whole life," one guy tells me after putting his order in. ("Mix  'em up!" I hear him say).  "I used to live in the neighborhood with my  family... but it got too expensive and we had to leave.  Now I'm in  Staten Island.  You can't stop me from making the trip for these rice  balls, though.  No one makes 'em better."  
JOE'S S_PERETTE (look  for the missing "U" on the sign because it's not getting replaced anytime soon...) is open 7 days a week, excluding  Christmas and New Years.
349 Smith Street bet/ 1st Place and  Carroll Street
718-855-6463
Monday, April 12, 2010
JOE'S S_PERETTE: If you don't go, you don't know.
Posted by
Sylvie Morgan Brown
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Reading: JOE'S S_PERETTE:  If you don't go, you don't know.Tweet This!
 
 
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my mouth is watering.
ReplyDeleteWHOA! I must have some very soon. I love the article!
ReplyDeleteBeen Going here for years! Best spot for rice balls!
ReplyDeleteIf you don't know you better go in for yourself and indulge!
You've sold me!
ReplyDeleteNothing like them on the planet. Been eating them since I was a kid. I live in NJ now and still make the trip to pick up a few dozen a couple times a year. Gotta experience them to understand!
ReplyDeleteI live in MD i still go to Joe's! He has a pic of myself when I was young, and now has a picture of my son =) i love Joe! BEST ROAST BEEF/MOZZARELLA SANDWICH EVER!
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