Nardò Italian Restaurant

On Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach, Nardò brings a contemporary take on Neapolitan pizza tradition to a casual setting with ocean views. The kitchen centers on light, well-leavened dough and quality ingredients, including the signature Nardò Pizza with its stuffed ricotta and pesto crust. It sits at the accessible end of the city's Italian dining options, with a terrace that faces the Pacific.

Where the Pacific Meets Neapolitan Tradition
Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach occupies a particular kind of California real estate: the road runs close enough to the water that ocean light shifts the room at different hours, and the informal energy of a surf city shapes what diners expect from even the most considered menus. It is not a setting that rewards formality, and the Italian restaurants that work leading here tend to channel the relaxed confidence of a trattoria over the ceremony of a white-tablecloth ristorante. Nardò Italian Restaurant, at 21022 Pacific Coast Hwy, reads the room correctly. The ocean view terrace is the organizing feature of the experience, and the menu answers the setting with food that is direct and ingredient-led rather than elaborate.
The broader category Nardò operates in — casual Neapolitan-style pizza with a contemporary California sensibility — has become one of the more active segments in Southern California dining. Where Italian restaurants in Los Angeles and San Diego have moved in different directions (some toward hyper-regional specificity, others toward tasting-menu ambition as seen at venues like Addison in San Diego or Providence in Los Angeles), the PCH corridor maintains appetite for the kind of Italian cooking that centers on a few well-sourced ingredients and does not oversell complexity. Nardò sits comfortably in that category.
The Ingredient Logic Behind the Menu
Neapolitan pizza has always been an argument about raw materials. The tradition holds that a properly made pizza requires very little: good flour, a long ferment, San Marzano-adjacent tomatoes, and cheese from animals that have been fed correctly. The craft is in controlling those variables rather than adding more of them. What distinguishes the better practitioners in this category is not the number of toppings but the integrity of each component and the quality of the fermentation that produces a crust with structure, chew, and lightness simultaneously.
The menu at Nardò reflects this thinking. The pizzas are described as light, soft, and well-leavened , the language of a kitchen paying attention to dough hydration and fermentation time rather than simply stretching and topping. That kind of dough work is harder than it appears and takes time to calibrate. The ingredient focus extends to the sourcing of ricotta and pesto used in the kitchen's signature preparation, where the crust itself becomes a delivery mechanism for the filling rather than a structural afterthought.
This approach connects to a wider ingredient-sourcing philosophy that has been reshaping California's Italian food scene for over a decade. Producers supplying high-moisture ricotta, estate-quality olive oils, and heritage-grain flours to restaurant kitchens have given chefs the raw material to make ingredient-forward menus credible rather than aspirational. At the accessible price tier where Nardò operates, the calculus matters especially: the kitchen does not have the margin of a tasting-menu destination like The French Laundry in Napa or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, so every ingredient decision is load-bearing.
The Signature: Nardò Pizza
The defining preparation is the Nardò Pizza itself, built around a stuffed ricotta and pesto crust. The format is significant: a crust stuffed with ricotta and pesto is not a conventional Neapolitan move. It pulls from the cornicione-stuffing tradition seen in some Campanian bakeries and in the pizza fritta culture of Naples' street food, where the edge of the dough becomes part of the flavor profile rather than the part diners push to the side. In the context of a California pizza restaurant, the stuffed crust reads as a considered reference rather than a gimmick, provided the ricotta is fresh and the pesto has real basil intensity. That distinction between thoughtful regional borrowing and shortcut novelty is what separates ingredient-serious kitchens from ones that are only performing the aesthetic.
For readers who follow the full range of ingredient-sourcing approaches across the American dining spectrum , from the hyper-local sourcing at Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown to the precision sourcing behind Le Bernardin in New York City , Nardò represents the accessible end of that continuum, where the same underlying discipline about where ingredients come from produces food that is casual rather than ceremonial.
Setting and Atmosphere
The ocean view terrace is the physical argument for choosing Nardò over an inland alternative. Huntington Beach's coastal strip rewards outdoor eating at almost any time of year, with marine layer mornings giving way to clear afternoons and the kind of evening light that makes simple food feel like a considered choice. The casual setting aligns with the menu's register: this is not a restaurant requiring planning or formality, and the atmosphere reflects that. Families, surfers stopping in from the beach, and couples looking for a relaxed dinner without a three-month lead time all occupy the same space without friction.
For visitors building a fuller picture of what Huntington Beach offers across dining categories, the coastline supports a wider range. Watertable represents a different register on the local dining spectrum. Our full Huntington Beach restaurants guide covers the range in more detail, and for planning around accommodation or other activities, our Huntington Beach hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide map the rest of the city's offer.
Planning Your Visit
Nardò is on Pacific Coast Highway, which means access by car is direct from most of the Orange County coastal corridor. The address at 21022 PCH places it within the stretch of the highway that runs closest to the beach, making it a natural stop before or after time on the sand. Given the casual format and accessible price tier, this is not a venue where booking weeks ahead is typically required , walk-in availability at a beachside pizza restaurant in this category is generally more accessible than at destination dining rooms, though weekend evenings on PCH can draw crowds from across the area. Arriving before peak dinner service on busy weekend nights is the practical approach for those without a reservation. Phone and website details are not currently listed in the EP Club database; checking directly with the venue for hours and reservation options is advised.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Would Nardò Italian Restaurant be comfortable with kids?
- The casual setting, ocean terrace, and pizza-forward menu make Nardò a natural fit for families. There is no dress code or formal service structure to navigate, and the relaxed atmosphere on PCH is well-suited to younger diners. At the accessible price tier it occupies within Huntington Beach's dining options, the risk of an expensive or stressful evening is low.
- What kind of setting is Nardò Italian Restaurant?
- Nardò is a casual Italian restaurant on Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach, with an ocean view terrace as its main environmental feature. The atmosphere is relaxed rather than formal, positioned at the informal end of the city's dining range. It suits beach-adjacent eating rather than special-occasion ceremony.
- What do people recommend at Nardò Italian Restaurant?
- The signature Nardò Pizza , featuring a stuffed ricotta and pesto crust , is the kitchen's defining preparation and the most referenced item in descriptions of the restaurant. The pizzas more broadly are noted for being light, soft, and well-leavened, which points to attentive dough fermentation rather than a production-line approach.
- How hard is it to get a table at Nardò Italian Restaurant?
- As a casual pizza restaurant in a beachside setting, Nardò does not operate in the same booking-pressure tier as tasting-menu destinations. Walk-in access is likely more achievable here than at reservation-heavy venues. That said, the PCH location draws consistent traffic on weekends, so arriving early in the dinner window remains the practical approach if you are visiting without a reservation.
- What's the defining dish or idea at Nardò Italian Restaurant?
- The Nardò Pizza with its stuffed ricotta and pesto crust is the kitchen's clearest statement. It draws on the Neapolitan tradition of treating the cornicione as part of the eating experience rather than discardable crust, and it signals a kitchen that takes ingredient quality seriously at a format that is otherwise approachable and casual. The broader menu philosophy centers on light, quality-ingredient-led pizza rather than elaboration for its own sake.
At-a-Glance Comparison
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nardò Italian Restaurant | Located on the Pacific Coast, Nardò offers a contemporary interpretation of Neap… | This venue | ||
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, Seafood, $$$$ |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$ |
| Lazy Bear | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Alinea | Progressive American, Creative | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive American, Creative, $$$$ |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Sushi, Japanese, $$$$ |
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