Ranelli’s Deli | Birmingham Food Guide

Ranelli’s Deli is a time capsule. It hasn’t changed much, if at all, since I first visited in 1990.

Ranelli’s is still slinging Italian-American fare and boasts a proper selection of sandwiches and salads.

Ranelli's Deli
The front counter of Ranelli’s Deli is fantastically chaotic

For me, Ranelli’s Deli is a lunch time sandwich and a beer joint. The meatball sub, specifically. Do they make the meatballs in house? I haven’t asked and I don’t care. This is the no-frills food that I grew up eating. Where else can you still find an iceberg lettuce salad with 3 carrot slices and a tomato? I occasionally suffer from crippling nostalgia. Ranelli’s is good medicine.

The Richman’s Po-boy is their flagship sandwich. It’s a concoction of ham, corned beef, peppered beef, hard salami,
and pastrami, with swiss and provolone cheese, topped off with an olive salad. It has a muffuletta vibe, but it’s served on a sub roll.

Tuesday is Spaghetti Day and Thursday is Lasagna Day. It’s a direct throwback to childhood dinners at my Italian-American friend’s houses. Straight-ahead, standard, served with an iceberg lettuce salad and garlic bread. It’s a familiar and comforting plate of food.

Sadly, just like Billy’s, these kinds of places are getting harder and harder to find.

The interior is plastered from floor to ceiling with a mix of music memorabilia, found objects, and other dusty treasures. Ranelli’s has been a live music venue in the past. The stage is small and intimate. I remember one standing-room-only show I attended where the crowd and the artists were all crammed together, sweaty and beer-spilling and playing away into the night. It’s a great place to catch a show.

I’m not sure how often they host shows these days.

Live music at Ranelli's Deli

Ranelli’s web site is just as dated as the restaurant, which is right on brand and right on time. I hope they never change it.