
After a fire destroyed the restaurant’s rotisserie station, executive chef Jamie Adams revamped the menu to focus more on regional Italian dishes with an emphasis on seafood. The former rotisserie area will become a charcuterie station featuring artisanal Italian cheeses and hand crafted meats such as prosciutto, soppressata and cacciatorini. Executive Manager, Leonardo Moura, is excited about the change in direction. “Chef Jamie is very earthy and unassuming. His focus is on ingredients and preparation. Just when we think that he has perfected the menu, he kicks it up a notch.”

With each new service came an accompanying wine selection. Nino Franco Rustico Prosecco with the antipasti and biodynamic Chianti with the pasta, pesci and carni. Then came the pasta course with spaghetti carbonara, orecchiette with a spicy fennel sausage and roasted broccoli, agnolotti filled with roasted chicken, duck and fontina tossed with brown butter, sage and pecans, and a robust saffron risotto with seafood and fennel. The restaurant is serving their pasta in smaller portions and are encouraging sharing. “In Italy, people eat smaller portions of several different dishes, not just one massive bowl of pasta or large piece of braised meat,” Chef Adams says. “It’s more a little bit of this and a little bit of that—a very balanced, healthy way of eating.”



