Eating Out 2001/12

Page 1

The most complete guide to

Eating Out in Port Chester

and Rye Brook

A Supplement to the

Tarry Lodge changes hands after 54 years in Rocca family By Jananne Abel

A

fter 54 years in the Rocca family, the Tarry Lodge changed hands this week. Billed up until now as “Port Chester’s oldest family run restaurant,” the Tarry Lodge, a cozy eatery at 18 Mill St. known for its thin-crusted pizza and reliably good, stick to your ribs Italian food at reasonable prices, was sold to Dublin-born Tony Loughlin. He doesn’t plan to change a thing.

“It’s a landmark,” said Loughlin in his distinct Irish brogue. “It’s known for its pizza and food in general and a happy bar crowd.” While no major changes will be made, Loughlin, who now lives in Stamford, Conn., does plan to do a little cleanup, things like replacing the carpeting, in January or February. “It just needs a facelift,” he said. “You don’t fix what’s working.” “He wanted to get a T-shirt to say, ‘I’m not changing a thing,’” said former owner Chris Rocca, who passed the torch to Loughlin Monday afternoon. Loughlin definitely won’t touch the restaurant’s famous thin-crusted pizza, which was, in fact, inherited from the previous owner when the Rocca family took over the Tarry Lodge more than five decades ago. “He believes the same thing I do,” said Rocca. “That’s why we never put the family name on top of the restaurant. He believes that people are loyal to the business. The restaurant is more than just me. The restaurant is an entity unto itself. People come because they like the atmosphere and the food. Nothing else will change but me.” However, said Rocca, now 50 and not in the best of health: “I’m hoping he will change things. I’m a little rusty after 27 years. It’s good to have new blood in there.” “I tried to organize the restaurant so it will run whether I’m there or not,” said Rocca. “No individual should be indispensable—the chef, the owner or anybody. I think the Tarry Lodge will continue and prosper. It should as long as they stick to the fundamentals.” While Rocca grew up in the restaurant business at the Tarry Lodge, Loughlin was brought up in the pub business in Ireland. At one time his family owned a chain of pubs. Now his parents have just one in Loghrea, County Gallway. Tarry Lodge is the first restaurant Loughlin, 36, can call his own, previously managing the private Glenbrook Athletic Club in Stamford which has a bar and catering hall. Loughlin is keeping the cooks and the rest of the staff at the Tarry Lodge. “He was very adamant about telling everyone he wants them to stay, “said Rocca. “They were a little nervous at first. Now all the nervousness they had about the changeover is pretty much dissipated,” he said last Saturday after working with Loughlin for two weeks to show him the ropes. “He’s very personable, looks pretty sharp and knows what he’s doing.” “He brings a lot of expertise in the bar area,” said Rocca. “I didn’t know much in the food area. Neither did my father,” a bartender in New York City before World War II. “He didn’t have a lot of background in food, but he learned. He had an old chef in his late 70s, John Gotti, who had worked on cruise ships. He learned a lot from him about the food business.” Rocca started scrubbing pots at the Tarry Lodge at age 14 and making pizzas at 15. On his 18th birthday, his grandmother’s cousin, Nat, taught him how to tend bar. When our interview was scheduled for last Friday, Dec. 7,

he had to reschedule because his bartender didn’t show up. So even in his last week as owner, he was still tending bar in a pinch.

A long history Rocca’s father, Bill, his Uncle George Botta and his mother’s cousin, Carl Pugni, bought the Tarry Lodge in 1947. Seeing neighborhoods changing in New York City where they had worked, they decided to move to the country and chose Port Chester. They bought the Port Chester tavern from a carpenter by the name of Anthony Sgambeterra who did the rustic woodworking within the establishment which allowed him to appropriately call it a lodge. The name Tarry might have come from the end of his name or the fact that he had a daughter named Terry, said Rocca. However, no one knows for sure. “It was a gin mill that served pizza and spaghetti,” said Rocca. By the mid50s, his father took over total operation of the restaurant and during his tenure built the small kitchen out twice. The Tarry Lodge building was constructed in 1906 and always housed a bar or restaurant. “I know for a fact it was a speakeasy during Prohibition,” said Rocca. Rocca and his brother, Bill, bought the business from his father when he decided to retire in 1974. The senior Rocca died on Feb. 25, 1996 at the age of 81. Chris was 23 and shortly out of Georgetown University. He had considered law school or the diplomatic corps but didn’t know exactly what he wanted to do with his life. He has no regrets. “When I got out of college, I had to decide whether I wanted to study further and theorize about things or actually go out and experience them. I chose the latter.” “I wanted to do something,” said Rocca. “One thing about the restaurant business is it’s actually real. We have to eat every day. I learned about the world around me and to understand people. What’s more important to learn about this life than about other people?” The two brothers built an addition in 1977 on the strip of land facing Abendroth Avenue which now serves as the reception area and a dining room with booths and Tiffany-style lights as well as a private party rooms upstairs. The entire restaurant seats 110 in three dining rooms plus 25 at the long bar and siderail. The bar and main dining room of rustic dark wood accented with antlers and hooks on the wall are separated by a panel of colorful stained glass floral designs. The third dining room is located a few steps above the main one. The private upstairs room, called “The On Deck,” seats up to 40. Bill left the business suddenly in 1983, leaving Chris, who grew up in Port Chester and graduated from Corpus Christi School and Archbishop Stepinac High School in White Plains, as the sole owner.

Rocca is North Carolina bound After closing on the building, parking lot and business Monday afternoon,

Dec. 10, Rocca expected to leave Tuesday night or Wednesday morning for Concord, N.C., a suburb of Charlotte. He said the city has a lot of parallels to Port Chester with its older downtown and surrounding houses built in the 1920s. That’s what attracted him and his wife, Pat, to the community. Ten years ago Concord had 25,000 people but has now grown to 60,000, the farmland around it allowing for expansion. The Roccas were lucky to move into a neighborhood where the people have in a short time become good friends. The 10-year-old development where they bought a house contains a nice mix of people from various parts of the country.

Restaurant sale took 3 years

Politics and Port Chester’s future

Rocca and his wife started talking about selling the Tarry Lodge and moving South after his father died in 1986. “We took some time to look at North Carolina,” he said, where both his wife’s sister and brother live. Pat is originally from South Carolina. Rocca has been actively trying to sell the restaurant for three years. “It’s not an easy thing to sell an established restaurant,” he said. “People want to buy an existing facility and rip it apart,” something he doesn’t understand since statistics show that 50% of all new restaurants fail in the first two years.

Tarry Lodge is home to the 40-40 Club, Lions Club and Rotary Club Board of Directors. Over the years the eatery has been a political hangout for Republicans, Independents, Democrats and Conservatives alike. Many a political campaign has been crafted within the walls of the restaurant’s private dining room upstairs. Rocca ran unsuccessfully for Port Chester trustee in 1980 and 1981 on the Republican ticket. “Thank God I wasn’t elected,” he said. “I think I’ve done more good not being an elected official than I would have if I had been elected. I have a great respect for elected officials. They put a lot of time and effort into a really thankless job.” “I am not now nor have I ever been a Democrat,” said Rocca. “I just work for people I think are good no matter what their party affiliation is.” He was the campaign manager when Christine Korff ran for mayor in 1994 and helped with all of her campaigns. Before that, he was involved with the Citizens Independent Party, a group of renegade Republicans—Sam Terenzi, the late Rick Giorgi, Steve Wallach and Dan Tartaglia. They ran a full slate consisting of Terenzi, Matt Troy and Rick Giorgi in 1993. They came in second after the Republicans. Sal Morlino and Goldie Solomon also ran independently that year. “We realized after that we couldn’t win an election without a major party line,” said Rocca. “That’s when we started supporting the Democrats.” Besides his friends, Rocca said he will actually miss the politics. “If nothing else, it was absolutely fascinating,” he said. “What I’ll miss most is leading the struggle to help Port Chester realize its potential. I’ve been fighting the fight for 27 years. But I’m tired. Let someone else take up the banner.” “We could have come much further than we have in a shorter time,” Rocca lamented. “The real problem is we’re our own worst enemy. We spend so much time fighting amongst ourselves. We’ve never had the kind of real leader we need to bring things together. We’ve had leaders, but they all seem to have some kind of fatal flaw.” His advice: “Bury the egos, work together for the common purpose and avoid people who are obviously in politics to line their pockets. Just remember, when Port Chester progresses, everybody wins.”

Tarry Lodge’s new owner, Tony Loughlin, toasts with Chris Rocca, the Port Chester restaurant’s previous proprietor, in the bar. The eatery is located at 18 Mill St. Rocca’s wife and four children moved to North Carolina 16 months ago so the kids could start school in August of 2000. He didn’t know it would take him this long to sell the restaurant. Katie is now 20, Carol is 19 and attending Rowan-Cabbarus Community College in Concord, Kendra is 14 and a freshman at Jay M. Robinson High School, a brand new facility with 1,600 students, and Christopher, 13, attends Concord Middle School. Since they left, Rocca has visited his family on the average of once a month. “It’s been a bit of a strain, but they’ve been very understanding,” he said. Since he’s driving down to North Carolina this week, his wife, who works full-time in the finance office for the Charlotte-Mecklenburgh School District, has a list a mile long of things she needs him to do before Christmas. He’ll come back to Port Chester a few times after Christmas to tie up some loose ends. After that, Rocca plans to look for a job, probably in the food service industry. He isn’t worried about the prospects, after having read an article in the Wall Street Journal a few months ago that said the South, and North Carolina in particular, was begging for restaurant managers. “I figure with my experience I won’t have any trouble getting a job,” he said. “What I want to do long-term I’m not sure yet. I know working for a newspaper doesn’t pay very well.” He does hope to do some writing, however. He plans to send some of the columns he’s written for the weekly newspapers in Port Chester to the daily Concord Independent Tribune to see if they want to pick him up. “If Andy Rooney wants to retire, I’d take his job,” he joked.

Over the past three years he had a few deals put together, one right at the beginning that didn’t get too far. Then he had an agreement worked out with a fellow from Long Island before LongIsland-based G&S Investors, Port Chester’s downtown developer, stepped in and interrupted that sale last fall and “strung me along until March.” They neglected to tell him they were buying the restaurant and flipping it over to an operator who was putting up the money. The closing was delayed and the operator backed out in March. “The operator used to come in every day to make plans,” said Rocca. “He was going to tear the place apart. A day before he was to sign the contracts with G&S, he backed out. I don’t know why.” In the end Rocca sold the property and business to Loughlin for an undisclosed amount of cash, which he will have to share with his brother and sister, who had an interest in the property. The transaction is being financed through a Small Business Association loan. “I have to split the biggest chunk, the building, with them,” he said. “I’m not retiring, am not going to be wealthy, far from it, after I pay all my debts.” But now he can walk away without any worries, so it was worth the wait. Rocca sold his house on Priscilla Lane a year ago—in November 2000—and has been living with friends Aldo and Debbie Vitagliano and their children Luke and John, 10, and Daniel, 6, on Elizabeth Street since then. He’s godfather to the twins and they all call him Uncle Chris. “I do provide some useful services like babysitting, and I know they will miss my bringing food home from the Tarry Lodge every Thursday night.”

Memories Rocca listed some of his fondest memories: Band Night at Port Chester High School’s Ryan Stadium, elections, when Christine Korff first got elected mayor, the Columbus Day and Memorial Day parades, the old Elks Club up on King Street (now Rye Brook Village Hall), the Port Chester Rotary Club in the late 1970s and early 1980s when everyone in town was in it, Boy Scout Pasta Night at the Tarry Lodge and the night he and other friends took Rick Giorgi to New York City before he moved to North Carolina several years ago. Rocca said he knows his mom, Eleanor, wouldn’t be disappointed about his selling the restaurant because he had already started the process before she died in January 1999 and she realized his reasons for doing it. He said his father might have been saddened by his decision. “Things change. You have to move on,” said Rocca. “We had a good run— 54 years. Who could ask for better than that?”


2R

, Friday, December 14, 2001

Eating Out - Eating Out - Eating Out Advertisers received extended listings.

American

ay me d i l Ho Welco es i t r Pa

Chinese

American Legion Post 93

Sichuan Pavilion

78 Pearl St., Port Chester 937-5562

480 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 939-8889

Coneyz

Wah Yuan Chinese Restaurant

1-9 North Main St., Port Chester 939-2222

Garden Plaza Restaurant-Diner Washington Park Plaza 261 South Ridge St., Rye Brook 939-8888

Old Homestead Bar & Restaurant

Post Road Plaza 262 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 939-7776

Coffee Shops Caffe Del Monte 321 North Main St., Port Chester 937-0108

“The Original & Still the Best”

325 North Main St., Port Chester 939-0758

Serving Westchester the Finest in

45 Midland Ave., Port Chester 939-9524

ITALIAN CUISINE

Port Chester Coach Diner

172 North Main St., Port Chester 934-7675

317 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 937-0008

Delicias Colombianas

The Pub

36 Broad St., Port Chester 939-9425

Piranha Bar & Grill

for over 15 years.

OPEN Christmas Eve & New Year’s Eve

Open for Lunch & Dinner Monday-Friday Dinner only Saturday & Sunday

Doral Arrowwood Anderson Hill Rd., Rye Brook 939-6620

Rye Ridge Delicatessen & Restaurant

(914) 937-4906/1096 64 Merritt Street, Port Chester

Rye Ridge Shopping Center 126 South Ridge St., Rye Brook 937-2131

Sam’s Bar & Grill

Fax: 934-8136 All Major Credit Cards Accepted

1 Mill St., Port Chester 939-2001

Catered Events in our Banquet Room

Brazilian Café Brazil 37-39 North Main St., Port Chester 934-1600

(for up to 100 people)

Margot’s Signature Restaurant & Gourmet Shop 35½ North Main St., Port Chester 934-0175 or 934-0087

Pantanal Restaurant 29 North Main St., Port Chester 939-6894

Caribbean Caribbean Affair Restaurant 25 North Main St., Port Chester 937-4885

ALL ADE HOMEM

Central American El Tesoro Restaurant

Mexican 24

95

Beef, chicken and vegetable combination

Tuesday Nights FREE Quesadilla with 2 dinners from 4-7 p.m. Wednesday Nights Mary Ann’s Special Soup FREE with 2 dinners from 4-7 p.m. Thursday Nights Special $5 00 Herradura Gold Tequila Margarita with every dinner from 4-7 p.m.

Chinese

Live Mariachi Band Friday and Saturday Nights

SPECIALS Monday Nights Fajitas for Two $ served with 2 Margaritas

92 Purdy Ave., Port Chester 935-9440

Restaurant

Great Wall Restaurant 140 Midland Ave., Port Chester 939-0068

A Great Variety of Seafood & Vegetarian Specialties

Green Symphony Vegetarian Cuisine

Full Bar with Big Screen TVs in a Festive Atmosphere

Kohl’s Shopping Center 427 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester Tel/Fax 937-6537

Happy Hour Sunday - Thursday 4-7 Margaritas & Beers at the bar only

Ho Sai Gai 544 Willett Ave., Port Chester 937-8337 or 937-8339

Number 1 Chinese Restaurant

Lunch & Weekend Brunch 11:30-4 Dinner: Sun. - Thurs. 4-10 Fri. - Sat. 4-Midnight

275 BOSTON POST ROAD FREE PORT CHESTER On-premises Parking 914-939-8700 ®

El Rincon Paisa 130 North Main St., Port Chester 939-9364

Los Remolinos Restaurant 123 North Main St., Port Chester 937-7456

Contemporary American Penfield’s at the Rye Town Hilton 699 Westchester Ave., Rye Brook 939-6300

Dominican Hollywood Chicken International 216 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 934-8137

Ecuadorian Mi Casita Restaurant 118 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 939-9373

Rinconcito Ecuatoriano Restaurant 150 North Main St., Port Chester 937-7343 Specialties include: Shrimp Omelet, Eggs & Corn, Chicken, Crab, Vegetable, Shrimp, and Tuna Salad; Clams & Shrimp Ceviche, Whole Red Snapper, Hen Stew, Rice with Beans & Grilled Steak, Chicken Stew with Mashed Potatoes, Ox Tail, Ecuadorian Bisteck, Fried Chicken, Pork Fried Rice, Shrimp, Chicken or Seafood with Rice, Fish Casserole, Apanadas; variety of soups. Newly renovated. Catering available. Breakfast, lunch & dinner 7 days a week. Hours: Sun.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-10:30 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 9 a.m.-11 p.m. Lunch specials Mon.-Fri. Street parking.

Fast Food Burger King 260 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 934-7877

Dunkin Donuts 330 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 939-8331

Garden Catering

Panda Restaurant

Kentucky Fried Chicken

32 Grace Church St., Port Chester 939-4310

AMERICAN EXPRESS ®

Asi Es Colombia

140 Midland Ave., Port Chester 934-7852 or 934-7810

Panda II Chinese Restaurant

SM

®

Colombian

120 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 937-8465 213 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 937-4699

MasterCard

The Kneaded Bread 181 North Main St., Port Chester 937-9489

262 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 935-0741

McDonald’s Restaurant 321 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 937-3355

SM

®

Ray’s Café 176 South Ridge St., Rye Brook 937-0747

Subway Restaurant Kinko’s Plaza 262 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 939-8713


3R

, Friday, December 14, 2001

Eating Out - Eating Out - Eating Out Advertisers received extended listings.

Fast Food Hubba 24 North Main St., Port Chester 939-7276

Wendy’s Restaurant 303 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 939-9417

Greek/American One Station Plaza 111 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 939-3416

Indian Tandoori Taste of India 163 North Main St., Port Chester 937-2727 or 935-9680

International Café Mirage 531 North Main St., Port Chester 937-3497

Sonora 179 Rectory St., Port Chester 933-0200

Italian/Pizzeria Frank’s Italian Restaurant and Pizza

Italian/Pizzeria

414 Willett Ave., Port Chester 939-0202

Marini’s Pizzeria

Bagel Emporium

Vinny’s Luncheonette

Rye Ridge Shopping Center 136 South Ridge St., Rye Brook 937-2511

Kohl’s Shopping Center 431 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 937-5252

182 North Main St., Port Chester 939-9591

Pizza Pasta & Things

Club Sandwich

Kohl’s Shopping Center 529 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 939-8000

7 Rye Ridge Plaza, Rye Brook 939-3475

314-16 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 937-1610

Michael’s Fine Italian Restaurant & Pizzeria

227 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 939-4134

Mirabello’s Pizza Trattoria 199 South Regent St., Port Chester 934-2900

T & J Pizza & Pasta

El Tio Restaurant 143 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 939-1494

141 Willett Ave., Port Chester 934-5065

Continued on page 4R

Deli Delight 174 North Main St., Port Chester 937-5775

To advertise

604 North Main St., Port Chester 939-9442

Hakata Restaurant 163 North Main St., Port Chester 939-7911

call the

200 South Ridge St., Rye Brook 939-1379

Bagel Basket

Lyon Park Deli, Café & Catering

140 Midland Ave., Port Chester 934-2245

29 Putnam Ave., Port Chester 937-1171

in this special monthly section

Lenny’s Bagels

Luncheonettes

508 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 939-8845

Coyote Flaco 115 Midland Ave., Port Chester 937-6969

J.P’.s Standby Drive-in

Japanese

P & D Pizza

Mexican

Crossroads Café & Take Away

Ruffolo’s Restaurant Number 1 Pizza

46 North Main St., Port Chester 937-5120

125 Midland Ave., Port Chester 939-2241

Luncheonettes

Pizza & Brew Restaurant

23 Putnam Avenue Port Chester 939-9711 • 939-8299

Luigi’s Pizza & Restaurant

Luncheonettes

at 939-3101.

Tamarind 112 North Main St., Port Chester 939-9103

Irish/American

New Year’s Eve Celebration

Davy Byrnes Restaurant 538 Willett Ave., Port Chester 937-2106

Italian

SPECIAL FULL COURSE DINNER

Hostaria Mazzei 25 South Regent St., Port Chester 939-2727

Marianacci’s Restaurant 24 Sherman St., Port Chester 939-3450

Pasquale II Ristorante 2 Putnam Ave., Port Chester 934-7770 The great cuisine of Arthur Avenue comes to Port Chester. Specialties: Stuffed Artichoke, Linguine Pescatore (with chopped clams and shrimp in white or red sauce, Costata di Vitello (veal chops), Chicken Balsamic, Zuppa di Pesce (lobster, shrimp, calamari, clams and mussels in red sauce over linguine), Fusilli Primavera (zucchini, peas, mushrooms, broccoli in light red sauce, Veal Scaloppine. Homemade Cheese Cake and Tira Mi Su. Closed Monday. Hours: Tues.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri. 11:30 a.m.-11 p.m., Sat. 12 noon-11 p.m., Sun. 1-9 p.m. Most major credit cards. Free on-premises parking.

Fixed price

CHOICE OF APPETIZER

CHOICE OF SALAD or CUP OF SOUP Minestrone

Village Inn 223 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 937-6665

Brother’s Pizza

Mixed Green Salad (blue cheese S1)

CHOICE OF ENTREE

18 Mill Street Port Chester 937-3070 The oldest Italian restaurant in Port Chester. Specialties: Pasta, veal, chicken, seafood; famous for their 10-inch pan pizza; Linguini Carolyn, Rigatoni Simplicata, Veal Pizzaiola, Chicken Francaise, Seafood Fra Diavolo; soups and salads. Hours: Lunch - Monday-Friday. Dinner - 7 days from 5 p.m.. All major credit cards. Some off street parking available.

24 Grace Church St., Port Chester 937-5676

Soup du Jour

Broiled Shrimp Scampi Served with rice Shimp Fra Diavolo Served over linguine (Shrimp and clams in a spicy hot marinara sauce) Seafood Posillipo Served over linguine (Shrimp, clams and scallops) Gamberoni i Pollo con Fusilli (Boneless chicken and shrimp sauteéd with tomato sauce and cream with fusilli pasta) Filet Mignon and Scampi Combination Served with rice Fusilli “Rosanna” (Spring shaped pasta tossed in oil & garlic with broccoli, sun-dried tomatoes and portobello mushrooms) Steak Tidbits Served with potato (Broiled sliced filet mignon on toast topped with our homemade onion rings) Rigatoni Simplicata (Rigatoni sauteed with mushrooms, spinach, chopped tomato in light butter and garlic)

Tarry Lodge

Pathmark Shopping Center 130 Midland Ave., Port Chester 939-5137

OPEN 5 p.m. - 10 p.m. Call for Reservations 914-937-3070

Popcorn Shrimp Stuffed Portobello Mushrooms Clams Casino Italian Antipasto Fried Mozzarella Fried Calamari Jumbo Shrimp Cocktail ($2 extra) Beer Battered Chicken Fingers

Doral Arrowwood Anderson Hill Rd., Rye Brook 939-4554

Antonio’s Pizza and Restaurant

2900

Regular Menu Also Available

Provare Trattoria

Italian/Pizzeria

$

Veal or Chicken Scaloppini “Sorrento” Scaloppini sauteéd with wine, mushrooms and brown sauce layered with eggplant and proscuitto with melted mozzarella Broiled Seafood Combo with rice Scampi, filet of sole and scallops broiled with scampi butter. Filet of Sole Francaise Served with rice Pork Chops Espiritu with ziti (Sauteéd in a spicy marinara sauce with mushrooms and cherry peppers) Veal or Chicken Parmigiana Served with Spaghetti Veal or Chicken Scaloppini ‘Piccata’ Served with rice (Scaloppini sauteed in butter, lemon and white wine) Sliced Filet Mignon “Bordelaise” Served with rice (Sliced filet of beef with a red wine and mushroom sauce) Surf & Turf $4 extra (Filet Mignon and Lobster Tail)

DESSERT

FRhEt EBeer,

Draug r Soda Winefull ocourse dinner) (with

Choice of Ice Cream, Cake or Fruit Cobbler Coffee or Tea (Cappuccino $1.25 extra, Espresso $.50 extra)

18 Mill Street Port Chester, NY

FOR RESERVATIONS

(914)

937-3070


4R

, Friday, December 14, 2001

Eating Out - Eating Out - Eating Out Advertisers received extended listings.

Eating Out is a monthly supplement to the Port Chester and

Rye Brook editions of the Westmore News. The Westmore News, a weekly newspaper serving the Port Chester and Rye Brook communities, is published every Friday and is available at newsstands and news boxes in its circulation area.It is also available by mail at a yearly subscription rate of $22. Call 914-939-6864 for futher information.

Enjoy Our Fine Ecuadorian Cuisine Rinconcito Ecuatoriano Restaurant 150 North Main Street, Port Chester 914-937-7343

FAMILY RESTAURANT Serving Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Reasonable Prices Lunch Specials Monday-Friday

NEWLY RENOVATED • CATERING AVAILABLE Open 7 days • Sun.-Thurs. 9 a.m. - 10:30 p.m. • Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m. - 11 p.m. Street Parking

Mexican Mary Ann’s Mexican Restaurant 275 Boston Post Rd., Port Chester 939-8700 Specialties include: Turkey chilli, chalupas, jalapenos stuffed with shrimp, cactus salad, tofu, brown rice, tofu jack cheese, Acupulco seafood dish, Enchiladas Puerto Vallarta, goat cheese quesadilla, salads and tostadas, Tampico Burrito (breast of chicken), chimichangas, tacos and taquitos, beef tamales, fajitas (tuna and salmon, chicken or steak), Mole Amirillo (grilled pork loin), Steak Picado Fundido, combo dishes with shrimp, beef or chicken, vegetarian plates, all homemade on premises. Nightly and lowfat specials. Happy Hour Sun.-Thurs. 4-7 p.m., lunch and weekend brunch 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m., dinner 4-10 p.m. Sun.Thurs., 4 p.m.-midnight Fri. and Sat. Credit cards: Visa, MC and Amex. Free on-premises parking.

Rancho Grande 8 Poningo St., Port Chester 934-2675

Tortilleria el Paisano 167 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 934-0372

Northern Italian Alba’s Ristorante 400 North Main St., Port Chester 937-2236 Fax: 937-2271

Eclisse Northern Italian Cuisine Washington Park Plaza 275 South Ridge St., Rye Brook 937-5770

Giorgio’s Restaurant 69 Merritt St., Port Chester 937-4906/1096 Specialties include Clams Casino, Fresh Mozzarella, Hot and Cold Antipasto, Soup di Giorno, Caesar Salad, Angel Hair Pasta with Clam Sauce, Tortellini Bolognese, Ravioli Filetto, Fettuccine Alfredo, Rigatoni with Broccoli Rabe & Sausage, Filet of Sole and Shrimp Francessi, Eggplant Parmegiana, Scampi Marniere, Pollo Scarpariello, Veal Marsala Scaloppini, Sirloin Steak Pizzaiola, Broiled Center Cut Veal Chop, Seafood Marechiare, Tartufo, cheesecake, Tiramisu, Fruit of the Forest, chocolate mousse cake, espresso, cappuccino. Open for lunch and dinner Mon.-Fri, dinner only Sat. and Sun. Live music 7-11 p.m. Thursdays. Catered events in new banquet room. All major credit cards. Free parking on premises.

Northern Italian Pasta Per Voi 23 North Main St., Port Chester 937-3200

Piero’s Italian Restaurant 44 South Regent St., Port Chester 937-2904

Peruvian Acuario Restaurant 137 Irving Ave., Port Chester 939-7090

Bravo Peru 6 Grace Church St., Port Chester 939-8420

El Chalan Restaurant 59 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 934-2244

Inca & Gaucho Restaurant Seafood & Steakhouse 173 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 939-2100

Machu Picchu Restaurant 40 Grace Church St., Port Chester 934-9090

Misti Restaurant 100 North Main St., Port Chester 939-9437

El Parral Restaurant 2 South Main St., Port Chester 939-0409

Tia/Aunt Gladys’s 16 North Main St., Port Chester 937-7917

Salvadoran El Tesoro Restaurant II 14 South Main St., Port Chester 937-2086

La Pupusa Loca de Port Chester 165 Westchester Ave., Port Chester 935-0767

Rinconcito Salvadoreno Restaurante 17 South Main St., Port Chester 937-9287

Seafood Shipwrecked Tavern 23½ North Main St., Port Chester 937-9524

South American

The Great Cuisine of Arthur Avenue

Mark Anthony Restaurant 11 North Main St., Port Chester 937-3357

Steakhouse Willett House Restaurant 20 Willett Ave., Port Chester 939-7500

2 Putnam Avenue, Port Chester, NY 10573 • 914-934-7770 “Just like grandma’s.” --New York Daily News, July 23, 1998

“Fine Italian Cuisine in a garden setting.” --Westmore News, Oct. 17, 1997

HOLIDAY PARTIES WELCOME! Catering Available • Private Parties (up to 70 people) Most major credit cards • On premises parking Hours: Tues. - Thurs. 11:30 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. • Friday 11:30 a.m. - 11:00 p.m. Saturday noon - 11:00 p.m. • Sunday 1:00 - 9:00 p.m. • Monday closed

You don’t have to go far to find great food. Just look in here!


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