M'tucci's Profiles - John Haas

A large part of M’tucci’s success is the man who created the menus, organized the kitchens, and built the kitchen staff, Executive Chef and founding partner, John Haas. One of his guiding principles says it all.

“I have always found inspiration in the past, instead of in the future. Some people chase trends, but I’ve always been inspired by the things you can connect to and it’s hard to connect to a trend.”

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John has been involved in restaurants for more than 20 years, beginning at a family friend’s Ames, Iowa sports bar as a dishwasher at the age of 15. While in college in Iowa City, he trained with chefs who had worked in famous kitchens in New Orleans and San Diego, absorbing techniques and a passion for cooking great food.

He really launched his career in Des Moines, where he was cooking in a Mediterranean restaurant, which featured some Italian dishes, and he had the chance to spend time in the kitchen with an Italian chef from the Veneto who came to the U.S. as part of a sister city cooking program. 

“For a week of 15-hour days, I cooked alongside this guy who had been in the chef Olympics and who didn’t speak English, but I learned a lot. It was a game changer, a pivotal moment in my career when I was introduced to the passion and technique in Italian food,” he said.

“I ended up as head chef at the young age of 25 in a high-end restaurant, doing some cool stuff, like expensive wine dinners. But my drive was so strong to excel that after a year and a half of 90-to-100 hour work weeks, I burned out.” 

He left thinking he wouldn’t work in restaurants again.

John talking with a winemaker in Tuscany, with the help of a translator app.

John talking with a winemaker in Tuscany, with the help of a translator app.

After a few months away, Bravo (a national Italian restaurant chain) contacted him about a job and his first thought was no. Going from high-end dining to a corporate setting didn’t seem like a step up.  Before giving up on the restaurant business completely, he thought about all the positive things he could learn in a corporate setting and decided to give it a try. 

“While I was with Bravo, I really learned how to run a restaurant, about the financial side, the systems, ordering, inventory and I discovered it was something that I loved and it reinvigorated me,” he said. “We had rules about what we could order and those rules didn’t allow for a lot of creativity, which was good, because it taught me how to think about ingredients differently. Instead of being able to rely on expensive ingredients like Iberíco pork, I now had to learn how to respect everyday ingredients and how to work with them. It gave a lot of discipline to my cooking. It was instrumental in my development process.”

He moved to Albuquerque to take over as Executive Chef at  Bravo and after three years of turning the restaurant around, he started itching for a challenge. He saw an ad on Craigslist, “Looking for a Chef” and replied. He heard from M’tucci’s founders Jeff Spiegel and Katie Gardner and learned they were not only looking for a chef, but were looking for a location, as well. John was a little more interested in jobs at established restaurants, and didn’t really pursue the connection. 

He continued interviewing. One restaurant told him they couldn’t meet his salary requirements, and later that day he heard from Jeff who asked if he was still interested and who asked if they could meet. They lunched on tacos at what was then Los Altos Ranch Market, now El Super grocery. 

“I was tired of interviewing, but I was interested in the tacos,” he said. “I had always heard about the place and wanted to check it out.”

As it turns out, he and Jeff discovered they had a lot in common and they agreed to continue their conversations over the next few weeks. Jeff recently recalled his meetings with John Haas.

Working with master baker, Francesco, in Carrera, Italy.

Working with master baker, Francesco, in Carrera, Italy.

“When Katie and I decided  to reprise our restaurant experience in NM after 23 years in the restaurant business in NYC, I knew I wanted a chef partner,” Jeff said.

“As has always been our practice, I invited the top three candidates to join me at our home to cook. At the end of those three days, and after countless hours of conversations with John, I pulled the trigger, hired him, and told him that he’d be a partner when the time was right to do the documents. It was the best partner decision I ever made. John cares about others, is a forgiving perfectionist and an excellent leader.”

“When I told Jeff if I wouldn’t have been a chef, I would have been an accountant, I think he thought, ‘I’ve found my chef’”, John said.

In the time leading up to finding a location, they had discussions about the character of M’tucci’s. Would it be fine dining with white tablecloths? From day one, they decided that was not the kind of restaurant they would open.

Saturday morning meeting with the kitchen crew at M’tucci’s Italian.

Saturday morning meeting with the kitchen crew at M’tucci’s Italian.

“I think people want value and interesting ingredients. Our whole thing was big flavor, being non-pretentious, very approachable and to let the food speak for itself. We wanted the type of place where people could eat a couple of times of week, instead of only for special occasions.”

After six years and with four M’tucci’s locations operating, what motivates John to continue to work long hours?

“I feel like I’ve been given a gift. Jeff gave me a chance and invested in me, and there is not a day that I don’t try to repay that gift. Part of (repaying that gift) is creating opportunities for other people, to give them the chance to grow and to prove how good they can be,” he replied.


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing Co.

HAPPY HOUR & NFL Football!

Lucky 7 Happy Hour features The Burger, a 10” Margherita or Pepperoni Green Chile Pizza, Charcuterie Boards and Wings for $7, Monday - Friday 3:00 - 6:30. Pair the food with a beer for $10.50 or $11, depending on the beer. Not eating (why not?), then $1 off all pints. The NFL is up and running and you can catch your favorite team on one of our large five screens.

HAPPY HOUR EVERY MONDAY UNTIL THE END OF THE FIRST HALF OF MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL!

Saturday, September 7: Beer Lover’s Day

Wednesday, September 18: Cheeseburger Day (stay tuned for specials)

Spicy Wings for Happy Hour: BBQ, Chipotle and Jerked. A plate of one flavor or mix them.

Spicy Wings for Happy Hour: BBQ, Chipotle and Jerked. A plate of one flavor or mix them.

M’tucci’s Moderno

Thanks to all our fans who voted our Servers the Best of Rio Rancho.

Weekend Specials

Pan Seared Fish- The Fresh Fish of the Day is a swordfish with a mildly sweet flavor and a moist meaty texture. It is served with Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Marinated Italian Artichokes, and Sautéed Arugula in a bed of Lemon Butter topped with Capers.


Cut of The Day - The house cut is a 24oz bone-in NY-Strip served with house Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, and an Italian style Salsa Verde Sauce.


Braised Special - 20oz Bone-in Lamb Shank braised in a White Wine Sauce with Fresh Celery, White onions, Ripe San Marzano Tomatoes with hint of cinnamon and nutmeg spice. Served with Creamy Polenta and Sautéed Baby Spinach.

Please ask about our available wine pairings!

8:30 Friday 9/6: Leah Leyva Live in the bar

7:00 Thursday, 9/12: Javier Ortega Live in the bar

Live Music every Thursday & Friday night.

Live Music every Thursday & Friday night.

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials

Cut of the Day - Bone-in NY strip, Salt Water Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Grilled Lemon Balsamic Reduction

Pan Seared Seafood - Sea Scallops, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Marinated Artichokes, Sautéed Arugula with Capers in Lemon Beurre Blanc Sauce

Braised - Napoleon-Creamy Garlic Polenta, Five Pork Bolognese Marinara, Sautéed Spinach

Ravioli - Duck Ricotta Ravioli in a Mushroom Thyme Brodo, Caramelized Onion, Local Roasted Gray Farm Oyster Mushrooms, Shaved Parmesan & Arugula

SHAMROCK FOODS FIRED UP! CHEF CHALLENGE

M’tucci’s Italian Sous Chef Damian Lucero took on chefs from Santa Fe and El Paso in a cooking competition in Albuquerque yesterday. Each chef was given the same basket of ingredients and given 30 minutes to create a dish for three local chef-judges. The Challenge was moderated by Celebrity Chef Antonia Lofaso at the Albuquerque Convention Center. Damian was assisted by M’’tucci’s Italian Cafe & Market Chef/Partner Shawn Cronin. Our guys cooked an amazing red snapper, but came up short for the win.

Don’t miss our Weekend Brunch with Italian favorites and new takes on brunch items. Then try to choose from one of our 7 special brunch cocktails, shown below. Or bring a crowd and try all 7!

Clockwise from the front: Italian Iced Caffé, Bellini, Bloody Mary, Amalfi Coast High Ball, Negroni Sbagliato. Below: Aperol Spritz and the Mimosa Bar (Prosecco with a selection of juices).

Clockwise from the front: Italian Iced Caffé, Bellini, Bloody Mary, Amalfi Coast High Ball, Negroni Sbagliato. Below: Aperol Spritz and the Mimosa Bar (Prosecco with a selection of juices).

M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market

Voted Albuquerque’s Best Deli by the Albuquerque Journal’s Readers.

The Café & Market continues to offer amazing pastries in our display case every day. We carry the same great Italian imports, all of our artisan breads, and a wide variety of imported, domestic, and house made cheese and meat. There is an expanded selection of coffee and pastries. We’ll still have charcuterie boards to eat in or take out with wine and beer by the glass. Click here to see our new menu.

M’tucci’s Catering

MARCH OF DIMES FUNDRAISER

Chef/Partner Cory Gray and Pastry Chef Lauren Bell were part of our team at the 6th Annual March of Dimes Signature Chef Auction last night at Las Puertas. Guests sampled dishes created by 12 different local businesses. M’tucci’s donated the food for the event, in addition to providing bar service with Trey and Randall and Austin Leard on hand to pour Prosecco for the VIP tables. M’tucci’s will donate the food and our time for a private 5-course private dinner. The entire amount of our team’s winning bid of $1,700 will go to the March of Dimes.

Give us a call for your next event, wedding reception or party! Click here to see our catering menu. 505.350.0019 or [email protected]


ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations in Albuquerque. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, and Raisin Rosemary Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

See you next Friday - Ciao!

M'tucci's Private Select Bourbon

M’tucci’s has an amazing cocktail program that includes hand-crafted Shrubs, staff-created cocktails, and our own riffs on some of the classic cocktails. Our selection of bourbon and rye are among our most popular. So, to increase our commitment to craft cocktails, we sent two of our managing partners (Chris O’Sickey and Austin Leard) and our bar manager (Trey Godwin) to Bourbon country, primarily around Louisville, Kentucky.  

When they arrived, they were asked why they were visiting, and the three responded in unison, “We’re here for the whiskey.” They were promptly corrected, “You mean bourbon.”

Their goal was to soak up the culture of bourbon and bring it back. However, they did a little more than just sip bourbon and soak up the culture.

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“Since we sell a lot of whiskey, our goal was to find a program that was unique and would allow us to buy our own one-of-a-kind barrel. After some research, we discovered that Maker’s Mark had a program that would be unique for us,” said Austin Leard.

Maker’s Mark started distilling in 1953 and is still owned by the same family today. Their attention to detail, their passion for quality ingredients, and the slow, exact aging they demand, are what make this bourbon special. You can read about their story here.

In 2010 they released Maker’s Mark 46, which was their first new product since they distilled the original Maker’s Mark Bourbon. The son of the founder created the Maker’s Mark 46 barrel select bourbon by adding a combination of seared French Oak staves to their barrel-aged bourbon for an additional 9 weeks (on top of the 5 3/4 to 7 years of aging). The flavor profile of the 46 has a higher level of caramel and vanilla. The success of this process led to the Private Select program, which led us to Kentucky.

In the tasting room, there are five different styles of wood staves which have been added to five different barrels of fully matured Maker’s Mark at cask strength for an additional 9 weeks. After tasting the five flavor profiles, our guys started blending flavors to find the perfect blend that that would be uniquely for M’tucci’s. Maker’s Mark claims that there are more than 1,000 possible combinations.

Chris, Trey and Austin mixed and blended and created four different flavor combinations and they ended up choosing #4 - one was too spicy, the second one didn’t have enough spice and one didn’t have enough full mouth-feel. After creating the combination that they felt was right, they went to the barrel room and uncapped a barrel and removed the top rings. Ten selected seared French oak staves were added and the barrel was reassembled. Then the 53-gallon barrel is filled with cask strength Maker’s Mark, where it will age for another 9 weeks in a cold limestone cave. After the aging is complete, our bourbon will be bottled in unique Private Select bottles. M’tucci’s Private Select Maker’s Mark will be just under 108 proof.

Trey, Chris and Austin each initialed our unique Private Select labels, which are printed on an old 1935 hand cranked printing press, then they signed our barrel, which we will display in our restaurants. 

Look for M’tucci’s Private Select Maker’s Mark Bourbon to arrive in 12 weeks or so, depending on delivery times.

Austin filling the 53 gallon barrel with what will become M’tucci’s Private Select Maker’s Mark Bourbon.

Austin filling the 53 gallon barrel with what will become M’tucci’s Private Select Maker’s Mark Bourbon.

In addition to the Maker’s Mark experience, our three M’tucci’s guys visited the Jim Beam Still House where they saw Jim Beam White Label being made. They sampled  Knob Creek, Basil Hayden, Bookers, and Bakers and visited Angel’s Envy. One day, they took a break from bourbon and went to Copper and Kings, a distillery that specializes in brandy. Their aging program features a selection of brandies aged in a variety of barrels that have held rum, tequila and even port.

While they toured some Maker’s Mark rack houses, they learned about the unique look of the rack houses that stems from the days of prohibition. As the whiskey ages in barrels, the evaporation (the Angel’s Share) would produce a black mold on the exterior of the buildings. This was a telling a sign for federal agents looking for illegal bourbon production during the dark days of prohibition. Now all of the rack houses are painted black.

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When M’tucci’s Private Select arrives, you can look for three things:

M’tucci’s Private Select will become the main bourbon in our Old Fashioned (now Stranahan’s).

We’ll create a Signature Cocktail (maybe two).

We will expand our private select program beyond bourbon.

Chris said that the passion for bourbon in Kentucky permeates every aspect of their lives. Bourbon is as important in the toniest hotel lounge as it is in the dark, basement dive bar. 

“I’m excited to bring our Private Select Bourbon to M’tucci’s and share it with everyone else,” he said. 

Won’t that be a fantastic Christmas present??

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M’tucci’s Private Select Maker’s Mark Bourbon barrel is resting here right now!

M’tucci’s Private Select Maker’s Mark Bourbon barrel is resting here right now!


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

LABOR DAY: All of our restaurants will be open normal hours on Labor Day, so if you’re around, we are too!

M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing Co.

HAPPY HOUR

Happy hour is back and better than ever. Lucky 7 Happy Hour features The Burger, a 10” Margherita or Pepperoni Green Chile Pizza, Charcuterie Boards and Wings for $7, Monday - Friday 3:00 - 6:30. Pair the food with a beer for $10.50 or $11, depending on the beer. Not eating (why not?), then $1 off all pints.

M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Squid Ink Rissotto - Baby Scallops, Calamari, Mushrooms & Marinated Tomatoes

Tomaresca, Chardonnay, Abruzzo, Italy: Balanced acidity, lite fruity aftertaste, slightly dry

Icelandic Cod Buttery to medium texture

Bottega Vinaia, Pinot Grigio, Italy: Delicate floral notes, fruity aromas from pear and peach, a little dry with balanced acidity

Cut of the Day: 24 oz Porterhouse

Sassarogale, Sangiovese, Italy: Notes of wild berries, cherries and a moderate spiciness

Gelato - Stracciatela
Sorbet - Peach Champagne

Lemonade - Peach Ginger

8:30 Friday 8/30: Lani Nash Live in the bar

7:00 Thursday, 9/5: Oscar Butler Live in the bar

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials

Pan-Seared Seafood- Robalo, Creamy Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Artichoke, Sautéed Arugula with Lemon Beurre Blanc & Capers

Ravioli - Fennel Roasted Duroc Pork & Goat Cheese Ravioli, Artichoke Roasted Summer Squash & Red Bell Pepper, White Wine Butter Sauce, Arugula, Shaved Parmesan

Rotisserie - Garam Masala Roasted Duck Legs, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Cherry Balsamic Reduction

Cut of the Day - 24 oz T-bone, Croquets Grilled Asparagus, Balsamic Reduction

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M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market

Voted Albuquerque’s Best Deli by the Albuquerque Journal’s Readers.

The Café & Market continues to offer amazing pastries in our display case every day. We carry the same great Italian imports, all of our artisan breads, and a wide variety of imported, domestic, and house made cheese and meat. There is an expanded selection of coffee and pastries. We’ll still have charcuterie boards to eat in or take out with wine and beer by the glass. Click here to see our new menu.

Fresh Mozzarella and Burrata, plus Aged Balsamico for Caprese Salad. All you need is tomatoes.

M’tucci’s Catering

Recently, we catered the New Mexico Make A Wish foundation fundraiser. We provideda full bar and the buffet included Charcuterie Boards, Shrimp Boards, Chianina Meatballs and Arancini. Give us a call for your next event, wedding reception or party! Click here to see our catering menu. 505.350.0019 or [email protected]


ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations in Albuquerque. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, and Raisin Rosemary Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

See you next Friday - Ciao!

Mozzarella & Burrata

 As you may have noticed, the grocery stores and the farmers markets are loaded with fresh tomatoes of all sizes, shapes and colors: small Lemon Pears, round Lemon Boys, bright red Super Sweet 100s and pink Brandywines. That’s a good thing for me, since the hot, dry summer has slowed my garden tomato production of those varieties for now. I hope it’s a good thing for you, as well.

I love dressing slices of large tomatoes or a bowl of halved cherry tomatoes with a handful of fresh basil, good extra-virgin olive oil (EVOO) and a small drizzle of an aged balsamic vinegar. Fresh tomatoes like these cry out for Insalata Caprese, the classic Italian pairing of fresh tomatoes, fresh mozzarella and basil.

Insalata Caprese at M’tucci’s Moderno

Insalata Caprese at M’tucci’s Moderno

Cheese is probably one of the oldest foods and, like many wonderful things to eat, was probably a happy accident. Nearly four thousand years ago the Chinese and people in the Middle East used animal stomachs to transport food. In the case of milk, the rennet in the stomach lining are a natural coagulant. Walk a few days with milk in your natural backpack and, mamma mia!, cheese. During the Middle Ages, the Romans turned cheese making into an art.

The best mozzarella in Italy comes from Puglia in the south, where it is made with water buffalo milk and called mozzarella di bufala. It is called fior di latte if cow’s milk is used. The fresh mozzarella and burrata in Puglia are not considered cheese (formaggio), but are called latticini (dairy product) and are customarily eaten fresh.

Mozzarella and burrata are also known as pasta filata, cheeses that are pulled and stretched and are meant to be consumed within a day of production. That’s why locally made mozzarella will be better than imported mozzarella - it’s all about the freshness.

At M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market, we make our own mozzarella and burrata a couple of times a week, both for menu items at our other restaurants and for retail sale in the Market. Like many things Italian, it’s not a complicated process, but it does rely on technique and quality ingredients. Kai, who is our main casaro (cheese maker), said one of the hardest parts is becoming accustomed to plunging lightly-gloved hands into the hot mixture of water and curds (nearly 190 degrees) and working the cheese to the right consistency. In addition to the importance of technique, the quality of the milk is extremely important.

While mozzarella is a soft, fresh cheese, it has a firm consistency. Burrata is related to mozzarella, but different. Burrata is made by pressing a ball of mozzarella into a flat piece, forming a pocket, then adding a mixture of cream and stracciatella (strips of mozzarella) to the pocket and sealing it. In a sense, it’s a ball of mozzarella with a creamy, cheesy center.

The next time you pick up some mozzarella and burrata from the Market, don’t forget to get a bottle of the 10-year-old Aceto Balsamico. This is a certified Modena IGP (Indicazione Geografica Protetta) vinegar, sweet and slightly syrupy, that will enhance your Insalata Caprese and many other dishes. The IGP designation means it is a genuine food product made in a specific area according to strict guidelines.

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Last night I made two salads by starting with a plate of mixed greens. I marinated some chopped cherry tomatoes with fresh basil, EVOO, sea salt and fresh ground pepper. After 30 minutes I spooned the tomatoes and their juice on top of the lettuce, then cut a ball of burrata over the top of each salad (half for me, half for my wife). A bit of the balsamic vinegar over the top was the finishing touch.

Another popular Southern Italian salad is Insalata di Pomodoro e burrata con pangrattato e basilco or Tomato and Burrata Salad with bread crumbs and Basil. It’s easy to make variations of this with stale or fresh bread for the pangrattato, or just simply add some of M’tucci’s Sourdough bread cut into chunks.


Recipe for 4

3/4 pound of heirloom tomatoes or any ripe, flavorful tomato (cored and cut into 1” chunks)

8-10 cherry tomatoes halved (yellow or red)

M’tucci’s Sourdough (2-3 slices), light toasted or slightly stale, cut into 1” cubes (optional to rub them with a bit of fresh garlic before chopping)

EVOO

1/3 - 1/2 C. Fresh Basil

1 ball of M’tucci’s Burrata

  1. Lightly salt tomatoes and place in a colander to drain about 30 minutes.

  2. If you don’t toast the bread, sauté it in a bit of EVOO for a crispy, olive oil flavor.

  3. Combine tomatoes, chopped basil and bread, then cut the burrata into chunks, taking care to reserve the creamy liquid.

  4. Add the burrata chunks and toss with a bit of EVOO and the creamy liquid. Dress the top with balsamic vinegar, salt & pepper to taste.

  5. Serve immediately

Chef Fred Gallegos’ Caprese Trio at M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing: burrata, fresh tomato, basil oil & 10-year old balsamic, smoked mozzarella, tomato jam & pesto, and mozzarella, smoke balsamic tomato and fresh basil.

Chef Fred Gallegos’ Caprese Trio at M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing: burrata, fresh tomato, basil oil & 10-year old balsamic, smoked mozzarella, tomato jam & pesto, and mozzarella, smoke balsamic tomato and fresh basil.


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

LABOR DAY: All of our restaurants will be open normal hours on Labor Day, so if you’re around, we are too!

M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing Co.

HAPPY HOUR

Happy hour is back and better than ever. Lucky 7 Happy Hour features several menu items for $7, Monday - Friday 3:00 - 6:30. Pair the food with a beer for $10.50 or $11, depending on the beer. Not eating (why not?), then $1 off all pints.

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Tonight, Friday, August 23: Instant Karma Live on the patio at 7:00.

Food & Beer Pairing

We held our first successful food and beer pairing Wednesday night and we look forward to doing many more. These are a great opportunity for the kitchen to try new items that pair well with the dozen or so Lava Rock beers on tap. Here are a few photos from the evening.

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials

Cut of the Day - Porterhouse, Salt Water Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus Balsamic Reduction

Pan-Seared Seafood - Ruby Red Trout, Creamy Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Sautéed Arugula, Capers, Lemon Beurre Blanc

Ravioli - Red Wine Porcini Braised Duroc Pork Asiago, Wild Mushrooms Carmelized Onions, Shaved Parmesam, Micro Greens

Braise - Harris Ranch Beef Tips, Five Cheese Tortellini, Roasted Summer Squash, Red Bell Pepper, Haricot Vert, Light Lemon Cream Sauce, Arugula, Shaved Parmesan

AUGUST PRIX FIXE MENU

8/28/19

1st Course- Creamy Smoked Corn Chowder, Green Chile, Smoked House Bacon

2nd Course- Smoked BBQ Game Hen, Watermelon BBQ Sauce, Jalapeño Cornbread, House Slaw

3rd Course- Flourless Chocolate Cake, Coffee Ganache, Orange Coulis, Crispy Semolina

M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Spicy Penne and Salmon $20 - Italian olives, capers, serrano chiles, white wine, marinara

Rufino Rose, Italy, 8/32 - Notes of strawberry and hints of rose petal, white fruits and berries compliment the acidity and bubbles

Yellow Tail Tuna - $23 Buttery soft with a light sear

Michael David, Sauvignon Blanc, California, 9/36 - Refreshing notes of crisp apple, honeysuckle, and orange blossom, bright and slightly acidic.

Cut of the Day: 24 oz NY Strip - $32

Sasserogale, Sangiovese 7/28 - Notes of wild berries, cherries and a moderate spiciness

8:30 Friday: Julian Dossett Live in the bar

M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market

The new Café & Market continues to wow our guests, primarily because of the amazing pastries in our display case every day. Our new hours are 8:00am - 6:00pm. We carry the same great Italian imports, all of our artisan breads, and a wide variety of imported, domestic, and house made cheese and meat. There is an expanded selection of coffee and pastries. We’ll still have charcuterie boards to eat in or take out with wine and beer by the glass. Click here to see our new menu.

A M’tucci’s/Lava Rock “Beeramisu”: Lava Rock Coffee Pale Ale Soaked Lady Fingers, Chocolate Caramel Sauce & White Chocolate Mascarpone Cream.

A M’tucci’s/Lava Rock “Beeramisu”: Lava Rock Coffee Pale Ale Soaked Lady Fingers, Chocolate Caramel Sauce & White Chocolate Mascarpone Cream.

M’tucci’s Catering

Recently, we catered the New Mexico Make A Wish foundation fundraiser. The buffet included Charcuterie Boards, Shrimp Boards, Chianina Meatballs and Arancini. Give us a call for your next event, wedding reception or party! Click here to see our catering menu. 505.350.0019 or [email protected]

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ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations in Albuquerque. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, and Raisin Rosemary Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

See you next Friday - Ciao!

M'tucci's Profiles - Jeff Spiegel & Katie Gardner

After nearly seven years as a health care consultant in Manhattan, Jeff Spiegel had an epiphany.

“At some point I got a glimpse of myself as a consultant walking down Madison Avenue with my overcoat and my briefcase in hand . . . and I took a start and thought holy s**t, that’s me. It’s not what I had in mind. I turned around and went home and called my brother (his business partner) and said I’m done.”

That epiphany in 1982 put Jeff and Katie Gardner, his wife and partner, on the path that would eventually lead to Albuquerque and to M’tucci’s. A friend suggested they start a restaurant in NYC, because “we like to cook”, (usually a terrible reason for getting into the restaurant business). So, Jeff said sure, sounds like a good idea.

While planning for a year, walking Manhattan to understand the restaurant business, good locations and commercial properties, they met the CEO of a public company that owned restaurants. They talked about doing a project together. While the deal didn’t happen, the CEO became an amazing mentor, guiding them to their initial restaurant space, providing the tools to get started, and even lent them a bookkeeper.

In 1983 they opened Margaritas on the Upper East Side, serving the city’s first Mexican food that wasn’t “garbage.” They held a cooking competition for prospective chefs and hired Christine Keff (who went on to win a James Beard award for her Seattle restaurant, Flying Fish) who had never cooked Mexican food. They both agreed that her food was fabulous.

Katie said they didn’t advertise, but they had the great idea of giving away margaritas for the first three nights and, of course, they were packed. Jeff said every restaurant they have ever opened since has always been packed. More restaurants followed, because as Katie says, “Jeff likes to start things. He likes the whole process of planning.”

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After 23 years of operating 11 restaurants in Manhattan, they decided it was time for a change, so they sold their restaurants and moved back to Albuquerque, Jeff’s hometown, and worked on different projects and jobs until 2013. They said that they didn’t go out to restaurants that much, but when they did, the service was uniformly cold and impersonal. Jeff was working as a consultant on economic development and realized that he could create 60 jobs just by opening a restaurant. That’s economic development!

“We knew exactly what we wanted to do,” Jeff said. As with all of their previous places, at M’tucci’s Italian they surrounded themselves with good people. “We’ve always had good people.”

Dave Herndon, a magazine editor and a former bartender at Margaritas said, “The real secret sauce has always been that they create a hospitable, loose, fun atmosphere where people can be themselves and feel at home. The vibe starts with Jeff and Katie’s fun loving personalities, which informs their staffing—They have highly tuned people instincts. They pick the right people, and the wrong ones get weeded out really fast. Customers are treated as friends and become regulars. Everybody wins.”

During the regular meetings of servers and bartenders, standards of service are discussed at length. The level of professionalism is emphasized repeatedly. Much of the M’tucci’s staff has been with us since the doors opened. Katie said that’s because Jeff believes that employees deserve to earn a living wage and that they and John Haas (Founding Partner/Executive Chef) believe in training and promoting talented staff. Several of our original cooks, servers and bartenders are now in management positions.

“I always prefer having the restaurant built out. Sometimes, it’s in a location that may not have appeared to be favorable. Anywhere I have opened in a location where the previous restaurant failed and ours has always been successful. Thanks to you - our guest.”


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing Co.

M’tucci’s kitchen is winding up their first month at Lava Rock Brewing Co. The brewers have been busy and have filled up 13 taps with their ales and lagers. Chef Fred has created a menu to complement the beers made by Ram Khalsa. Click here to see the menu, a map of the location, and the hours.

Wednesday, August 21 @ 7:00: Special Six Course Beer (5 oz.) and Food Pairing:

  1. Gila Gose shrimp & Crab Ceviche

2. Shiprock Saison & Honey Balsamic Chicken Wing

3. Petroglyph Wit & Watermelon with Feta, Basil

4. Brown Trout Lager Dunkle & Sausage Orzo Ragu

5. 32 Bravo DIPA & BBQ Meat Balls, Arugula, Apple Mustard

6. Capulin Pale Ale & Chocolate Cherry Tart Hazelnut Cookie Crust


$24 with beer - Reservations recommended - $6 deposit

Tonight, August 16 @ 7:00: Live Music with H28

Visit Lava Rock at 2220 Unser Blvd (about a mile north of I-40). Call (505) 836-1022 for details. Their website is: http://lavarockbrewpub.com/

Check out the site and follow them on Facebook: @LavaRockBC and Instagram: @Lavarockbc

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M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials

House Ravioli

Local Roasted Bell Pepper-Three Cheese Ravioli, Spicy House Bacon, Roasted Summer Squash, Caramelized Onion, White Wine Butter Sauce.

The Braise

Porcini Braised Duroc Pork Shank, Creamy Polenta, Sautéed Spinach, Local Porcini, Red Wine Braising Sauce.

Cut of the Day

24oz T-Bone, Salt-Water Smashed Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Grilled Lemon, Balsamic Reduction.

Pan Seared Fish

Opah, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Artichoke Heart, Sautéed Arugula, Lemon Butter Caper Sauce.

Lapostolle Canto de Apalta Red Blend 2012

Glass 8 – Bottle 30

Michael David Freakshow Cabernet 2015

Glass 9 – Bottle 36


Weekend Brunch: 11:00 - 3:00

New menu for drinks and food. Click here.

AUGUST PRIX FIXE MENU

8/21/19

1st Course- Heirloom Tomato, Smoked Portabella, Aged Balsamic, Creamy House Mozzarella, Toasted Sunflower Seeds 

2nd Course- Chianina Italian Cut Sirloin, Crispy Sea Water Potatoes, Marinated Red Bell Peppers, Colonata Style Butter

3rd Course- Cheesecake Bars, Strawberry Shrub Smetana, Fresh Fruit

8/28/19

1st Course- Creamy Smoked Corn Chowder, Green Chile, Smoked House Bacon

2nd Course- Smoked BBQ Game Hen, Watermelon BBQ Sauce, Jalapeño Cornbread, House Slaw

3rd Course- Flourless Chocolate Cake, Coffee Ganache, Orange Coulis, Crispy Semolina

M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market

The new Café & Market continues to wow our guests, primarily because of the amazing pastries in our display case every day. Our new hours are 8:00am - 6:00pm. We carry the same great Italian imports, all of our artisan breads, and a wide variety of imported, domestic, and house made cheese and meat. There is an expanded selection of coffee and pastries. We’ll still have charcuterie boards to eat in or take out with wine and beer by the glass. Click here to see our new menu.

Sarah with some of her beautiful baguettes, fresh daily!

Sarah with some of her beautiful baguettes, fresh daily!

M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Shrimp and Lobster Risotto - Wild Mushrooms, Asparagus, Grape tomatoes - $26

Rufino Rose, Italy, Notes of strawberry and hints of rose petal, white fruits and berries compliment the acidity and bubbles $8/32

Yellow Tail - Buttery soft with a lite sear - $23

Michael David, Sauv Blanc, California, Refreshing notes of crisp apple, honeysuckle and orange blossum, bright and slightly acidic. $9/36

Cut of the Day: 24 oz Porterhouse - $34

Tercos, Malbec, Argentine - Earthy, Berries and plum flavors, soft tanins with a long finish $8/32

Lemonade: Ginger Peach--Gelato: Tiramisu-- Sorbetto Peach Champagne

Tonight, August 16 @ 8:30: Amy Cliser Live

M’tucci’s Catering

Here are a few photos from the Make A Wish foundation fundraiser. Give us a call for your next event, wedding reception or party! Click here to see our catering menu. 505.350.0019 or [email protected]


ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations in Albuquerque. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, and Raisin Rosemary Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

See you next Friday - Ciao!

M'tucci's Pizza

Where did you have your first pizza? ( At home when Dad brought home a Chef Boy-Ar-Dee pizza kit for Sunday dinner. He ruined it with canned mushrooms and anchovies - yechh!)

Where did you have your most memorable pizza? ( Probably a tie between several places in Italy and M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing last night.)

A $144 billion-a-year business, pizza has been around for centuries and can be found in nearly every country around the world. Around 3 billion pizzas are made every year, 83% of Americans have eaten it in the past month, and there are more than 76,000 pizzerias in the U.S. The word “pizza” could have come from “pita” which were likely the first types of flatbread to be covered with toppings. Pizza’s story begins in Naples, Italy in the 17th century, according to food historians.

A M’tucci’s grating of fresh parmesan when the pizza comes from the oven.

A M’tucci’s grating of fresh parmesan when the pizza comes from the oven.

It was the arrival of tomatoes from the New World that gave Italy the most popular topping for the flat breads that had been prepared in Naples. Historians believe the first pizza was created in 1734 at a small corner shop near the port, where the food was popular with sailors going to sea. The first pizza was the marinara (Italian for sailor) and was topped with crushed tomatoes, olive oil, oregano and garlic. Antica Pizzeria Port’Alba is considered to be the first pizzeria and is still operating at the original port location.

In Naples, pizza was considered food for the poor and was not embraced by royalty until 1889, when Raffaele Esposito from Pizzeria Brandi served Queen Margherita and King Umberto I his famous creation; tomato and mozzarella pizza topped with fresh basil. Bearing the colors of the newly-created Italian flag (red, white and green), the dish became a hit and is still one of the most commonly ordered pizzas in Italy.

While the types, shapes and ingredients of pizzas around the world vary wildly (squid in Japan, green beans in Brazil), the Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana is the Naples-based, international governing body that sets forth the rules for Pizza Napoletana. They stipulate the ingredients and the size, and that it must be cooked in a wood-fired oven at temperatures between 806-896 degrees F and be finished in 90 seconds or less. There are even guidelines for the thickness of the center and the edges of the crust.

However precise, these rules result in the nearly perfect food with all of the taste groups covered. You have salt from the dough, sweetness from tomatoes, sour from the mozzarella di bufala and some bitterness from the lightly charred crust (the char should look spotty).

There are no certified AVPN pizzerias in New Mexico, and M’tucci’s doesn’t intend to be the first. Still, we embrace the style of Pizza Napoletano, creating pizzas that are true to our philosophy of fresh, great ingredients and hand made.

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Six years ago, when M’tucci’s Italian opened, M’tucci’s Italian Market soon followed with Chefs Shawn Cronin and Cory Gray in charge of breads, pizzas, making mozzarella and curing meat. They had worked together at Farina Pizzeria and had a few ideas about creating the best pizza. According to them, the most important ingredient isn’t what’s on top - it’s the crust. It’s the most difficult ingredient to get right, and it’s the most critical to the flavor, the mouth feel and the integrity of the pizza.

Also, they wanted to create food that was more natural, that was easier to digest, and that would have a distinctive flavor. So, they tossed out the dry yeast and created their own starter for leavening. They also lowered the temperature and extended the time for proofing the period that the dough rises). That sourdough starter, special flour, water and salt is what makes M’tucci’s pizzas unlike any other pizza in the area.

While pizza is normally a simple food, making one is full of potential pitfalls: the dough can be too wet, or it can have too much flour, or it can be kneaded too much. It takes experience and technique to create a sublime pizza. All of our pizza chefs (pizzaiolo) agree on the most challenging part of making a pizza - the stretching of the dough. Some use a technique to stretch flat on the pizza peel and a few like to give it a light toss in the air (frowned upon by AVPN) to achieve an even stretch.

We think our sourdough crust is close to the flavor of Pizza Napoletano, since the crust stands in for the sour flavor you would get from mozzarella di bufala, which is not practical to use so far from its Southern Italy source.

In June, we didn’t have time to travel to Naples, so we had to be content with eating pizza in Tuscany. Still, we marveled at the thin crust, neither soggy nor crispy, and the perfect balance of ingredients.

Like so many things in Italy, they’ve been doing this for centuries and we do everything we can to soak up their culture and bring it to you.

In Bolgheri,Pizza with Salami and the left and, of course, Margherita on the right.

In Bolgheri,Pizza with Salami and the left and, of course, Margherita on the right.


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing Co.

M’tucci’s and Lava Rock Join Forces

M’tucci’s kitchen is now open at Lava Rock Brewing Co. Chef Fred Gallegos is heading a team of talent in the kitchen (making those great pizzas that you all love), and he has created a menu to complement the beers made by Ram Khalsa at the brewery. Click here to see the menu, a map of the location, and the hours.

We think you are going to love the food and beer pairing at Lava Rock. Come visit Lava Rock at 2220 Unser Blvd (about a mile north of I-40). Call (505) 836-1022 for details. Their website is: http://lavarockbrewpub.com/

Check out the site and follow them on Facebook: @LavaRockBC and Instagram: @Lavarockbc

M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Herb Roasted Duck: Served with Creamy Polenta, Grilled Asparagus, Cranberry Gastrique

Planet Oregon, Pinot Noir A little spicy, aromas of cherry, raspberry and smoke


Pan Seared Diver Scallops:
Buttery soft with a lite sear

Mimi Chardonnay, Chateau St. Michelle Notes of apple and pear with a bright acidity, refreshing yet complex


Cut of the Day: 24 oz T-Bone

Liberty School, Cabernet Sauvignon California, Aromas of cherry, crushed rock, cigar box and hickory and tasting blackberry, sage, pepper, smoke and a minerally finish. $10 glass/$40 Bottle

Lemonade: Strawberry Basil --Gelato: Espresso -Sorbetto - Cucumber Lime

New Happy Hour Cocktail Menu

$3 Select Taps

$1 OFF all wines by the glass

$5 Aperol Spritz

$5 House Sauza Margarita

$6 House Infused Hollow Spirits Vodka Mule

$7 Tito's Martini

$7 Drink of the Week


8:30, Friday: Lani Nash Live in the Bar

M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market

The new Café & Market continues to wow our guests, primarily because of the amazing pastries in our display case every day. Our new hours are 8:00am - 6:00pm. We carry the same great Italian imports, all of our artisan breads, and a wide variety of imported, domestic, and house made cheese and meat. There is an expanded selection of coffee and pastries. We’ll still have charcuterie boards to eat in or take out with wine and beer by the glass. Click here to see our new menu.

Order a custom Charcuterie Board for your next event - or lunch!

Order a custom Charcuterie Board for your next event - or lunch!

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials -

The Braise: Lightly Smoked & Herb Roasted 1/2 Chicken, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Sauteéd Spinach, Lemon-Caper-Olive Brodo

Ravioli: Pesto & Ricotta Stuffed Ravioli, Summer Squash, Hericot Verts, Roasted Red Bell Pepper, Caramelized Onion, Light Lemon Cream Sauce, Fresh Arugula, Shaved Parmesan

Cut of the Day: 24oz House Cut Porterhouse, Salt Water Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Balsamic Reduction, Grilled Lemon

Pan Seared Fish: Barramundi, Whipped Garlic Potatoes, Sauteéd Arugula, Grilled Italian Artichokes, Lemon-Caper Beurre Blanc.


Weekend Brunch: 11:00 - 3:00

New menu for drinks and food. Click here.


ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations in Albuquerque. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, and Raisin Rosemary Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

See you next Friday - Ciao!

Italy's Super Tuscan Wines

Like many of Italy’s regional food products, Italian wine grapes are specific to their region: Barbera, Dolcetto and Nebbiolo in Piedmont; Valpolicella in Veneto, Nero d’Avola in Sicily, Pinot Grigio in Friuli and Sangiovese in Chianti. I wrote about the wines from Chianti a few months ago and you can read about them here.

On the recent trip to Italy with M’tucci’s chefs, we were based near the town of Bolgheri in the Maremma growing region of Tuscany near the Tyrrhenian Sea. In the 1930s this area was mostly swamp and farmland and was not known for wine grapes until the 1970s, when wines from a small family-owned estate bested some of the best wines from Bordeaux in a blind tasting.

From Winesearcher.com: “in 1978, in an infamous blind tasting arranged by Decanter Magazine, the 1972 vintage of a largely unknown wine called Sassicaia, made at Tenuta San Guido estate of the Marchese Mario Incisa della Rocchetta, beat a number of top Bordeaux wines. Wine had been been made at Tenuta San Guido in a rather rustic fashion for personal consumption for some years previously, and only commercialized from the 1968 vintage, but this early example of a more polished version made by legendary winemaking consultant Giacomo Tachis led to an awakening of interest in the region.”

Vineyards around Castagneto Carducci.

Vineyards around Castagneto Carducci.

Wineries discovered that the chalky, gravelly soil (Sassicaia means stony field) and the proximity to the sea were very similar to Bordeaux. Many of them bought land and started planting Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Cabernet Franc in addition to Sangiovese and Petit Verdot. The most common white wine grape in the area is Vermentino.

As the vintners improved the vineyards and their techniques, the top wines from the area continued to be known as Super Tuscans, distinctly different from a Sangiovese-dominant Chianti. Some of these top wines (with prices to match) are: Sassicaia, Ornellaia (by Antinori) and some of the wines from the Antinori Guado al Tasso estate.

Unlike many of the wine regions in Italy, the vintners in the Bolgheri area aren’t limited by strict laws governing the percentages of a specific grape in their wine and they are free to make wine that expresses “terroir.” The soil rich in minerals, limestone, clay and pebbles, and the warm sunny days with nights cooled by sea breezes all combine to produce wines that are now becoming known as Bolgheri wine instead of Super Tuscan. Probably a good idea, since most of the Super Tuscans start out a $80-$100 a bottle.

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The success of the wines from this area was not lost on the wine estates in other parts of Tuscany, even in Chianti itself. Ruffino produces a Super Tuscan blend called Modus at one of their estates near Florence and Arcanum Il Fauno is a red blend made primarily with Cabernet Franc near Siena. Both of these wines are available at M’tucci’s Italian. Even Antinori’s Santa Cristina (available by glass & bottle) is a blended Tuscan wine that uses Sangiovese, Syrah and Merlot, and comes from their estate near the town of Cortona (of “Under the Tuscan Sun” fame).

In fact, most of the red Tuscan wines at M’tucci’s Italian tend to be more of the Super Tuscan/Bolgheri style than straight Sangiovese Chiantis. Why?

Austin Leard, Beverage Director/Partner explains, “I think all the different levels of Chianti tend to be a little confusing and I prefer offering Italian reds that are more food friendly. The Tuscan blends are more inviting and are a better value for our guests.”

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One of the top wines on our wine list is from Bolgheri, Antinori’s Guado al Tasso “Il Bruciato”, a blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Syrah. It was one of the wines on our 6th Anniversary 7-Course tasting menu and was paired with a Braised Beef Shank. It goes very well with hearty meat or tomato based dishes.

Here are the tasting notes from the Antinori site: “The 2016 Il Bruciato offers an intense ruby red color. On the nose, the aromas of ripe red berry fruit, sweet spices, and a light and fresh minty note are the most prominent sensations. The palate is well structured, persistent, and very pleasurable in its fruity finish and aftertaste.”

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Many of these wines are going to be available as specials in the coming weeks, most of them were from the Antinori estates in different parts of Tuscany. In addition, we often come across special wines which make up our “Captain’s List”, and we pass the savings on to you. Always ask your server what is available during your next visit.


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing Co.

M’tucci’s and Lava Rock Join Forces

M’tucci’s kitchen is now open at Lava Rock Brewing Co. Chef Fred Gallegos is heading a team of talent in the kitchen (making those great pizzas that you all love), and he has created a menu to complement the beers made by Ram Khalsa at the brewery. Click here to see the menu, a map of the location, and the hours.

We think you are going to love the food and beer pairing at Lava Rock. Come visit Lava Rock at 2220 Unser Blvd (about a mile north of I-40). Call (505) 836-1022 for details. Their website is: http://lavarockbrewpub.com/

Check out the site and follow them on Facebook: @LavaRockBC and Instagram: @Lavarockbc

M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market

The new Café & Market continues to wow our guests, primarily because of the amazing pastries in our display case every day. Our new hours are 8:00am - 6:00pm. We carry the same great Italian imports, all of our artisan breads, and a wide variety of imported, domestic, and house made cheese and meat. There is an expanded selection of coffee and pastries. We’ll still have charcuterie boards to eat in or take out with wine and beer by the glass. Click here to see our new menu.

Here is what Pastry Chef Lauren did with fresh fruit past week.

Fresh Fruit tarts, Almond Sable Crust with Citrus White Chocolate Mousse

Fresh Fruit tarts, Almond Sable Crust with Citrus White Chocolate Mousse

M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Goat Cheese Spaghettini Wild pink shrimp, sweet and hot peppers, toasted walnuts tossed in a light goat cheese sauce $19

Toscolo Chianti, Toscana Italy: black cherry, clover and a white pepper spice flavors

California Halibut White and flaky yet meaty texture, buttery flavor

Mimi Chardonnay, Chateau St. Michelle: Notes of apple and pear with a bright acidity, refreshing yet complex

Cut of the Day: 24 oz Bone-in NY Strip

Frescobaldi Remole, Super Tuscan, Italy: Notes of raspberry, blackberry, black cherry, aromatic spicy notes of pepper and eucalyptus

New Happy Hour Cocktail Menu

$3 Select Taps

$1 OFF all wines by the glass

$5 Aperol Spritz

$5 House Sauza Margarita

$6 House Infused Hollow Spirits Vodka Mule

$7 Tito's Martini

$7 Drink of the Week


8:30, Friday: Cali Shaw Live in the Bar

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials

The Braise: Braised Chianina Beef, Five Cheese Tortelloni, Sautéed Mushrooms & Shallots, Light Mushroom Cream Sauce

Pan Seared Fish: California Halibut, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Italian Artichokes, Sautéed Arugula, Lemon Butter-Caper Sauce

Ravioli: Mushroom & Ricotta Stuffed Ravioli, Ibérico Chorizo, Caramelized Onions, Wild Mushroom Bechamel, Shaved Aged Parmesan, Fresh Arugula

Cut of the Day: 24oz House Cut Porterhouse, Crispy Salt Water Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Balsamic Reduction


Weekend Brunch: 11:00 - 3:00

New menu for drinks and food. Click here.


ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations in Albuquerque. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, and Raisin Rosemary Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

See you next Friday - Ciao!

Prosciutto - the King of Cured Meat

Prosciutto crudo and Prosciutto di Parma aged 2 years

Prosciutto crudo and Prosciutto di Parma aged 2 years

We wish we knew the identity of the first person who figured out that salting meat would not only preserve it, but make it taste good. We want to thank him or her. History says that meat curing has been around since ancient times, probably discovered by the Greeks, who then taught the Romans. During those times, it was a way of making sure that there was something to eat during hard times, and, of course, to preserve food before refrigeration. 

Curing meat is popular throughout the world, however, nobody does it with such care and creativity like the Italians. As with most things Italian, a great final product begins with a carefully raised product and exacting production techniques. Great cured prosciutto begins with pigs raised in the right climate and that are fed a special diet that ensures great flavor. 

Prosciutto is probably the most famous cured meat in the world. The hams from 10-month old pigs are salted and pressed for two months, then rinsed, salted and periodically massaged during the curing process. Many of the pigs in Parma area are fed the whey left from the making of Parmigiano Reggiano cheese. Pigs near the Umbrian city of Norcia range freely and feast on acorns and truffles. The butchers in this area are know as Norcini, which has become synonymous with the designation of  master butcher.

Food Writer Bill Buford writes: “To age a prosciutto is a subtle business. If it's too warm, the aging process never begins. The meat spoils. If it's too dry, the meat is ruined. It needs to be damp but cool. The summer is too hot. In the winter—that's when you make prosciutto.”

Prosciutto di Parma, can only come from farms within a defined area surrounding Parma, Italy. Other well known prosciutti are San Daniele from Friuli-Venezia Giulia region, Prosciutto di Norcia and Speck (which unlike prosciutto is smoked). At M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market we carry Prosciutto di Parma (one aged for 12 months and one aged for 24 months), Prosciutto crudo from Emilia, Speck from Trentino-Alto Aldige, and Jamón Serrano and Jamón Ibérico from Spain.

Many of these products are designated DOP - Denominazione di Origine Protetta - which certifies that the product is authentic, is produced in a specific area, and follows specific rules of production.

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Much of the salami, coppa and prosciutto comes from the northern and central parts of Italy, since cool weather is necessary for good air-cured meat. Also, some of the mountainous areas of Southern Italy also produce DOP cured meats like copocollo in Calabria. Calabria and Basilicata also produce soppressata and capocollo.

Capicola and coppa are both produced from the pork collar muscle (near the shoulder). You often see the words coppa, capicola and capocollo referring to this cut of meat. All terms are correct and are generally used based on the region where it is produced. There are different methods for spicing, salting and curing the cut. We make two different styles at the Market, our Applewood-smoked Spicy Capicola and our air-dried Coppa and you can see the results below.

Capicola (L) and Coppa

Capicola (L) and Coppa

Currently our meat curing program (the only one in New Mexico licensed to sell products retail) has Pancetta (unsmoked Italian bacon), Guanciale (meat from the jowl - indispensable for Pasta all’ Amatriciana- recipe below), Coppa and Capicola. We also cure salmon and make our own pastrami.

You can find the products used in a variety of dishes at all of our restaurants. M’tucci’s Moderno has Spicy Capicola on the Peperoncino Pizza and the Charcuterie Boards B, C, & D have Parma Prosciutto, Spicy Capicola and Speck. At M’tuccii’s Italian, Charcuterie Board A has 2-year Parma Prosciutto and Board C has Spicy Capicola. Our new venture, M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing Company has Prosciutto on Charcuterie Board A and Spicy Capicola on Board B and the Capicola is on the Smoked Mozzarella Muffaletta Sandwich.

In addition to being able to order any of the aforementioned meats sliced to go, they are available on Charcuterie Boards and Sandwiches at the Market.

Our selection of meat that we don’t cure ourselves includes: Mortadella, Genoa Salami, Soppressata, Finnochiona, Calabrese Salami, Iberico Chorizo and Pepperoni. Some of these are imported and some are produced by one of the oldest Italian Salami houses in the U.S., P.G. Molinari in San Francisco (since 1896).

Pasta all’amatriciana - serves 4

4 oz. M’tucci’s Guanciale

1/2 C. water

1/4 t. red pepper flakes

1 T tomato paste (use the kind in a tube)

1/4 C. red wine

1.5 C canned diced tomatos

1 oz Pecorino Romano (1/2 C fresh grated)

1/2 lb pasta (linguine, spaghetti, fettucine)

  1. Slice guanciale into 1/4-inch-thick strips and then dice. Simmer pork and water in a small skillet over medium heat until water evaporates and guanciale begins to sizzle., lower heat and cook softly for about 5 minutes. You want golden pieces of pork. Remove pork and pour off all fat except for about 1 tablespoon and reserve in a bowl.

  2. Add tomato paste and pepper flakes to skillet and cook stirring constantly then add red wine. Cook less than a minute. Add tomatoes with juices, then add guanciale a cook at a low simmer. Make a paste out of reserved fat and half of pecorino.

  3. Bowl pasta in salted water and save 1/2 C water when pasta is al dente. Drain pasta, return it to pot, add sauce, maybe 1/4 C of cooking water, and Pecorino paste, stir until well coated. Serve immediately with the remaining Pecorino.

Building a BIG Charcuterie Board to go at M’tucci’s Italian Cafe & Market

Building a BIG Charcuterie Board to go at M’tucci’s Italian Cafe & Market


News from M’tucci’s

M’tucci’s 6th Anniversary Week

Only two more nights to celebrate our 6th Anniversary with a 3-Course menu at both M’tucci’s Italian and at M’tucci’s Moderno. Reservations are not required for these dinners. Cost is $30 per person for the 3 courses paired with three wines.

Here is the menu:

First Course:

Olive Brined Shrimp, M’tucci’s Baguette, Olive Tapenade, Dressed Greens

Wine: Fantini Trebbiano

Second Course:

Porcini Ravioli, Mushroom Consommé, Marinated Zucchini, Truffle Pecorino or

Italian Style Sirloin, Colonnata Style Butter Tossed Salt Water Potatoes, Marinated Red Bell Peppers or

Seared Yellowfin Tuna, Potato-Chive Croquettes, Oyster Mushrooms, Salsa Verde

Wine: Sassoregale Sangiovese or Oliver Hill Shiraz or Caymus Conundrum

Third Course:

House Gelatos- Pistaccio and Apricot Gelato, Champagne Biscotti

Wine: Folinari Prosecco

$30 Per Person

No Substitutions

Tax & Gratuity Not Included

M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing Co.

M’tucci’s and Lava Rock Join Forces

M’tucci’s kitchen is open at Lava Rock Brewing Co. Chef Fred Gallegos is heading a team of talent in the kitchen (making those great pizzas that you all love), and he has created a menu to complement the beers made by Ram Khalsa at the brewery. Click here to see the menu, a map of the location, and the hours.

Saturday 7:00-9:00: The Gershom Brothers Live on the Patio (weather permitting)

We think you are going to love the food and beer pairing at Lava Rock. Come visit Lava Rock at 2220 Unser Blvd (about a mile north of I-40). Call (505) 836-1022 for details. Their website is: http://lavarockbrewpub.com/

Check out the site and follow them on Facebook: @LavaRockBC and Instagram: @Lavarockbc

M’tucci’s Moderno

In addition to our Anniversary Prix Fix Menu, we have the following Weekend Specials:


Pan Seared Baramundi $26
White and flaky yet meaty texture, buttery flavor
Wine Pairing: Kiona Reisling, Washington, $8/32
~Bright floral notes along with apricot and honey aromas~

Hand Cut Steak of the Day: 24 oz T-Bone $33
Wine Pairing: Molly Dooker "The Scooter" Merlot, South Australia $7/25
~Vibrant red Merlot with rich flavor and a soft touch of oak~

Lemonade: Strawberry Basil

Gelato: Stracciatella or Ultra DarkChocolate

Sorbetto: Peach Champagne

Friday, 8:30-10:30: Adam Hooks Live in the Bar

M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market

The new Café & Market continues to wow our guests, primarily because of the amazing pastries in our display case every day. Our new hours are 8:00am - 6:00pm. We carry the same great Italian imports, all of our artisan breads, and a wide variety of imported, domestic, and house made cheese and meat. There is an expanded selection of coffee and pastries. We’ll still have charcuterie boards, salads and sandwiches to eat in or take out. Click here to see our new menu.

Just a few treats that have flown out the door in the past week:

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials

Pan Seared Fish: New Zealand Swordfish, Roasted Italian Artichokes, Sautéed Arugula, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Lemon Caper Beurre Blanc

Cut Of The Day: 24oz House Cut Porterhouse, Crispy Salt Water Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Balsamic Reduction, Grilled Lemon

The Braise: Five Pork Medley, Roasted Garlic Polenta, Spicy Marinara, Sautéed Spinach, Pecorino, Basil

Ravioli: Wild Boar and Ricotta Stuffed Ravioli, Caramelized Onions, Guanciale San Marzano Sauce, Shaved Aged Parmesan, Local Micro Greens

Weekend Brunch: 11:00 - 3:00

New menu for drinks and food. Click here.

Nova-Style: House Cured Nova Style Salmon, Toasted M'tucci's Rye, Italian Capers, Shaved Red Onion, Cream Cheese, Mustard-Dill Sauce

Nova-Style: House Cured Nova Style Salmon, Toasted M'tucci's Rye, Italian Capers, Shaved Red Onion, Cream Cheese, Mustard-Dill Sauce


ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia. Look for our pastries in some of the area’s best coffee shops soon.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

See you next Friday - Ciao!

M'tucci's Celebrating Six Years in Albuquerque

At the beginning of my association with M’tucci’s, I was impressed by their commitment to quality and by their devotion to Italian food - and absolutely amazed that the chefs had not been to Italy (although the founders Jeff and Katie had traveled and eaten their way through the country before starting the restaurant).  

As a fan of Italy and of Italian food for many years and as an admitted “food and wine snob”, I was thrilled with my involvement with the M’tucci’s culture.

A recent trip to Italy underscored M’tucci’s commitment to creating the best possible Italian food for New Mexico. They sent four chefs (and one lucky photographer) on an eating, drinking and cooking trip through Tuscany. Our guests will be the beneficiaries of this trip for many months to come. However, the 6th Anniversary Dinner tomorrow night, July 20 will be the first opportunity to taste some of their experiences.

The 7-course menu, paired with six wines and one drink, was inspired by different meals or classes during our visit. 

tuscany.198.jpg

Every day in Tuscany was scheduled with meals and visits to farms, food producers and wineries, except on our one Sunday. John Haas (Executive Chef/Partner) suggested we drive a bit north to Livorno to see what this busy port city had to offer in the way of seafood. Our lunch was in an unassuming restaurant near the commercial docks and was one of the few places we chose that hadn’t been recommended to us or arranged for us. 

At Il Porto, we ordered our usual 8-9 plates from the appetizers, first course and second course menu. The seafood crudo plate featured salmon, sea bream and tuna dressed with different sauces. Our Anniversary first course was inspired by the food at Il Porto, as was the finishing drink. Shawn was looking at the amari selection and the server told him not to order an amaro, but to order the drink, Poncé, which often follows every meal in Livorno. Our last dessert course will be paired with M’tucci’s Poncé.

During a workshop at a well-known butcher shop in Chianti, the chefs learned to make several dishes that are served in the shop’s restaurants. We will use one of the local techniques for making the third course Chianina Beef Tartare. One of the courses in our massive 8-course lunch was the inspiration for the 5th course, Bone Marrow Braised Beef Shank Roast (being paired with one of my favorite Italian wines from the Bolgheri area, Antinori Guado al Tasso ‘Il Bruciato’).

The second course drew on two items that we were served for our family-style lunch in Colonnata at Lardarium (also know as the Lard Rock Cafe). The lunch followed a fascinating trip through the marble caves in nearby Carrara that has been the source for the marble for centuries of Italy’s most iconic statues and sculptures (like Michelangelo’s David). The first course was an amazing plate of marinated vegetables, dressed perfectly and lightly. Our third course was loaded with charcuterie; local meat and cheese with Lardo taking the starring role. Lardo, which is made from the strip of fat along the pig’s back, was a traditional food for the miners. Processed for six months with herbs and spices, it has a long shelf life and it provided fuel for the worker’s  12-hour shifts in the marble mines of Carrara.

We know some of these dishes will reappear as specials in the future, or maybe even as permanent menu items. However, don’t miss your chance to celebrate our 6th Anniversary on Saturday night with a very special meal and some very special wine from Tuscany.

Here is the menu, don’t hesitate to make a required reservation, because space is now very limited. $125 pp.

Screen Shot 2019-07-13 at 7.46.29 AM.png

NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

M’tucci’s @ Lava Rock Brewing Co.

M’tucci’s and Lava Rock Join Forces

M’tucci’s kitchen is now open at Lava Rock Brewing Co. Chef Fred Gallegos is heading a team of talent in the kitchen (making those great pizzas that you all love), and he has created a menu to complement the beers made by Ram Khalsa at the brewery. Click here to see the menu, a map of the location, and the hours.

The big event this weekend is the Car Show put on by the New Mexico Desert Kings. Last year there were more than 100 low-riders and exotic sports cars. Saturday, July 20 from 11:00 - 1:30. FREE!

We think you are going to love the food and beer pairing at Lava Rock. Come visit Lava Rock at 2220 Unser Blvd (about a mile north of I-40). Call (505) 836-1022 for details. Their website is: http://lavarockbrewpub.com/

Check out the site and follow them on Facebook: @LavaRockBC and Instagram: @Lavarockbc

M’tucci’s Sausage Pizza and Lava Rock Valles Lager

M’tucci’s Sausage Pizza and Lava Rock Valles Lager

M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market

The new Café & Market continues to wow our guests, primarily because of the amazing pastries in our display case every day. Our new hours are 8:00am - 6:00pm. We carry the same great Italian imports, all of our artisan breads, and a wide variety of imported, domestic, and house made cheese and meat. There is an expanded selection of coffee and pastries. We’ll still have charcuterie boards to eat in or take out. Click here to see our new menu.

Just a few treats that have flown out the door in the past week:

M’tucci’s 6th Anniversary Week

Celebrate with us beginning Saturday with our special 7-Course menu paired with 6 Italian wines and an Italian beverage. Continue the celebration with a week-long 3-Course menu at both M’tucci’s Italian and at M’tucci’s Moderno. Reservations are not required for these dinners which are available from July 22-28. Cost is $30 per person for the 3 courses paired with three wines.

Here is the menu for that week:

First Course:

Olive Brined Shrimp, M’tucci’s Baguette, Olive Tapenade, Dressed Greens

Wine: Fantini Trebbiano

Second Course:

Porcini Ravioli, Mushroom Consommé, Marinated Zucchini, Truffle Pecorino or

Italian Style Sirloin, Colonnata Style Butter Tossed Salt Water Potatoes, Marinated Red Bell Peppers or

Seared Yellowfin Tuna, Potato-Chive Croquettes, Oyster Mushrooms, Salsa Verde

Wine: Sassoregale Sangiovese or Oliver Hill Shiraz or Caymus Conundrum

Third Course:

House Gelatos- Pistaccio and Apricot Gelato, Champagne Biscotti

Wine: Folinari Prosecco

$30 Per Person

No Substitutions

Tax & Gratuity Not Included

M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Pork Piccata $20: Lightly floured and seasoned Pork Loin pan fried topped with a light sauce of tomatoes, capers, feta, lemon and butter , served with Spaghettini and sautéed baby kale.

Frescobaldi Remole Super Tuscan, Italy: Chocolate and jam overtones, gentle palate with a smokey finish, medium tannic levels. $7/28

Pan Seared Baramundi $26: White and flaky yet meaty texture, buttery flavor.

Kiona Reisling, Washington, Bright floral notes along with apricot and honey aromas. $8/32

Hand Cut Steak of the Day: 24 oz T-Bone $33

Molly Dooker "The Scooter" Merlot, South Australia: Vibrant red Merlot with rich flavor and a soft touch of oak. $7/25

New Happy Hour Cocktail Menu

$3 Select Taps

$1 OFF all wines by the glass

$5 Aperol Spritz

$5 House Sauza Margarita

$6 House Infused Hollow Spirits Vodka Mule

$7 Tito's Martini

$7 Drink of the Week

New House Infused Hollow Spirits Vodka Mule

New House Infused Hollow Spirits Vodka Mule

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials

The Braise

Sautéed Harris Ranch Beef, Roasted Summer Squash, Red Bell Pepper, Arugula, Five Cheese Tortelloni, Lemon Cream Sauce

Pan Seared Fish

Fresh Sea Scallops, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Sautéed Arugula, Roasted Italian Artichokes, Caper-Lemon Beurre Blanc

Ravioli

Braised Harris Ranch Beef & Goat Cheese Stuffed Ravioli, Garlic Roasted Yukon Gold Potatoes, Hericot Verts, Wild Mushroom Cream Sauce

Cut of The Day

24oz Hand Cut T-Bone, Crispy Salt Water Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Balsamic Reduction, Grilled Lemon

Weekend Brunch: 11:00 - 3:00

New menu for drinks and food. Click here.

Our new Mimosa tray: Prosecco with Orange, Grapefruit, and Blood Orange Juice and Lavendar Honeydew Peppercorn Shrub, plus fresh fruit garnish - Get Creative!

Our new Mimosa tray: Prosecco with Orange, Grapefruit, and Blood Orange Juice and Lavendar Honeydew Peppercorn Shrub, plus fresh fruit garnish - Get Creative!


ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia. Look for our pastries in some of the area’s best coffee shops soon.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

See you next Friday - Ciao!

Italy Comes to New Mexico

Four M’tucci’s chefs recently spent a busy week eating, drinking and cooking their way through Tuscany. Why spend thousands of dollars to send four guys, who have more than 70 years of combined professional cooking experience, to Italy? Especially since they are part of the team that has created the best Italian food in New Mexico?

We knew that because of their passion and dedication to being the best, they would bring back new ideas and techniques. At the very least, they would absorb “Italy” and share it with us. That is already evident at M’tucci’s with the new Italian Café & Market, and with the 6th Anniversary Dinner at M’tucci’s Italian on July 20 (menu at the end of this piece).

During a particularly memorable meal in the wine town of Bolgheri in the western, coastal part of Tuscany where we were based, Executive Chef/Partner John Haas exclaimed:

“The food is so incredibly simple in a great way, but the techniques are in their blood. They are in their 3rd or 5th or more generations at these techniques and we are first. I believe our flavors and depth are better in many cases, but there is no substitute for inherently knowing something.”

It doesn’t hurt that nearly all of Italy is one big farm, with a climate that allows for a long growing season and with fertile soils that support a diverse agriculture. Every place we went, the restaurants are blessed with quality ingredients and they truly embrace “farm to table” dining, which they have for generations. They returned committed to using only the best and freshest ingredients.

Menu at Enoteca Tognoni

Menu at Enoteca Tognoni

Overall, the visit didn’t produce startling new techniques or unknown recipes, rather it gave all four chefs the opportunity to experience Italian style, Italian living and Italian passion. All intangible qualities that you can’t get from a book, or from a hot kitchen. You have to feel it, eat it and live it. And, if only for a week, they absorbed it daily.

At the new Italian Café & Market, Shawn brings his experience to the charcuterie program, and to the artisan bread (which was already fantastic). He has inspired the pastry and bread chefs (Lauren, Michelle, Moriah and Sara) to continue their commitment to excellence, creativity and whimsy, which we saw at every cafe in every small town.

Lauren created Fresh Fruit Tarts with Mascarpone Cream. In Italy and at all M’tucci’s it’s all about fresh.

Lauren created Fresh Fruit Tarts with Mascarpone Cream. In Italy and at all M’tucci’s it’s all about fresh.

We have revamped the menu at M’tucci’s Café & Market and changed the hours (8:00am-6:00pm). You’ll see an amazing new display of desserts, pastries, cookies and artisan chocolates. We think we have created a little bit of Italy in Albuquerque.

The new M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market

The new M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market

Much of our inspiration for our upcoming Anniversary Dinner came from several of the meals and cooking experiences in Tuscany. They learned about Lardo in Carrara, where it was the main sustenance for the men working in the marble mines, and where we had it for lunch at a traditional trattoria nearby in Colonnata. Also, we made a version of it during our butcher class In Panzano in Chianti. Lardo is a type of salami which is made by curing strips of pork fatback with spices and rosemary, usually for several months. The wild boar pasta, the truffles, the beef shank, and the Chianina tartare on the anniversary menu were inspired by our trip.

                       July 20, 2019                                                

6th Anniversary Wine Dinner

Please join us for this special evening inspired by our chef’s recent trip to Italy. We are celebrating six years of bringing La Dolce Vita to Albuquerque. Reservations required. $125 pp ($25 deposit required)

1st 

Insalata de Mare- Chilled Lobster, Pink Shrimp, Sea Scallop, White Clam, Fava Bean Puree, Barley Crumble

Pairing – Antinori Guado al Tasso Vermentino 2017

2nd

House Charcuterie- Garlic Salamini, Colonnata Style Butter, M’tucci’s Coppa, “Caprese” Burrata, Preserved Vegetables

Pairing – Antinori Guado al Tasso Sacalabrone Rose 2016

3rd

Chianina Beef Tartare (in the style of Chianti) - Extra Virgin Olive Oil , Regional Spices,  Garlic, M’tucci’s Crostini

Pairing – Antinori Peppoli Chianti Classico 2016

4th

Braised Wild Boar, Hazelnut and Black Truffle Pappardelle, Grana Padano, Pan Jus

Pairing – Marchese Antinori ‘Tignanello Vineyard’ Chianti Classico Reserva 2015

5th

Bone Marrow Braised Beef Shank Roast, Insalata de Mirepoix, Herbs, Pan Jus

Pairing – Antinori Guado al Tasso ‘Il Bruciato’ 2016

6th

Almond Sable Ring, Brandy Soaked Stone Fruit, Black Pepper Meringue

Pairing- Antinori Muffato della Sala 2008

7th

Dark Chocolate Truffle, Limoncello Gelato, Candied Lemon

Pairing- Poncé Alla Livornese

Damian, Cory, Shawn & John with the Chianina near Bibbona, Italy

Damian, Cory, Shawn & John with the Chianina near Bibbona, Italy


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

M’tucci’s Italian Café & Market

The reincarnation of the Market is open and better than ever. Our new hours are 8:00am - 6:00pm. We carry the same great Italian imports, all of our artisan breads, and a wide variety of imported, domestic, and house made cheese and meat. There is an expanded selection of coffee and pastries. We’ll still have charcuterie boards to eat in or take out. Click here to see our new menu.

Here are just a few photos of what Lauren and Michelle have created for you:

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Dinner Specials

-Cut of Day- Porterhouse

-Pan Sear- Ruby Red Trout

-Ravioli- Pesto Ricotta Ravioli Crispy Vodka Braised Duroc Pork, Gray Family Farm Roasted Oyster Mushrooms, Light Lemon Cream Sauce

-Braised- Red Wine Porcini-Braised Harris Ranch Beef Short Ribs Creamy Polenta Sautéed Spinach Red Wine Porcini Sauce

New Brunch Menu - Click here


Eggs Benedict Cotto (vegetarian)

Eggs Benedict Cotto (vegetarian)

ANNIVERSARY DINNERS AT M’TUCCI’S ITALIAN AND M’TUCCI’S MODERNO

3 COURSES/ 3 WINES, JULY 22 - 28

Celebrate 6 Years with Us all Week!

First Course:

Olive Brined Shrimp, M’tucci’s Baguette, Olive Tapenade, Dressed Greens

Second Course:

Porcini Ravioli, Mushroom Consommé, Marinated Zucchini, Truffle Pecorino or

Italian Style Sirloin, Colonnata Style Butter Tossed Salt Water Potatoes, Marinated Red Bell Peppers or

Seared Yellowfin Tuna, Potato-Chive Croquettes, Oyster Mushrooms, Salsa Verde

Third Course:

House Gelatos- Pistachio and Apricot Gelato, Champagne Biscotti

$30 Per Person

No Substitutions

Tax & Gratuity Not Included

M’tucci’s Moderno

WEEKEND SPECIALS

Herb Rubbed Pork Tenderloin Grilled on open flame, served with Creamy Polenta, Sauteéd Haricot Vert and a bright Dijon Lemon Butter Sauce-Maggio

Old Vine Zinfandel Lodi, California: Chocolate and jam overtones, gentle palate with a smokey finish, medium tanic levels. $7/28

Pan-Seared Swordfish - Swordfish is very lean and has a mild flavor profile. A light grayish color and smaller flaky texture .

Tomaresca Chardonnay, Italy: Bright flavors, aromas of exotic fruits, citrus, pineapple notes and a light mineral finish. $7/28

Hand Cut Steak of the Day: 24 oz T-Bone

Molly Dooker "The Scooter" Merlot, South Australia: Vibrant red Merlot with rich flavor and a soft touch of oak~ $7/25

Live Music 8:30-10:30: Cali Shaw


M’tucci’s and Lava Rock Join Forces

Opening July 17: M’tucci’s menu will be available at Lava Rock Brewing beginning next week. Fred Gallegos will be at the helm of the M’tucci’s kitchen (making those great pizzas that you all love), and has created a menu to complement the beers made by Ram Khalsa at the brewery. The menu is below and will be on our site within a few days. Come visit Lava Rock at 2220 Unser Blvd (about a mile north of I-40). Call (505) 836-1022 for details.

Screen Shot 2019-07-12 at 5.16.54 PM.png

M’tucci’s Catering

We have a new web page and menu for our catering. You can schedule an event at M’tucci’s Italian (best for smaller parties of 12 or less) or in one of two private dining rooms at M’tucci’s Moderno (capacity 75 and 35). We also cater wedding receptions, office meetings or parties, lunch meetings and off-site events for any occasion. A full array of dishes, glasses and staff is available for your event.

Click here to see our full catering menu. For more information, call Ivy at 505-350-0019.


ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S MONTHLY PHOTO CONTEST

The winner of the June Photo Contest was Cheryl Valadez, who wins a $50 gift certificate, which is good at any M’tucci’s. The July Photo Contest is heating up, so post a photo from M’tucci’s with friends, food or beverages on your Facebook page or your Instagram feed and tag the photo #lovemtuccis. The winning photo is chosen from the three photos with the most likes. Don’t forget to edit your photos for exposure. Enter early for the best chance to win.

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

ALBUQUERQUE THE MAGAZINE - BEST OF THE CITY

We would appreciate your vote and support in the newest Best of the City poll. We feel pretty strongly that we are the best in these categories: Bartender, Bloody Mary, Craft Cocktails, Happy Hour, Appetizer Menu, Brunch, Chef, Dessert, Gourmet Pizza, Pizza and Wine List. We won last year for Waitstaff and Italian Restaurant and would love to keep our record intact. Click here to vote.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

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Ciao until next Friday!

M'tucci's in Italy: Eating, Drinking and Cooking in Tuscany

Our final day of a very busy week began early with the usual coffee and pastry, then a nearly two hour drive through the mountains of Tuscany, past Volterra, San Gimignano and Castellini in Chianti. We arrived in Panzano in Chianti for a cooking class, tour and lunch at Antica Macelleria Cecchini. This beautiful Tuscan hill town is, of course, surrounded with olive trees and vineyards, but the town’s star is Dario Cecchini, who holds forth behind the counter of his butcher shop. His popularity is a big draw in the small town, and the dining rooms that are adjacent to the butcher shop, are usually filled with an international, as well as local, clientele.

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Like any butcher shop in Tuscany, the star of the show is Chianina beef (which we regularly serve as a carpaccio and which we feature on occasional special steak nights), so we visited Cecchini’s small Chianina herd, once again marveling at their size and beauty. At the processing facility, one of their skilled butchers showed us how to break down an entire leg into sub primals.

Ricardo, the Sous Chef for the past 18 years, worked with us in the kitchen, showing us how to make their “Tuscan Butter”, a seasoned lardo spread, steak tartare, and Brasato al Midollo (a roasted beef shank). The Tuscan Butter and tartare were both taken in large bowls to the front of the shop so Dario could do the seasoning. Then it was show time, with loud rock music playing, and the shop crowded with lunch guests and patrons, Maestro Dario portioned the bisteca fiorentina 2-3 pound steaks. Always cooked rare over hot coals and only seasoned with salt, pepper and olive oil. Our chefs definitely learned a few techniques and came away with some new ideas, but most importantly we were introduced to large Turkish knives for chopping and mincing.

After all of that work, it was time for lunch. The eight course menu, heavy on beef, took a couple of hours, where we had the seats of honor close to the fire, so we could watch (and sweat with) the grill master. To say we were overfed, is an understatement. It was so good, we didn’t want to stop eating the Chianina, which is not heavily marbled, but has a deep, rich flavor. It was so, so good. I passed on the baked potato and cake for dessert! John remarked that we all had “meat sweats” for the next 24 hours.

We all needed a walk (or our stomachs pumped), but we waddled our way to the car for the hour-long drive to the cheese factory northeast of Florence. The cheese production is part of a coop and produce Tuscan Pecorino, fresh bread, butcher their own Chianina, have a vegetable farm, make pasta and gelato. We were thankful for the opportunity to tour the Chianina barn, the cheese production and aging facility and the butcher shop before we had to sit down and taste their cheese. There wasn’t a hungry body among us, but we took one for the team and enjoyed their cheese. Someone, who will remain nameless, even had room for gelato.

It was an overwhelming week, with many great experiences and meals. My calculation, based on most lunches and dinners is that we tasted 117 different plates at 13 different restaurants (it would have been 126/14 but we skipped dinner on the last day). We all were struck by the simplicity of the cooking, which was always about finding the best ingredients, cooking them perfectly and letting them shine.

Executive Chef/Partner John Haas summed up the trip beautifully:

“We made great relationships with great people that we expect to build on with each and every opportunity we have to use them. We grew as chefs, as individuals, and as a team. The 5 of us were left touched by the generosity, passion, and mutual respect we shared with the Italians we spent time with. It’s the start of what will lead to some amazing opportunities.”

We look forward to sharing our Italian experiences with you soon.


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

New Summer Menus Now at M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno. Click on each name to see what’s new.

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Dinner Specials

Cut of the Day-Bone-in NY Strip

Pan sear Seafood - Lightly Battered Sand Dabs

The Braise- Vodka Braised Duroc Pork Belly Creamy Polenta, Grilled Asparagus, Local Gray Family Farms Oyster Mushrooms,Vodka Braising Sauce

Ravioli- Braised New Zealand Lamb/Goat Cheese Raviolis, Sautéed Artichokes, Asparagus, Tomato, Light Lemon Cream Sauce

New Brunch Menu Starts tomorrow, July 6

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M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Beef Tortelloni: Diced Tomatoes, Beef Tips and Cheese-filled Tortelloni tossed in a Spicey Alfredo Sauce. Topped with Gorgenzola Blue Cheese and Green Onion. $19

Stephen Vincent Pinot Noir Sonoma County~Great character with cherry and raspberry notes, soft tannins with a touch of oak. 7/28

Starts with Swordfish and switches to Norwegian Cod
Served with Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Sauteéd Organic Arugula, Grilled Artichoke Hearts and a Lemon Butter Caper Sauce. Swordfish and Cod are similar, they are both very lean, mild flavor profile. Swordfish having light grayish color and smaller flakey texture and Cod having vibrant white large flakey texture. $25

Nobilo, Sauvignon Blanc, New Zealand ~ Vibrant & refreshing w/ tropical fruit flavors and a crisp finish~ 8/32

Hand Cut Steak of the Day: 24 oz T-Bone $33
Served with Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus and a vibrant Salsa Verde

Molly Dooker "The Scooter" Merlot, South Australia ~Vibrant red Merlot with rich flavor and a soft touch of oak~ 7/25

July Live Music (Thursdays 7:00-9:00 & Fridays 8:30-10:30)

7/5: Matt Kollock

7/11: Sade

7/12: Cali Shaw

7/18: RJ Perez

7/19: Lani Nash

7/25: Oscar Butler

7/26: Nathan Fox

M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria

Big news here. We are evolving and changing. The last day of the Market & Pizzeria will be Sunday, July 7. We will be closed on Monday, July 8 for our transition to M’tucci’s Cafe & Market. Our new hours will be 8:00am - 6:00pm. We will carry the same great Italian imports, all of our house made breads, and a wide variety of imported, domestic, and house made cheeses and meats. There will be an expanded selection of coffee and pastries. We’ll still have charcuterie boards to eat in or take out. Our pizza will now be available at M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno.

Stay tuned for more news next week about an exciting new venture for the Cafe & Market.

Here is a sampling of what our pastry chefs have been creating for you:


M’tucci’s Catering

We have a new web page and menu for our catering. You can schedule an event at M’tucci’s Italian (best for smaller parties of 12 or less) or in one of two private dining rooms at M’tucci’s Moderno (capacity 75 and 35). We also cater wedding receptions, office meetings or parties, lunch meetings and off-site events for any occasion. A full array of dishes, glasses and staff is available for your event.

Click here to see our full catering menu. For more information, call Ivy at 505-350-0019.


M’tucci’s on the Radio! Tune in to 94.5FM/AM 770 KKOB Sunday, 7/7 at 7:00 to hear Partner Austin Leard talk about what’s new and the chefs trip to Italy.

M’tucci’s Italian Prix Fixe Menu for July

7/10/19

1st Course- Spinach, Arugula, Foccacia Croutons, Red Onion, Roasted Apple Vinaigrette, Gorgonzola 

2nd Course- Sautéed Pink Shrimp, Spaghetini, Olives, Red Onions, Capers, Red Bell Pepper, Creamy House Mozzarella

3rd Course- Dacquoise-Almond Shortbread, Hazelnut Meringue, Espresso Mousse, Chocolate Ganache

7/17/19

1st Course- Roasted Chicken, Farro Grain, Spinach, Hearty Stock

2nd Course- Stuffed Pork Loin- Spinach, Artichoke, Mushroom, Mozzarella Stuffed Duroc Pork Loin, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Herbed Butter

3rd Course- Strawberry Torta Strati- Devil’s Food Cake, Strawberry Marshmallow, Champagne Spoom, Meringue Kisses, Strawberry Chips

7/22/19-7/28/19

Join us for our anniversary week! We will be offering a Prix Fixe every day to celebrate 6 years!  Scroll down for details.

7/31/19

1st Course- Calabrese & Nduja Flatbread

2nd Course- Lamb Polpette, Creamy Roasted Garlic Polenta, Tomato-Mint Agrodolce

3rd Course- Truffle Bon Bon Trio- Dark Chocolate & Limoncello, Classic Bon Bon, Amaretto & Almond Rolled Truffle

6th Anniversary Celebration Dinners at M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno

Saturday, July 20: Celebrate our anniversary with a very special 7 course menu paired with 7 wines. Space is limited. $125 pp, not including tax and gratuity. $25 reservation fee (applied toward dinner) required.

OR

Celebrate 6 Years with Us all Week with a 3 course dinner paired with 3 wines!

July 22-July 28

First Course:

Olive Brined Shrimp, M’tucci’s Baguette, Olive Tapenade, Dressed Greens

Second Course:

Porcini Ravioli, Mushroom Consommé, Marinated Zucchini, Truffle Pecorino or

Italian Style Sirloin, Colonnata Style Butter Tossed Salt Water Potatoes, Marinated Red Bell Peppers or

Seared Yellowfin Tuna, Potato-Chive Croquettes, Oyster Mushrooms, Salsa Verde

Third Course:

House Gelatos- Pistachio and Apricot Gelato, Champagne Biscotti

$30 Per Person

No Substitutions

Tax & Gratuity Not Included


ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S MONTHLY PHOTO CONTEST

The winner of the June Photo Contest was Cheryl Valadez, who wins a $50 gift certificate, which is good at any M’tucci’s. The July Photo Contest is heating up, so post a photo from M’tucci’s with friends, food or beverages on your Facebook page or your Instagram feed and tag the photo #lovemtuccis. The winning photo is chosen from the three photos with the most likes. Don’t forget to edit your photos for exposure. Enter early for the best chance to win.

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

ALBUQUERQUE THE MAGAZINE - BEST OF THE CITY

We would appreciate your vote and support in the newest Best of the City poll. We feel pretty strongly that we are the best in these categories: Bartender, Bloody Mary, Craft Cocktails, Happy Hour, Appetizer Menu, Brunch, Chef, Dessert, Gourmet Pizza, Pizza and Wine List. We won last year for Waitstaff and Italian Restaurant and would love to keep our record intact. Click here to vote.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Receive an email when La Gazzeta is published each Friday. Simply use the form at the bottom left of the page. We promise not to share your email, or bother you with unwanted promotions.

Ciao until next Friday!

M'tucci's in Italy, Part 2

When we reported on our traveling chefs last week, they had just finished their farm tour, the marble caves tour and lardo lunch, an artisanal bread workshop, and a truffle hunt followed by a truffle lunch. We were still trying to set up a winery tour, but most of the wineries in the Western part of Tuscany specialize in high-end Bordeaux-style wines that sell for $300 a bottle. Not exactly what we were looking for in Italy.

Olive trees and vineyards around the town of Castagneto Carducci.

Olive trees and vineyards around the town of Castagneto Carducci.

After returning from the truffle lunch, the plan for the evening was to grill the Chianina sirloin and some vegetables, make a charcuterie board of the salami and cheese, and sample the wine we had purchased. I opened a bottle for John while he was working the grill and after the first sip, he said, “What is this. Damn. Yummy.” Or something like that. We checked the label and realized it was a red that Shawn had bought at the Chianina butcher shop and the winery was located just outside of that town about 15 minutes away - and it was less than 10€. After some text messages to the butcher shop, they would try and get in contact with the winemaker. We hope for the next day, Saturday. Needless to say, eating a dinner cooked by four chefs was a real treat - like eating at M’tucci’s!

Ciabatta & olive oil; sausages, cheese, pancetta; Chianina sirloin, grilled eggplant, onion and red bell pepper.

Ciabatta & olive oil; sausages, cheese, pancetta; Chianina sirloin, grilled eggplant, onion and red bell pepper.

We had been on the road early each morning and stopped for coffee and a pastry along the way. Our country villa was among the vineyards and olive groves in the valley and we hadn’t been to the hill town a few kilometers away, so we went there for coffee and shopping, and to soak up the ambiance of a small Italian town on a Saturday morning. It’s here that you experience the rhythm of Italian life, la dolce vita (the sweet life) or dolce far niente (the pleasure of doing nothing). Life slows down and people sit in cafes enjoying their coffee and each other’s company.

The village of Bolgheri is about 10 minutes from Castagneto Carducci and is surrounded by vineyards bearing the names of some of Italy’s most prized and expensive wines known as the Super Tuscans. The vineyards in this region are only a few kilometers from the sea, which cools the land at night, giving the grapes a quality that can be superior to the warmer Chianti region. Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc and Merlot are popular here and are probably more common than Chianti’s ubiquitous Sangiovese grape. The Super Tuscans - Sassicaia, Ornellaia, Solaia and Tignanello, to name a few - are found in the shops and on the wine lists of simple osterias and pizzerias, in addition to the upscale restaurants in town. However, you don’t have to spend your entire paycheck to get a good wine, with many local wines on the shelves beginning at 8€.

A walk around the compact streets of the town quickly emphasize that wine and tourism is the local business. The pizza was pretty darn good, too.

We got a message that the winemaker, Massimo, could meet with us. He is located just a few miles from Bolgheri in Bibbona, so he has the same land and the same weather as the Super Tuscans, but not the same prices. We arrived a little early, before the translator, so we communicated with my basic Italian and his basic English. Not a lot of English is spoken in this area, since it is much less traveled by Americans than the Chianti region or the area around Siena. Once the translator arrived, our mission was made more clear and the wine tasting moved into high gear. We like what we tasted, especially his award-winning Merlot, which surprised all of us.

After the tasting he took us to his vineyards to walk among the Sangiovese and Cabernet Sauvignon vines that were full of young clusters of grapes. He spoke about how he cares for and eventually prunes the clusters to enhance the concentration of flavors. We may not have caught all the words, but his passion and enthusiasm were obvious. With luck, we may see his wines in M’tucci’s in the future.

With no appointments on Sunday, we took advantage of our proximity to the Mediterranean Sea and tried out seafood in the busy, commercial/cruise ship port of Livorno for lunch and then dinner in a more tranquil, upscale village called San Vincenzo. Both featured seafood crudo (sushi Italian-style) featuring salmon, tuna and sea bream. We discovered some new flavors and interesting preparations.

I know you are thinking, “those guys are so lucky, eating and drinking all day long.” That’s partially true, but each meal was the opportunity to taste another chefs techniques and flavor combinations, and every meal involved a lot of discussion about what we were tasting and how it could apply to what we do at all three M’tucci’s locations. It was work - but, it was enjoyable work.

NEXT FRIDAY: A master class with a world-famous Tuscan Macellaio (butcher) followed by an unforgettable 8-course lunch with more beef than one should safely eat and a visit to a Tuscan cheese caseificio (producer and seller).


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

New Summer Menus Now at M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno. Click on each name to see what’s new.

M’tucci’s Sponsors the Urban Land Institute Program at the Albuquerque Museum, featuring renowned Urban Planner and Artist, Theaster Gates.

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Dinner Specials

Ravioli: Braised Lamb & Goat Cheese Stuffed Ravioli, Asparagus, Tart Cherries, Arugula, Rosemary Goat Cheese Sauce

The Braise: Sautéed Harris Ranch Beef, Gray Family Farms Oyster Mushrooms, San Marzano Tomato Ragu, Five Cheese Tortelloni

Pan Seared Fish: New Zealand Swordfish, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Sautéed Arugula, Roasted Italian Artichokes, Lemon-Caper Beurre Blanc

Cut Of The Day: 24oz House Cut Porterhouse, Crispy Salt Water Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Balsamic Reduction, Grilled Lemon

M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Chicken Marsala- $20
Two Pan-Seared Chicken Breasts served with Garlic Mashed Potatoes and
Sautéed Garlic Haricot Vert in a Marsala Wine Sauce with Mushrooms,
Sage and Garlic.
Wine pairing- Stephen Vincent Pinot Noir 7/28 Sonoma County

California Halibut- $26
Prized for its fine texture and delicate flavor with large flakes.
Served with Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Marinated Artichokes, Sautéed
Arugula with Lemon Butter Sauce and Capers.
Wine pairing- Nobilo Sauvignon Blanc, New Zealand 8/32

Hand Cut Steak of the Day: 24oz Bone-in NY Strip $33
Served with Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Asparagus and a traditional
Italian Salsa Verde.
Wine pairing- Molly Dooker "The Scooter" Merlot, South Australia 7/25

M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria

Every Thursday - Sunday: M’tucci’s pizzas, sandwiches, and charcuterie boards are available La Cumbre Westside. Look for the M’tucci’s server and we’ll bring the food to you!

New and special pastries in the deli case every week. You must try the new Sourdough Croissants!

ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S MONTHLY PHOTO CONTEST

The winner of the May Photo Contest was Melissa Garcia. The June Photo Contest is a hot contest right now, so post a photo from M’tucci’s with friends, food or beverages on your Facebook page or your Instagram feed and tag the photo #lovemtuccis. The winning photo is chosen from the three photos with the most likes. Don’t forget to edit your photos for exposure. When you enter early you have the best chance to win.

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

M’TUCCI’S ITALIAN WEDNESDAY PRIX FIXE DINNERS

Dinners for July will be posted in this space in the next few days

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

ALBUQUERQUE THE MAGAZINE - BEST OF THE CITY

We would appreciate your vote and support in the newest Best of the City poll. We feel pretty strongly that we are the best in these categories: Bartender, Bloody Mary, Craft Cocktails, Happy Hour, Appetizer Menu, Brunch, Chef, Dessert, Gourmet Pizza, Pizza and Wine List. We won last year for Waitstaff and Italian Restaurant and would love to keep our record intact. Click here to vote.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Receive an email when La Gazzeta is published each Friday. Simply use the form at the bottom left of the page. We promise not to share your email, or bother you with unwanted promotions.

Ciao until next Friday!

M'tucci's in Tuscany

In my first six months of working with M’tucci’s I have been impressed by two things:

1) The partners commitment to quality and to creating the best Italian cuisine possible

2) Their belief that as good as we are, there are always ways to make it better

That’s why I am with four of M’tucci’s chefs in Tuscany, who are visiting bakers, butchers, vintners, farmers, truffle hunters and , yes of course, restaurants. They are here to observe techniques and traditions that have existed for centuries and to take part in some of the timeless work that is part of the culture of Italian cuisine.

Vineyards and Olive Groves at the edge of the Mediterranean Sea from Castagna Carducci in Western Tuscany.

Vineyards and Olive Groves at the edge of the Mediterranean Sea from Castagna Carducci in Western Tuscany.

Many of our visits are taking place in a lesser traveled area of Tuscany called Bolgheri. We only have one day in Chianti south of Florence. Our Italian purveyor is tied to this part of Tuscany and made most of these visits possible. The Bolgheri area is near the Tyrrhenian Sea, in an area renowned for their Super Tuscan wines (Sassicaia, Tignanello, Ornellaia, etc) which are wines that are made with the traditional grapes of Bordeaux (Cabernet, Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot). While the wines are significantly different from a Chianti made from Sangiovese, the produce and landscape in this area are all very similar to the rest of the region..

After three full days of baking, truffle hunting, farm visits and eating, the chefs have been struck by the Italian commitment to tradition (with sensible innovation), to using quality ingredients, and to making the best product possible. At the Chianina farm (which also produces pork, olive oil and wine), Alessandro, talked passionately about the importance of what he feeds his cows and how its equally important that their lives are not stressed as they make their final journey to becoming beef. One of the guys commented that they had never met a man with so much mental discipline.

Alessandro with his Chianina cows on his farm near Bibbona.

Alessandro with his Chianina cows on his farm near Bibbona.

At the bakery in Carrara, Francesco, who is in the process of modernizing his father’s recipes, has gained enough notoriety that he regularly holds workshops in Asia to teach technique. John, Cory, Shawn and Damian made ciabatta and focaccia and had long conversations with him about flour, leavening and the mysteries of great bread.

Focaccia pizza at L’Antico Molino Pandolfo in Carrara.

Focaccia pizza at L’Antico Molino Pandolfo in Carrara.

Ciabatta

Ciabatta

We were told at the beginning of the truffle walk that hunting truffles is like fishing - sometimes you have a lot of luck and sometimes you have none. The only skill involved is having an understanding of where truffles grow and, most importantly, having a well-trained dog with a refined sense of smell. Andrea brought Giotto, a 3-year-old mixed breed (easier to train) who found five black summer truffles within about 90 minutes. Since he is young, once he started digging, Andrea had to hold him back so he wouldn’t damage the precious tuber. Once the truffle was uncovered, Giotto was more interested in getting his treat than eating the truffle.

When we returned to Savino Tartufo, which makes a dizzying selection of truffle products, we were treated to a lunch that demonstrated what a fresh truffle can do to a dish, even the less expensive summer black truffle. The three-course meal showed how they could add complexity and depth to a simple spread for bruschetta or pasta. A truffle-infused Amaro? Oh yeah.

One of our best meals was served family style in a very small town near the marble caves of Carrara (the chunk of marble for Michelangelo’s David came from here). Hand carved marble boxes are used to cure Lardo, which is pork back fat. The fat is layered with rosemary, salt, clove, cinnamon and pepper in the box, which has a marble lid weighing it down, and aged for a minimum of six months. The flavor, along with the rest of the charcuterie on our plate was sublime. I think Cory said the flavors made his eyes tear up.

Boar salami, coppa, lardo, cured beef, pancetta, cured pork loin and Tuscan pecorino.

Boar salami, coppa, lardo, cured beef, pancetta, cured pork loin and Tuscan pecorino.

In the days ahead, we’ll visit a cheese producer, a vineyard, a salami maker and one of Italy’s (if not the world’s) most famous butchers, Dario Cecchini, in Chianti.

We look forward to bringing you another report from Italy next Friday and to returning to New Mexico to wow your taste buds with our experiences.

Damian, Cory, Shawn and John in Tuscany with our friends, the Chianina.

Damian, Cory, Shawn and John in Tuscany with our friends, the Chianina.


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

New Summer Menus Now at M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno. Click on each name to see what’s new.

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Dinner Specials

The Braise: Lightly Smoked and Herb Roasted 1/2 Chicken, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Sauteed Hericot Verts, Tart Cherry Gastrique

Ravioli: Three Cheese-Red Chile Stuffed Ravioli, Sliced Italian Sausage, Local Italian Mushrooms, Caramelized Onions, Savory Lemon Brodo, Basil Micro Greens

Pan Seared Fish: Icelandic Cod, Garlic Mashed Potaotes, Sauteed Arugula, Roasted Italian Artichokes, Caper Beurre Blanc

Cut of the Day: 24oz Hand Cut Porterhouse, Crispy Salt Water Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Grilled Lemon, Balsamic Reduction

M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Smoked and Herb Rubbed Half Chicken
Served with Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Asparagus, and a Cranberry Gastrique
Recommended Wine Pairing:
Molly Dooker "The Scooter" Merlot, South Austrailia 7/25
~Vibrant red Merlot with rich flavor and a soft touch of oak~

Icelandic Cod $25
Lean, mild flavor profile with large flakes and a tender-firm texture.
Served with Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Sautéed
Arugula, Lemon Caper Butter Sauce
Recommended Wine Pairing:
Nobilo, Sauvignon Blanc, New Zealand 8/32
~Vibrant & refreshing w/ tropical fruit flavors and a crisp finish~

Hand Cut Steak of the Day: 24 oz Bone-in NY Stip $33
Recommended Wine Pairing:
Sassoregale, Sangiovese, Maremma Toscana, Italy 8/32
~ Full & firm flavor with an elegant finish, ideal with red meats~

M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria

Every Thursday - Sunday: M’tucci’s pizzas, sandwiches, and charcuterie boards are available La Cumbre Westside. Look for the M’tucci’s server and we’ll bring the food to you!

New and special pastries in the deli case every week. Come in today!

ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S MONTHLY PHOTO CONTEST

The winner of the May Photo Contest was Melissa Garcia. The June Photo Contest is underway, so post a photo from M’tucci’s with friends, food or beverages on your Facebook page or your Instagram feed and tag the photo #lovemtuccis. The winning photo is chosen from the three photos with the most likes. Don’t forget to edit your photos for exposure. When you enter early you have the best chance to win.

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

M’TUCCI’S ITALIAN WEDNESDAY PRIX FIXE DINNERS

6/26/19

1st Course- Shredded Kale, Granny Smith Apples, Local Feta, Dried Tart Cherries, Pomegranate Vinaigrette

2nd Course- Pesto & Ricotta Filled Ravioli, Shallots, Artichokes, Light Lemon Cream Sauce

3rd Course- Lemon Tart-House Graham Cracker Crust, Lemon Curd, Chantilly Whipped Cream, Candied Lemon

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

ALBUQUERQUE THE MAGAZINE - BEST OF THE CITY

We would appreciate your vote and support in the newest Best of the City poll. We feel pretty strongly that we are the best in these categories: Bartender, Bloody Mary, Craft Cocktails, Happy Hour, Appetizer Menu, Brunch, Chef, Dessert, Gourmet Pizza, Pizza and Wine List. We won last year for Waitstaff and Italian Restaurant and would love to keep our record intact. Click here to vote.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Receive an email when La Gazzeta is published each Friday. Simply use the form at the bottom left of the page. We promise not to share your email, or bother you with unwanted promotions.

Ciao until next Friday!


Decisions, Decisions. The selection in Enoteca Tognoni in the Bolgheri district of Tuscany is daunting.

Decisions, Decisions. The selection in Enoteca Tognoni in the Bolgheri district of Tuscany is daunting.

Italian Cuisine - Most Popular in the World?

Italian food is probably the most talked-about, written-about and happily consumed food in the world (start with pizza - 75,000 pizzerias in the U.S. selling $40 billion worth of pizzas every year). Yet, Italian food in Campania is totally different from Italian food in Piemonte. Like Mexico or France, Italy is a country with a wide variety of regional cuisines. Although Naples and Venice are both coastal cities and feature seafood on their tables, dinner at a seafood restaurant in Naples would be unrecognizable to a Venetian. Florence and Bologna are only 60 miles apart, yet the food of Emilia-Romagna and Tuscany are significantly different. However, there are common threads that are found in every region: quality ingredients and la dolce vita (the sweet life).

When author Matt Goulding was pitching a book about Italians and Italian food to the late Anthony Bourdain, (who as a young chef worked as Executive Chef in one of M’tucci’s founder’s Jeff Spiegel’s NYC restaurants) he said: “Nobody takes food more seriously than Italians. I have seen family feuds break out over pasta shapes and grape varietals. . . . More than anywhere else in the world, food carries the full weight of Italy’s heritage: the pains and joys of its history, the depth of its ingenuity. Politicians are corrupt, democracy is fragile, borders are porous, but la cucina italiana is eternal.”

Gouldings book, “PASTA, PANE, VINO: Deep Travels Through Italy’s Food Culture” was published by Bourdain’s company in 2018 and is a treasure. A must read for anyone interested in Italy and Italian food.

A small market in Tuscany

A small market in Tuscany

As with any regional specialty, Italys has been shaped to a large extent by what is available locally. In the north, where rice is grown and there are flat plains for grazing cows, risotto and butter are more popular than pasta and olive oil. In the central mountains of Tuscany and Umbria, olives grow on hillsides more easily than dairy cows can graze, so Tuscans and Umbrians cook with plentiful, local olive oil more than they do with butter. Just south of the Alps, Liguria has a moderate climate because of the Mediterranean Sea, and there you’ll find the most flavorful Genovese basil for making pesto. In the South where water buffalo graze, the real mozzarella di bufala and burrata (referred to by locals as latticini not cheese/formaggio) have a distinct flavor because of the milks balance of fat and acidity - perfect for making pasta filata (stretched or pulled cheese).

Display at a restaurant in Sorrento

Display at a restaurant in Sorrento

At all M’tucci’s locations we embrace the two common components in regional Italian cooking: quality ingredients and la dolce vita. We use recipes from several regions and add our personal touch to create some of our dishes such as: Milanese Burrata (normally a plain breaded cutlet of veal or chicken, we add Spicy Marinara and M’tucci’s burrata), or our Osso Bucco (usually made with a veal shank, but we use pork), or Pesto Ravioli (we add roasted artichokes and grape tomatoes).

Pesto Ravioli - only at M’tucci’s Moderno

Pesto Ravioli - only at M’tucci’s Moderno

Other recipes are classic preparations, for example: Cacio e Pepe (a staple in Rome, but rarely on a menu in the north) and our Melanzana all Parmigiana (Eggplant Parmesan is a southern dish, but popular throughout the country). Our pizza is definitely true to the Neopolitan style with a thin crust which is made with a sourdough starter and cooked in a very hot oven.

Charcuterie Boards are popular throughout Italy as antipasti, with products from all over the country available in any region. You would certainly find prosciutto (from Emilia Romagna) in Rome, or burrata (Puglia) in Tuscany. While every region produces special meats and cheeses, most all of them are popular throughout the country, primarily because they travel well.

M’tucci’s Italian Charcuterie Board C: Capicola, Sweet Onion & Tomato Agrodolce, Smoked House Mozzarella, House Made Bread and Taralli.

M’tucci’s Italian Charcuterie Board C: Capicola, Sweet Onion & Tomato Agrodolce, Smoked House Mozzarella, House Made Bread and Taralli.

How have we brought Italy to New Mexico? Some of our chefs have trained under Italian chefs, all of M’tucci’s chefs are voracious readers and, most importantly, they are students of Italian techniques and cooking. The only thing they haven’t done is travel, eat, and work in Italy. That is going to change on Monday when three of our Chef/Partners and one of our Sous Chefs will spend an intensive week in Italy visiting a Chianina ranch, a panificio (artisan bakery), salumerias/macellarias (think meat products) and a variety of farms and local producers.

Follow us on Facebook and instagram to keep up with their Italian experiences. We promise to share what they learn and to bring M’tucci’s la dolce vita to a whole new level!

Tune in next week for a brief report from Tuscany.

Ciao!


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

New Summer Menus Now at M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno. Click on each name to see what’s new.

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Dinner Specials

Ravioli- Blue Crab and Wild Mushroom Ravioli, Pink Shrimp, Asparagus,  Porcini Cream Sauce. $25

Pan Seared- Scallops, Garlic Mashed Potatoes,  Grilled Artichokes, Sautéed Arugula $29

Cut of the Day-  24 oz Porterhouse $35

Braised- Rosemary & Milk Braised Lamb Shank, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Sautéed Spinach 

Wines-

Oliver Hill McLaren Vale Shiraz $ 9/36

Capture Sonoma County Sauvignon blanc $8/32

Father’s Day Specials (all day)

Lobster Ravioli

Chianina Ribeye

Lamb Shanks

Pan Seared Scallops

M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Pasta with Linguica $18
Red Onion, Sun Dried Tomato, Light Tomato Sauce, Arugula, Pecorino.
Recommended Wine Pairing:
Landmark Pinot Noir, California  $8/34


Scallops $29
Tender, Buttery, Sweet Diver Scallops.  Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Sautéed Arugula, Lemon Caper Butter Sauce
Recommended Wine Pairing:
The Palm Rosé, France $7/30


Hand Cut Steak of the Day:
24 oz Bone-in NY Strip $31
Recommended Wine Pairing: 
Sassoregale Sangiovese, Maremma Toscana, Italy $8/32

Friday: 8:30 - Leah Leyva Live

M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria

Every Thursday - Sunday: M’tucci’s pizzas, sandwiches, and charcuterie boards are available La Cumbre Westside. Look for the M’tucci’s server and we’ll bring the food to you!

New and special pastries in the deli case every week. Come in today!

Weekend Brunch - Happy Father’s Day

If you aren’t bringing Dad in for Father’s Day, at least buy a M’tucci’s Gift Certificate for him, good at all three locations.

Come in for brunch for some of your favorite Brunch items done M’tucci’s Italian-style. You’ll love our take on Eggs Benedict, or Italian Sausage Hash or even a Carbonara Risotto. Of course, our Mimosas are made with fresh-squeezed Orange Juice. We will have a new and expanded Brunch Menu for you by the end of the month.

Eggs Benedict Cotto - Poached Eggs, Grilled Italian Ham, House Hollandaise Sauce, Crispy Parmesan Crusted Eggplant, Breakfast Potatoes

Eggs Benedict Cotto - Poached Eggs, Grilled Italian Ham, House Hollandaise Sauce, Crispy Parmesan Crusted Eggplant, Breakfast Potatoes

M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno both open at 11:00 and M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria is open at 10:00 with coffee, pastries and biscotti.

ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S MONTHLY PHOTO CONTEST

The winner of the May Photo Contest was Melissa Garcia. The June Photo Contest is underway, so post a photo from M’tucci’s with friends, food or beverages on your Facebook page or your Instagram feed and tag the photo #lovemtuccis. The winning photo is chosen from the three photos with the most likes. Don’t forget to edit your photos for exposure. When you enter early you have the best chance to win.

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

M’TUCCI’S ITALIAN WEDNESDAY PRIX FIXE DINNERS

6/19/19

1st Course- Grilled Watermelon Caprese, M’tucci’s Mozzarella, Basil Oil

2nd Course- Crispy Bone-In Chicken, House BBQ Sauce, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, House Slaw

3rd Course- Smoked Peach Cobbler, Salted Caramel Gelato

6/26/19

1st Course- Shredded Kale, Granny Smith Apples, Local Feta, Dried Tart Cherries, Pomegranate Vinaigrette

2nd Course- Pesto & Ricotta Filled Ravioli, Shallots, Artichokes, Light Lemon Cream Sauce

3rd Course- Lemon Tart-House Graham Cracker Crust, Lemon Curd, Chantilly Whipped Cream, Candied Lemon

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

ALBUQUERQUE THE MAGAZINE - BEST OF THE CITY

We would appreciate your vote and support in the newest Best of the City poll. We feel pretty strongly that we are the best in these categories: Bartender, Bloody Mary, Craft Cocktails, Happy Hour, Appetizer Menu, Brunch, Chef, Dessert, Gourmet Pizza, Pizza and Wine List. We won last year for Waitstaff and Italian Restaurant and would love to keep our record intact. Click here to vote.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Receive an email when La Gazzeta is published each Friday. Simply use the form at the bottom left of the page. We promise not to share your email, or bother you with unwanted promotions.

Ciao until next Friday!


Water fountain in Rome.

Water fountain in Rome.

Pane

Stocking the shelves each morning with Sourdough.

Stocking the shelves each morning with Sourdough.

Until I started my association with M’tucci’s I held a dim view of Italian bread. In most American Italian restaurants the free bread that arrives at the table usually has no character, and more importantly, no flavor. After living in France and falling in love with baguettes and batards, I was disappointed to discover the bread in the restaurants of Italy is often tasteless. I was always happy to see the bread basket include a good bread stick made with olive oil or tasty focaccia.

Chef/Partner Shawn Cronin made it his mission to not make mediocre, tasteless bread when he and Chef/Partner Cory opened M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria. Working with a starter that was very old, it became the basis for our sourdough, ciabatta and baguettes. Shawn created the starters for the whole wheat, rye and focaccia. A “starter” (lievito madre in Italian) is made by mixing flour and warm water and letting them stand and ferment for a period of time. This is what we use in all of our breads as our leavening agent. No additional yeast is ever added. As the starters permeate the atmosphere where it is used, the spores in the air continue to add character and flavor to bread. After three years, the Market is a rich bread-making environment.

Our flour is sourced from mills that specialize in unbleached wheat flour. While we use local water, it goes through a filtration system first. We only use sea salt in our bread. Our pizza dough is made using sourdough starter and flour especially ground for pizza dough. Our focaccia is raisin rosemary, except for the focaccia for the Italian Roast Pork Sandwich at M’tucci’s Italian which has green chile.

Sara checking the progress on a loaf of ciabatta.

Sara checking the progress on a loaf of ciabatta.

Of course, all of our bread is made fresh daily and is available in M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria. All three locations only use M’tucci’s bread on our Charcuterie boards, Appetizers, Sandwiches and Cicchetti. The breads are also delivered fresh twice a week to Silver Street Market and they are served on the Charcuterie Boards at Bosque Brewing.


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

New Summer Menus Now at M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno. Click on each name to see what’s new (Moderno link coming soon).

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials

Ravioli:

Pesto & Ricotta Filled Ravioli, Roasted Summer Squash-Red Bell Pepper, Artichokes, Light Lemon Cream Sauce   

Roasted Meat: 

Lightly Smoked Duroc Pork Loin, Fennel-Garlic-Herb Crust, Chive & Potato Croquettes, Grilled Asparagus, Dijon Beurre Blanc

The Braise:

Wild Mushroom Stuffed Soft Shell Blue Crab, Crispy Saltwater Potatoes, House Made Turkey Sausage, Sweet Corn Puree

Pan Seared Fish:

Alaskan Halibut Cheeks, Roasted Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Artichoke Heart, Sautéed Arugula, Lemon Butter Caper Sauce   

Cut of The Day:

24oz Bone-In NY Strip, Crispy Sea Water Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Grilled Lemon, Balsamic Reduction   

Wine Features:

2018 Casa Rodeña Viogner

8 Glass / 32 Bottle

2012 Northstar Red Blend 

15 Glass / 65 Bottle

M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Spaghettini Shrimp Diablo $19

Spaghettini Pasta with Pink Shrimp, Capers, White Wine, Caramelized Onions, Celery, Spicy Marinara

Recommended wine pairing:

Stephen Vincent Pinot Noir $7/$28

Pan Seared  Mahi Mahi

A lean fish with mild and sweet flavor with a moderately firm texture and large moist flakes.

Recommended wine pairing:

Chateau Ste. Michelle "Mimi" Chardonnay $9/$36

Hand Cut Steak of the Day: 24oz T-bone $33

Recommended wine pairing:

Liberty School Cabernet $10/$40

Tonight 8:30pm - Eryn Bent Live

M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria

May 29: Beer Week Tap Takeover with Steel Bender Brewyard - We’ll feature SkullBucket IPA, ETTu Brut IPA, Berliner Wiesse and the Kolsch. Albuquerque Beer Week Pouring until they are gone!

Every Thursday - Sunday: M’tucci’s pizzas, sandwiches, and charcuterie boards are available La Cumbre Westside. Look for the M’tucci’s server and we’ll bring the food to you!

New and special pastries in the deli case every week. Come in today and you might find Rocky Road Sandwich Cookies: House made Marshmallow Fluff between two Brown Butter Pecan Chocolate Chip Cookies.

IMG_3659.JPG

Weekend Brunch

Don’t forget to come in for brunch, with some of your favorites done M’tucci’s Italian-style. You’ll love our take on Eggs Benedict, or Italian Sausage Hash or even a Carbonara Risotto. Of course, our Mimosas are made with fresh-squeezed Orange Juice. We should have a new and expanded Brunch Menu for you by the end of the month.

M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno both open at 11:00 and M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria is open at 10:00 with coffee, pastries and biscotti.

ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S MONTHLY PHOTO CONTEST

The winner of the May Photo Contest was Melissa Garcia. The June Photo Contest is underway, so post a photo from M’tucci’s with friends, food or beverages on your Facebook page or your Instagram feed and tag the photo #lovemtuccis. The winning photo is chosen from the three photos with the most likes. Don’t forget to edit your photos for exposure. When you enter early you have the best chance to win.

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

M’TUCCI’S ITALIAN WEDNESDAY PRIX FIXE DINNERS

6/12/19

1st Course- Corn & Yellow Pepper Gazpacho, Cucumber, Red Onion, Fresh Yellow Tomato 

2nd Course- Bistecca Spiedini, Seasonal Marinated Vegetables, Crispy Salt Water Potatoes, Romesco Sauce

3rd Course- Double Chocolate Chip Brownie, Meringue Marshmallow, House Made Graham Cracker

6/19/19

1st Course- Grilled Watermelon Caprese, M’tucci’s Mozzarella, Basil Oil

2nd Course- Crispy Bone-In Chicken, House BBQ Sauce, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, House Slaw

3rd Course- Smoked Peach Cobbler, Salted Caramel Gelato

6/26/19

1st Course- Shredded Kale, Granny Smith Apples, Local Feta, Dried Tart Cherries, Pomegranate Vinaigrette

2nd Course- Pesto & Ricotta Filled Ravioli, Shallots, Artichokes, Light Lemon Cream Sauce

3rd Course- Lemon Tart-House Graham Cracker Crust, Lemon Curd, Chantilly Whipped Cream, Candied Lemon

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

ALBUQUERQUE THE MAGAZINE - BEST OF THE CITY

We would appreciate your vote and support in the newest Best of the City poll. We feel pretty strongly that we are the best in these categories: Bartender, Bloody Mary, Craft Cocktails, Happy Hour, Appetizer Menu, Brunch, Chef, Dessert, Gourmet Pizza, Pizza and Wine List. We won last year for Waitstaff and Italian Restaurant and would love to keep our record intact. Click here to vote.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Receive an email when La Gazzeta is published each Friday. Simply use the form at the bottom left of the page. We promise not to share your email, or bother you with unwanted promotions.

Ciao until next Friday!

Waiting for the boss in Florence.

Waiting for the boss in Florence.

Cicchetti (small bites)

Most everyone who considers themselves a fan of good food, is aware of Spanish tapas. Tapas bars and small plates, along with a small glass of wine are found throughout Spain. Cicchetti are Italy’s version of tapas, but are found primarily in the small wine bars (bàcari) in Venice. From my experience (and my research), I’ve never seen them in Rome, Florence or Southern Italy.

Cicchetti are always fresh and made with local products. With Venice surrounded by water, they are usually seafood based, but meats and vegetables are also popular. Bàcari are usually small, with no tables, can be open before lunch and stay open late. Locals stop in for a quick bite and an ombra (small glass of wine which means shade) before lunch, after work or during the time we would consider happy hour! Going out for cicchetti is very much part of the social life of Venice.

Grand Canal - Venice

Grand Canal - Venice

Some of the cicchetti you might find in Venice inlcude: seppioline alla griglia (grilled baby squid), polpette (fried meatballs) or grilled polenta topped with different seafood. The wine you order at a bàcari will be local (from the Veneto) and usually from a keg of a large container on tap. It’s not intended to be fancy, rather a refreshing couple of sips to wash down your food. The name of the glass of wine, ombra, is said to have come from the days when wine merchants would unload their casks of wine to sell in St. Marks Square. During the day they would move their wine to keep it in the shade of the church tower to keep it cool.

St. Marks Square - Venice

St. Marks Square - Venice

We serve cicchetti at all three M’tucci’s locations. Of course, we have put our New Mexico/local twist on them, and the servings are a bit larger than you would find in Venice. Most bàcari are a five-minute walk or less from each other and encourage hopping from bar to bar for a small bite, so the concept is a little different here.

Some of our small bites at M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria are: fresh house made Mozzarella, tomato jam and ciabbata; house cured salmon, cucumber, lemon aioli and caperberry; or a prosciutto slider with mozzarella and tomato. They are $3 each, but during Monday happy hour (3:30-5:30) they are two for $5.

market.095.jpg

M’tucci’s Moderno and M’tucci’s Italian have different cicchetti menus with a few similarities. At M’tucci’s Moderno you can choose from beef carpaccio, truffle chips, Chianina meatballs or baked goat cheese. Some of the cicchetti at M’tucci’s Italian has truffle fries, wood roasted goat cheese bruschetta caprese on flatbread. Both locations have fried artichokes and a pizzeta margherita. All of the plates are available all day, but only in the bar and cost $5. We are planning some changes our cicchetti menu to offer small bites in addition to small plates.

italian.091.jpg

NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials

Ravioli: Three Cheese & Red Chile, Artichokes, Asparagus, Tomato, White Lemon Cream Sauce

Seafood: Pan-Seared Mahi Mahi, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Sautéed Arugula, Roasted Italian Artichokes in a Lemon Caper Beurre Blanc Sauce

Braise: Slow Braised Whole Local Oxtail, Roasted Yellow Squash, Caramelized Fennel in an Onion Braising Sauce

M’tucci’s Moderno

Tonight 8:30pm - Eryn Bent Live

Weekend Specials

Seafood: Pan-Seared Swordfish

Pork Picatta

Hand-Cut 24 oz. Porterhouse

M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria

May 29: Beer Week Tap Takeover with Steel Bender Brewyard - We’ll feature SkullBucket IPA, ETTu Brut IPA, Berliner Wiesse and the Kolsch. Albuquerque Beer Week Pouring until they are gone!

Every Thursday - Sunday: M’tucci’s pizzas, sandwiches, and charcuterie boards are available La Cumbre Westside. Look for the M’tucci’s server and we’ll bring the food to you!

Weekend Brunch

Don’t forget to come in for brunch, with some of your favorites done M’tucci’s Italian-style. You’ll love our take on Eggs Benedict, or Italian Sausage Hash or even a Carbonara Risotto. Of course, our Mimosas are made with fresh-squeezed Orange Juice.

M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno both open at 11:00 and M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria is open at 10:00 with coffee, pastries and biscotti.

ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S MONTHLY PHOTO CONTEST

The winner of the May Photo Contest will be announced tomorrow. The June Photo Contest begins tomorrow, so post a photo from M’tucci’s with friends, food or beverages on your Facebook page or your Instagram feed and tag the photo #lovemtuccis. The winning photo is chosen from the three photos with the most likes.

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

M’TUCCI’S ITALIAN WEDNESDAY PRIX FIXE DINNERS

Details of our three course dinners paired with three wines will be published on Facebook and Instagram every Wednesday. 3 course + 3 wines for $25 per person, tax and gratuity not included.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

ALBUQUERQUE THE MAGAZINE - BEST OF THE CITY

We would appreciate your vote and support in the newest Best of the City poll. We feel pretty strongly that we are the best in these categories: Bartender, Bloody Mary, Craft Cocktails, Happy Hour, Appetizer Menu, Brunch, Chef, Dessert, Gourmet Pizza, Pizza and Wine List. We won last year for Waitstaff and Italian Restaurant and would love to keep our record intact. Click here to vote.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Receive an email when La Gazzeta is published each Friday. Simply use the form at the bottom left of the page. We promise not to share your email, or bother you with unwanted promotions.

Ciao until next Friday!

lewis.italy.055.jpg

Italian Cheese

Cheese is an ancient food, possibly originating in Egypt and brought back to Italy by visitors (soldiers?) around 6,000 years ago. The center for cheese making was Rome, with many artisans experimenting with cheese made from sheep, goats and cows. The Roman artisans were credited with developing the techniques for aging and preserving cheese. While there are many cheeses made throughout Italy with familiar names like provolone, mozzarella, fontina, asiago and gorgonzola, today we focus on the three aged hard cheeses that are most important to our dishes at all three M’tucci’s locations: Grana Padano, Pecorino Romano and Parmigiano-Reggiano.

Grana Padano, Pecorino Romano and Parmigiana - Reggiano

Grana Padano, Pecorino Romano and Parmigiana - Reggiano

These cheeses are only similar in the sense that they are made of only milk and rennet, and aged for a minimum amount of time: Parmigiano for 18 months (we buy only 24-month old parm), Grana for nine months and Pecorino for at least five months. Each is made in a different region of Italy and has a different flavor profile.

Grana Padano - is similar to Parmigiano in flavor and is made from cow’s milk in the Po River Valley of northeastern Italy. All of the pastas and pizzas at M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria are made with Grana. “We like it because it has a bright, nutty flavor, akin to the best parmesan, but it also has little salt crystals that impart awesome bursts of flavor onto any dish,” said Chef/Partner Shawn Cronin. It is not quite as salty as Parmigiano and it is usually cheaper. I normally buy Grana for grating over pasta or making pesto.

Parmigiano-Reggiano - this cheese comes from partly-skimmed milk from pasture grazed cows in the Emilia Romagna region surrounding Bologna, Parma and Pisa. It is aged a minimum of 18 months in the form of a wheel which usually weighs around 80 pounds. We serve Parmagiano-Reggiano on our charcuterie boards at all three locations. I like to use a vegetable peeler to shave curls of it on my salads. When the wedge is finished, I keep the rinds in the freezer in a baggie and add them to minestrone or pasta e fagioli soup while it cooks. As a grated cheese over pasta, it usually pairs better with butter-based sauces. One notable exception is the use of it in pesto sauce, which is made with olive oil

Pecorino Romano - pecora means sheep in Italian and, when aged, this sheep’s milk cheese is distinctive. It has a bright, tangy, salty flavor that the late cookbook author, Marcella Hazan, says is perfect for stronger flavored pasta sauces containing broccoli, rapini, or those that are made with olive oil. Although it originated in the area around Rome, Pecorinos are also made in Tuscany and Sardinia and can be found as a young cheese, as well as one aged for grating.

People who are lactose intolerant can digest sheep’s milk cheeses, since the lactose is set free in the whey.

I like the flavor of it and always combine some of it with Parmigiano when I make pesto. Our chef’s at M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno use it grated or in ribbons on our pastas and pizzas.

Grana Padano, Pecorino Romano and Parmigiano-Reggiano.

Grana Padano, Pecorino Romano and Parmigiano-Reggiano.

Always look for the imprint of the cheese’s name on the rind. If there is no imprint, it’s not authentic. Usually, it’s best to buy as much as you think you will use in 2-3 weeks. Never grate an aged cheese ahead of time (they can dry out and lose their flavor). They are best stored wrapped in wax paper, then wrapped with foil or placed in a baggie in the refrigerator.

We sell all three cheeses at M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria.


NEWS FROM M’TUCCI’S

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials

Ravioli:

Lobster-Crab-Shrimp Ravioli, Lobster Cream Sauce, Pink Patagonian Shrimp, Local Micro Greens, Shaved Parmesan   

The Braise:

Harris Ranch Beef, Wild Mushroom, Local Spring Onion, Heirloom Tomato, Porcini Cream Sauce, Fussilloni Pasta

Pan Seared Fish:

Ruby Red Trout, Roasted Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Artichoke Heart, Sautéed Arugula, Lemon Butter Caper Sauce   

Cut of The Day:

24 oz Porter House, Roasted Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Grilled Lemon, Balsamic Reduction   

Dolce: 

Strawberry Cream Cake, Brown Sugar Crumble, Strawberry Jam, White Carmel 

Wine Features:

2017 Joel Gott Sauvignon Blanc

2016 Murphy Goode Pinto Noir

7 Glass / 25 Bottle

Our new Summer Menu is online now. We have added a few new dishes and updated some of your favorites to reflect the fresh produce now available. You can view it online by clicking here.

Father’s Day, June 16 - Treat Dad to Brunch or an evening meal. Make reservations now.

M’tucci’s Moderno

Weekend Specials

Pork Tenderlion $21

The Pork equivalent of a beef tenderloin, it is a long, tender cut of Duroc Pork. Comes with Creamy Mascarpone Polenta, Grilled Asparagus, and a Dijon Lemon Butter Sauce. 

Recommended Wine Pairing:

Frescobaldi 'Remole' Super Tuscan, Italy  $7/$28

California Halibut  $26

This lean, white-fleshed fish has a delicate flavor and flakes easily.

Recommended Wine Pairing:

Tomaresca Chardonnay, Abruzzo, Italy $7/$28

Hand Cut Steak:

24 oz NY Strip $31

Recommended Wine Pairing: 

Bonanza Cabernet Sauvignon, California $9/$40

Friday, 8:30: Cali Shaw Live!

Our new Summer menu is coming soon.

M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria

May 29: Beer Week Tap Takeover with Steel Bender Brewyard - We’ll feature SkullBucket IPA, ETTu Brut IPA, Berliner Weisse and the Kolsch. Albuquerque Beer Week

May 29, 6:00 - 8:00: La Cumbre Westside Beer Pairing. Four Cicchettis (small bites) paired with 4 4oz beers for $20. No reservations or tickets, but there will be a limited supply. Watch our Instagram and Facebook page for the bites and beers.

Every Thursday - Sunday: M’tucci’s pizzas, sandwiches, and charcuterie boards are available La Cumbre Westside. Look for the M’tucci’s server and we bring the food to you!

ONGOING NEWS

M’TUCCI’S MONTHLY PHOTO CONTEST

Only week week left in the May Photo Contest, so enter soon and enter often. Post a photo from M’tucci’s with friends, food or beverages on your Facebook page or your Instagram feed and tag the photo #lovemtuccis. The winning photo is chosen from the three photos with the most likes.

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Our market items can be purchased at a couple of locations. We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

M’TUCCI’S ITALIAN WEDNESDAY PRIX FIXE DINNERS

Details of our three course dinners paired with three wines will be published on Facebook and Instagram every Wednesday. 3 course + 3 wines for $25 per person, tax and gratuity not included.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

ALBUQUERQUE THE MAGAZINE - BEST OF THE CITY

We would appreciate your vote and support in the newest Best of the City poll. We feel pretty strongly that we are the best in these categories: Bartender, Bloody Mary, Craft Cocktails, Happy Hour, Appetizer Menu, Brunch, Chef, Dessert, Gourmet Pizza, Pizza and Wine List. We won last year for Waitstaff and Italian Restaurant and would love to keep our record intact. Click here to vote.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Receive an email when La Gazzeta is published each Friday. Simply use the form at the bottom left of the page. We promise not to share your email, or bother you with unwanted promotions.

Ciao until next Friday!

Summer market in the Campo di’ Fiori in Rome.

Summer market in the Campo di’ Fiori in Rome.

Chianti - The Classic Wine of Italy

Vineyard near Greve en Chianti

Vineyard near Greve en Chianti

Dating back to the 13th Century, wines produced in Chianti are probably the most recognized Italian wine. With apologies to lovers of wines from other areas in Italy such as Friuli, Piedmont, Abruzzo, Veneto, Umbria and Sicily, Chianti and, more importantly, Chianti Classico are classically Italian.

While some of us of a certain age were first introduced to Chianti in a straw basket, those days and that wine are best forgotten for it was a thin, insipid wine. After WWII, many vintners had fled to the U.S., and the area suffered from a lack of talent and bad wine management (seeking higher yields instead of quality yields) for a couple of decades.

Quality returned to the area with an enforcement of higher standards and techniques. A Chianti’s grapes have to be grown in a defined part of Tuscany, primarily around Florence and Siena, and include 70% Sangiovese grapes. That Chianti receives a DOC classification on the label (Denominazione di Origine Controllata). Chianti Classico is the higher level of classification and must be made with 80% Sangiovese, and requires a minimum of 24 months of maturation, most of that in oak barrels. Classico receives the DOCG classification on the label (Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita). The bottles are also recognizable by the black rooster on a pink label (gallo nero) on the bottle neck.

Some of the top producers in the area, notably Angelo Gaja (who originally had vineyards in the Piedmont making Barolo and Barbaresco) and Piero Antinori, resolved to make wines of distinction and rebelled against the rigid Chianti standards of 70-80% Sangiovese and created what became known as Super Tuscans. These wines blended Sangiovese with Cabernet and/or Merlot according to the wine maker’s tastes and were not eligible for the Chianti designation. However, their quality caught on with wine writers and critics, and soon became wildly popular with wine lovers - at least those who could afford the prices these special wines commanded. Antinori created Tignanello, the most well-known and one of the most expensive. I shared a bottle with friends in Italy a few years ago and it was sublime (I’ll leave the snooty wine adjectives to wine writers).

Sangiovese grapes ripening in the late August sun near Florence.

Sangiovese grapes ripening in the late August sun near Florence.

Another favorite Chianti wine that is not called Chianti are the wines of Montalcino, a small hilltop town southwest of Florence. Here Brunello di Montalcino and Rosso di Montalcino are made exclusively from a varietal of Sangiovese grapes called Sangiovese Grosso. The Brunellos are very popular, age-worthy and usually begin at around $50 a bottle. The Rossos are made for enjoying now at less than half the price. This is one of the most picturesque towns in Italy and well worth a visit for lunch or an extended stay. If you are a fan of Brunello, there are merchants in town that will help you select and package a case for shipment back to the U.S.

Brunellos on display in Montalcino.

Brunellos on display in Montalcino.

Vineyards around Montalcino.

Vineyards around Montalcino.

Let’s get back to Chiantis and other wines from Tuscany, since not all of us are in the habit of drinking $50-80 bottles of wine nightly. There are many producers making good quality Chiantis and we feature several bottles on our menus at all three of our locations. Antinori’s Santa Cristina Toscana is a wonderful food wine, blended from four grapes including Sangiovese (so, while it is grown in Chianti, it isn’t called Chianti). M’tucci’s Italian also features Toscolo Chianti Classico and Antinori Peppoli Chianti Classico and Melini Chianti. M’tucci’s Moderno has both of the aforementioned Chianti classicos. M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria offers a Rufina Renso Masi Chianti DOCG (the highest classification for the region).

For my taste buds, the vast majority of European wines are made for food - not for sipping as a cocktail, and Chianti is not an exception. I think most of them are too tannic for quaffing, but are perfect for pasta, steaks and hearty stews. Do the experiment yourself. Open a Chianti Classico and drink a glass with no food. Now drink the second glass with Pasta Bolognese or even a plate of prosciutto and taste the difference.


NEWS OF THE WEEK

M’tucci’s Italian

Weekend Specials: Pan-Seared Icelandic Cod, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Artichoke Heart, Sautéed Arugula, Lemon Butter Caper Sauce 
Cut of the Day: 24 oz Bone-in Porterhouse,  Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Balsamic Reduction 

House Ravioli-Braised Harris Ranch Beef/Ricotta Ravioli, Caramelized Onion, San Marzano Tomato Ragu

 Braised special: Pink Patagonia Shrimp, Spicy Goat Cheese Tomato Sauce, House Rotatelli Pasta, Sautéed Spinach, Toasted Hazelnuts 

Father’s Day, June 16 - Treat Dad to Brunch or an evening meal. Make reservations now.

Subscribe to La Gazzeta to receive notice of our new summer menu - coming soon!

M’tucci’s Moderno

Osso Bucco Pomodoro $17
Tender Braised Duroc Osso Bucco, Roasted Red Peppers, Caramelized Onions, Italian Olives, Spicy Red Wine Marinara, Rigatoni Pasta, Shaved Parmesan, and Basil
Recommended Wine Pairing:
Toscolo Chianti, Italy  $7/$28

Icelandic Cod $26
It has a lean, mild flavor profile with large flakes and a tender-firm texture.
Recommended Wine Pairing:
Tomaresca Chardonnay, Abruzzo, Italy $7/$28

Hand Cut Steak of the Day:
24 oz T-Bone $33
Recommended Wine Pairing:
Bonanza Cabernet Sauvignon, California $9/$40

Tonight (May 17) 8:30: Lanie Nash Live in the Bar

Thursday (May 23) 6:00: Melissa Rios Live in the Bar

M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria

May 23- June 2: Beer Week Tap Takeover with Steel Bender Brewyard - We’ll feature SkullBucket IPA, ETTu Brut IPA, Berliner Weisse and the Kolsch. Albuquerque Beer Week

May 31, 6:00 - Beer Week Collaboration with Dialogue Brewing. Four course menu paired with Dialogue’s European style beers. Tickets available at Dialogue Taproom, 1501 1st St NW. $40 per person.

Every Thursday - Sunday: Order M’tucci’s pizzas, sandwiches and boards while visiting La Cumbre Westside. The patio is the place to be (although you might want to dine inside this weekend!).

ONGOING

M’tucci’s Monthly Photo Contest

Our April winner was Megan McNutt, who receives a $50 gift certificate to any M’tucci’s location. The May contest is underway, so enter soon and enter often. Post a photo from M’tucci’s with friends, food or beverages on your Facebook page or your Instagram feed and tag the photo #lovemtuccis. The winning photo is chosen from the three photos with the most likes.

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Did you know you can find our market items at a couple of locations? We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.


SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

M’TUCCI’S ITALIAN WEDNESDAY PRIX FIXE DINNERS

New specials for the month of May will be published in this space next Tuesday or Wednesday. You can also find them on Facebook and Instagram every Wednesday.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

ALBUQUERQUE THE MAGAZINE - BEST OF THE CITY

We would appreciate your vote and support in the newest Best of the City poll. We feel pretty strongly that we are the best in these categories: Bartender, Bloody Mary, Craft Cocktails, Happy Hour, Appetizer Menu, Brunch, Chef, Dessert, Gourmet Pizza, Pizza and Wine List. We won last year for Waitstaff and Italian Restaurant and would love to keep our record intact. Click here to vote.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Receive an email when La Gazzeta is published each Friday. Simply use the form at the bottom left of the page. We promise not to share your email, or bother you with unwanted promotions.

Ravioli, Queen of Stuffed Pasta

One of our favorite pasta dishes (and one of our guests) is ravioli, those light, fluffy pillows stuffed with a varying combinations of herbs, greens, meat, seafood and cheese. Traditionally in Italy, they are square. If you see them semi-circular, they would be called mezzelune (half-moons). Many other types of Italian pasta contain fillings, such as tortelloni and tortelli, however they are usually smaller and more difficult to make by hand.

italian.083.jpg

Ravioli appears in writings as early as the 14th century and they were reportedly served at a papal conclave in Rome in 1549. The favored stuffings vary by region, for example ricotta cheese and spinach are popular in Rome. Many ravioli dishes come with a tomato or cream based sauce, however they were traditionally served en brodo, in a broth, which was how we served our Chianina Ravioli during our special Chianina Weekend. Beef from an ancient breed of cattle paired with the old way of saucing ravioli just seemed right.

Everyone who had it loved it. This is what you missed: Roasted Chianina Beef-Fresh Mozzarella Ravioli, Roasted Wild Mushrooms, Fennel, Sweet Onion, Grana Padana Brodo

Because we make all of our own ravioli, it’s usually a weekend special at M’tucci’s Italian and at M’tucci’s Moderno, however look for each location to add ravioli as a regular menu item in the near future. Some of the past favorite fillings have been; Wild Mushroom and Ricotta, Red Chile Three Cheese, Roasted Fennel and Duroc Pork with Goat Cheese and Butternut Squash and Mascarpone with a Browned Butter Sage Sauce.

For Mother’s Day, we are giving Mom what she wants and that is our most requested ravioli: Lobster and Cream Cheese with a Shrimp and Lobster Cream Sauce. If you haven’t made your reservations, do so now.

Here is a video of our ravioli process. As you can see there are a few tools that allow us to hand-make our ravioli. Can you imagine how long it would take to make 1,200 totally by hand?



Lobster & Cream Cheese Ravioli with a Shrimp and Lobster Cream Sauce, micro greens and parmesan

Lobster & Cream Cheese Ravioli with a Shrimp and Lobster Cream Sauce, micro greens and parmesan

NEWS OF THE WEEK

M’tucci’s Italian

Tonight, 6:00-8:00: Violist Michelle Zetterhom will play dinner music.

Weekend Specials are Pan-Seared Scallops, Braised Harris Ranch Beef, Sautéed Wild Mushrooms, Shallots in a Red Chile Cream Sauce.

Mother’s Day, May 12 - We are nearly full for the day and evening, so why not bring Mom on Saturday night if you can’t get the reservation you want on Sunday? Or better yet, honor your Mother with a M’tucci’s Gift Certificate. Both M’tucci’s Italian and Moderno will open for brunch at 10:00am and offer a couple of specials and a surprise for all Mothers.

M’tucci’s Moderno - Specials for the weekend are Pan-Seared Bay Scallops and Lobster Ravioli (a Rio Rancho favorite).

Mother’s Day, May 12: Brunch starts at 10:00am, so make your reservations now!

Tonight (May 9) 7:00: Stanlie Kee Live in the Bar

Friday, May 3, 8:30: Delphia Live in the Bar

M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria

May 31, 6:00 - Beer Week Collaboration with Dialogue Brewing. Four course menu paired with Dialogue’s European style beers. Tickets available at Dialogue Taproom, 1501 1st St NW. $40 per person.

May 23- June 2: Beer Week Tap Takeover with Steel Bender Brewyard - We’ll feature SkullBucket IPA, ETTu Brut IPA, Berliner Weisse and the Kolsch. Albuquerque Beer Week

Every Thursday - Sunday: Order M’tucci’s pizzas, sandwiches and boards while visiting La Cumbre Westside. The patio is the place to be (although you might want to dine inside this weekend!).

ONGOING

M’tucci’s Monthly Photo Contest

Our April winner was Megan McNutt, who receives a $50 gift certificate to any M’tucci’s location. The May contest is underway, so enter soon and enter often. Post a photo from M’tucci’s with friends, food or beverages on your Facebook page or your Instagram feed and tag the photo #lovemtuccis. The winning photo is chosen from the three photos with the most likes.

M’TUCCI’S AROUND TOWN

Did you know you can find our market items at a couple of locations? We deliver our fresh bread every Tuesday and Friday to Silver Street Market at 2nd and Silver. Choose from Sourdough, Fennel Rye, Wheat, Baguette, Ciabatta, Raisin Rosemary and Focaccia.

Drinking at Bosque in Nob Hill? You can order a M’tucci’s Charcuterie Board while there.

Tony stocking the shelves at Silver Street Market in downtown ABQ.

Tony stocking the shelves at Silver Street Market in downtown ABQ.

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

M’TUCCI’S WEDNESDAY PRIX FIXE DINNERS

New specials for the month of May will be published in this space next Tuesday or Wednesday. You can also find them on Facebook and Instagram every Wednesday.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

ALBUQUERQUE THE MAGAZINE - BEST OF THE CITY

We would appreciate your vote and support in the newest Best of the City poll. We feel pretty strongly that we are the best in these categories: Bartender, Bloody Mary, Craft Cocktails, Happy Hour, Appetizer Menu, Brunch, Chef, Dessert, Gourmet Pizza, Pizza and Wine List. We won last year for Waitstaff and Italian Restaurant and would love to keep our record intact. Click here to vote.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Receive an email when La Gazzeta is published each Thursday. Simply use the form at the bottom left of the page. We promise not to share your email, or bother you with unwanted promotions.

It’s a nice time of year to be in Venice! But, if you can’t go to Venice - come to M’tucci’s!

It’s a nice time of year to be in Venice! But, if you can’t go to Venice - come to M’tucci’s!

Cocktails with an Italian Twist

If you are a fan of fine food, craft beers and excellent wines, you are likely a fan of craft cocktails. Why do we use the term “craft” cocktails. Why not simply say cocktails? At M’tucci’s Italian and M’tucci’s Moderno, we use the word craft cocktails, because we have elevated the ingredients, the techniques and the attention to detail that makes our cocktails special.

The Boulevardier, made with Knob Creek Rye Whiskey, Campari and Cinzano 1757 Sweet Vermouth.

The Boulevardier, made with Knob Creek Rye Whiskey, Campari and Cinzano 1757 Sweet Vermouth.

Craft means using the best ingredients: fresh juices, house made syrups and high quality liquor. The craft cocktail relies on the sum of the best ingredients. A margarita made with a “margarita mix” is a sad version of one made with fresh lime juice.

Technique includes proper measurements to achieve balance - you’ll notice our most experienced bartenders using a shot glass most of the time. Should a drink be shaken or stirred? Both are done to create the perfect cocktail by diluting the drink with ice/water. There is the correct amount of time to shake or stir a drink to achieve that perfect dilution. Whether you are making a martini or a manhattan, make three drinks and stir three different lengths of time (5, 10 or 15 seconds) and taste the difference. Apologies to Ian Fleming and James Bond, but we would never shake a martini.

Attention to details refers to proper technique, but it also refers to the proper garnish or the proper glass and how both affect the flavor and aroma of the cocktail. Do you express a lemon twist over glass and discard it, or rub it around the rim and discard it, or do you two both and then slip it into the drink? All garnish methods will affect the first sip, where you expect to sit back and say, Ahhhhh.

All of our bartenders are trained that all of the above are important, and they bring that training, skill and passion for the perfect cocktail to work every day. Some of them love to make infusions for our drinks and several of them have created a cocktail now on our drinks menu.

Italian.047.JPG

As warmer weather and summer approach, we start thinking about lighter drinks and the Italians have those drinks perfected. Using a blend of herbaceous aperitivi, Prosecco and vermouths, Italian culture (and M’tucci’s Restaurants) embrace cocktails created for before-meal drinking, which will stimulate your taste buds with low-alcohol combinations.

APERITIVI

One of our favorite bittersweet Italian bottles is Aperol, a light (11% Alcohol by Volume ABV) apertivo which can be used in many variations, but is most popularly used in an Aperol Spritz, equal parts Aperol, Prosecco and seltzer of Club Soda, garnished with a slice of orange.

The other favorite is Campari, slightly higher in alcohol than Aperol (24% ABV), but about the same as most light Amari, it’s another style of bitter Italian alcohol. Campari can simply be a highball with seltzer and a piece of lemon. It’s definitely the star of the Negroni, the Boulevardier and the Americano. Next time you come to M’tucci’s Italian, ask Trey to make a Negroni Sbagliato for you. Watch him smile and you can thank me later.

Want to learn more about making cocktails at home, how to stock a basic home bar, and more? Stay tuned to this space and our Social Media feeds for an announcement about our Cocktails Classes - Coming Soon!

Aperol Spritz is made with Aperol and Ruffino Prosecco and seltzer water.

Aperol Spritz is made with Aperol and Ruffino Prosecco and seltzer water.

Negroni made with Bulldog Gin, Campari and Cinzano 1757 Sweet Vermouth garnished with an orange slice.

Negroni made with Bulldog Gin, Campari and Cinzano 1757 Sweet Vermouth garnished with an orange slice.

RECIPES

Aperol Spritz

2 oz Aperol, 2-3 oz Prosecco or dry Sparkling Wine, 2 oz cold Seltzer

Pour Aperol into a wineglass, add ice, then add sparkling wine and seltzer and stir gently. Garnish with orange slice (or try a grapefruit slice for a different flavor)

Negroni

1 oz. Gin, 1 oz Sweet Italian Vermouth, 1 oz. Campari

Stir ingredients in a cocktail shaker, strain into an Old-Fashioned glass, add ice and orange slice


M’tucci’s Family Gallery

Joe Romero, bartender extraordinaire at M’tucci’s Italian. Omar Rosas. Chef de Cuisine at M’tucci’s Moderno. Justin Sandoval, Sous Chef at M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria.


NEWS OF THE WEEK

M’tucci’s Italian - Our weekend specials will feature a Pan-Seared New Zealand Swordfish and Grilled New Zealand Lamb Chops with Creamy Polenta and Summer Vegetables.

Mother’s Day, May 12 - We are nearly full for the day and evening, so why not bring Mom on Saturday night if you can’t get the reservation you want on Sunday. Or better yet, honor your Mother with a M’tucci’s Gift Certificate. Both M’tucci’s Italian and Moderno will open for brunch at 10:00am and offer a couple of specials and a surprise for Mothers.

M’tucci’s Moderno - Specials for the weekend are Pan-Seared Bay Scallops and Lobster Ravioli (a Rio Rancho favorite).

Mother’s Day, May 12: Brunch starts at 10:00am, so make your reservations now!

Tonight (May 2) 7:00: Oscar Butler Live in the Bar

Friday, May 3, 8:30: Leah Leyva Live in the Bar

M’tucci’s Italian Market & Pizzeria

May 31, 6:00 - Beer Week Collaboration with Dialogue Brewing. Four course menu paired with Dialogue’s European style beers. Tickets available at Dialogue Taproom, 1501 1st St NW. $40 per person.

May 23- June 2: Beer Week Tap Takeover with Steel Bender Brewyard - We’ll feature SkullBucket IPA, ETTu Brut IPA, Berliner Weiss and the Kolsch. Albuquerque Beer Week

Every Thursday - Sunday: Order M’tucci’s pizzas, sandwiches and boards while visiting La Cumbre Westside. The patio is the place to be!


ONGOING

M’tucci’s Monthly Photo Contest

Our April winner was Megan McNutt, shown sipping an Espresso Martini at M’tucci’s Italian. She shared the photo on her Instagram feed and had 68 likes. She receives a $50 gift certificate to any M’tucci’s location. The May contest is underway, so enter soon and enter often. Post a photo from M’tucci’s with friends, food or beverages on your Facebook page or your Instagram feed and tag the photo #lovemtuccis. The winning photo is chosen from the three photos with the most likes.

April Photo Contest Winner!

April Photo Contest Winner!

SERVICE INDUSTRY NIGHT & DISCOUNTS

Area service industry workers can get a Service Industry card from us by showing proof of employment. With the card you receive 10% off your check every day and 20% off on Sundays from 6:00 - 9:00. Dine in only.

M’TUCCI’S WEDNESDAY PRIX FIXE DINNERS

New specials for the month of May will be published in this space next Tuesday or Wednesday. You can also find them on Facebook and Instagram every Wednesday.

ONLINE ORDERING

Our food is available for delivery with Door Dash or for pick up. Pick up something for the weekend or on your way home from work. The links to ordering are on the Home page.

MTUCCI’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Videos about making cocktails and pasta and getting to know the M’tucci’s culture. Click here

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Receive an email when La Gazzeta is published each Thursday. Simply use the form at the bottom left of the page. We promise not to share your email, or bother you with unwanted promotions.

Chianina Dinner Weekend at M'tucci's Italian

It’s finally here! Chianina Beef, the Ultiimate Italian Beef Experience is only available in New Mexico at M’tucci’s Italian. If you have been to Tuscany and had bistecca alla fiorentina, then you know what we mean. If you haven’t, we would like to introduce you to this full-blooded Italian and, now, local beef.

The Chianina (pronounced kee-a-nee-na) breed is probably the oldest breed of cattle in the world, with evidence of them on Roman coins and as statues as early as 80 AD. They are certainly the largest breed, with bulls standing as tall as 6’ at the shoulders and tipping the scales at 3,000 + pounds (a large Angus is usually 2,000). These snowy-white cattle are noted for their enormous muscle mass and their meat is prized for its flavor and nutritional qualities (the meat is high in omega-3 fatty acids).

Executive Chef/Partner John Haas and Partner/General Manager Chris O’Sickey at M’tucci’s Italian discuss finer qualities of the Rib Eye before it is trimmed and portioned.

Executive Chef/Partner John Haas and Partner/General Manager Chris O’Sickey at M’tucci’s Italian discuss finer qualities of the Rib Eye before it is trimmed and portioned.

We at M’tucci’s strive to provide the most authentic Italian experience possible and there is nothing more authentically Italian than Chianina Beef.

Because the Chianina takes almost two years to mature (compared to Angus) and because of their relatively small numbers in the U.S., the cost of bringing the Chianina to the table is higher. However, we think the flavor is worth it. As you can see, the marbling on these Rib Eyes is unlike anything we have ever seen!

Fresh hand cut Chianina Rib Eye steak - only at M’tucci’s Italian.

Fresh hand cut Chianina Rib Eye steak - only at M’tucci’s Italian.

Beginning tonight, we’ll offer the following specials with Chianina Beef:

Chianina Beef Carpaccio, Lemon Aioli, Capers, Shaved Parmesan, Fresh Arugula $10

12 oz. Hand-Cut Chianina Ribeye, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Balsamic Reduction $75

Roasted Chianina Beef-Fresh Mozzarella Ravioli, Roasted Wild Mushrooms, Fennel, Sweet Onion, Grana Padana Brodo $25

Slow Braised House Cured Chianina Beef Brisket, Roasted Calabrian Pepper Rubbed Red Potatoes, Grilled Asparagus, Roasted Apple Mustard $31

The brisket is prepped before slow roasting.

The brisket is prepped before slow roasting.

8 oz. Chianina Italian Sirloin, Roasted Root Vegetables, Sautéed Spinach, Mojo Picon $27

We will take advance reservations for the Rib Eye. Call 505-503-7327 to reserve yours.