Midtown has a group of restaurants that has operated for years,
yet their appeal have diminished with all the new competition, despite having
decent food and a pleasant atmosphere. Spacco is one of these restaurants, a
place I recall visiting for work functions numerous years ago, dining on
appetizer platters and finger foods.
They began offering a Groupon deal for a
three course meal for four for only $80 - a steal considering most of their
mains are $15-$20 (prices included in the post are from the regular menu). We
did have to order from condensed offerings, but still had plenty of choices and
was a well curated selection off their complete menu.
Both of the calamari ($13) were fair sized portions and well
executed. The battered version, the typical thin rings, were hot and fresh from
the deep fryer. Meanwhile, the grilled version could be charred a bit more but
had nice flavours from the lemon garlic olive oil, the vegetables on the side a
great addition.
The oven baked shrimp ($13) were thankfully not overcooked
and the chunky spicy roasted tomato sauce they sat in great for slathering on
the soft complimentary ciabatta buns.
Although the arancini
($12) were delicious and in my opinion the tastiest of all the appetizers, the
two ping pong sized balls made the starter much smaller compared to other
offerings. Typically, at other restaurants, there would be three to an order –
Spacco you need to consider increasing the number of arancini or the size of each one for this appetizer. Nonetheless,
the deep fried risotto stuffed with peas and mozzarella were hot and
satisfying, a soft molten middle with the requisite crunchy exterior.
For the mains, the seafood risotto ($20) was terrible – the rice
extremely mushy and is questionable if it was even made with the Arborio variety.
There was a fair amount of seafood (shrimp, scallop, calamari and mussels) but
despite the menu describing the mussels as “fresh”, they were gritty and tasted
off to me.
The penne trecolore
($18) was better, the pasta in between the al dante and cooked through state
but tossed in a tasty tomato cream sauce. Mixed into the pasta was plenty of chicken,
spinach and roasted red peppers to provide the “three colours” from the dish’s
name.
With the wood-burning oven prominently situated in the open
kitchen, it seemed like a safe bet that the pizzas would be good. We ordered
two to share, the culo rosso ($16) and
campagnia ($17), both delicious and
prettily presented.
Indeed, the culo rosso had
a very spicy kick from the hot banana peppers, so much so that it momentarily
renders your tongue numb making the sausage and caramelized shallots
non-existent. But, if you like the heat, it’s a great pie. On the other hand,
the campagnia is much tamer topped with
chicken, roasted red peppers, spinach, sundried tomatoes and a fair amount of
creamy goat cheese.
The only easy decision is dessert – there are two choices, a
sweet and moist tuxedo truffle mousse cake or dense and sugary iced chocolate
brownie with ice cream ($7). Neither are fantastic, yet tasted fresh and since
they’re both so decadent, leaves you satisfied with a few tastes.
Overall mark - 7 out of 10
How To Find Them
Location: Toronto, Canada
Address: 2415 Yonge Street (behind Alleycatz)
Address: 2415 Yonge Street (behind Alleycatz)
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Gastro World's Grading System
- Anything under 5 - I really disliked and will never go back
- 6 - decent restaurant but I likely won't return
- 7 - decent restaurant and I will likely return
- 8 - great restaurant that I'd be happy to recommend
- 9 - fantastic restaurant that I would love to visit regularly and highly recommend
- 10 - absolute perfection!
Is That It? I Want More!
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