New York Post

Big league chew

New stadium fare unveiled for '24 season

- By ALEX MITCHELL amitchell@nypost.com

Talk about last licks.

The Yankees unveiled the stadium’s newest food options for the 2024 season, and paisans are batting cleanup by way of Food Network personalit­y and Bronx native Christian Petroni’s crispy fried meatballs.

These latest additions come only a few months after Giants quarterbac­k Tommy DeVito inspired a deep love between sports and scrumptiou­s Italian Sunday-style chicken cutlets.

Now, the wake of cutlet mania has given new Yankee executive chef Robert Flowers — who replaced Matt Gibson at the culinary helm this season — lots of confidence to introduce the extra-virgin olive oil fried meatballs amid the Tommy Cutlets explosion.

“I think it’s gonna go huge,” he told The Post of the meatballs, served in a portable box alongside a cup of eight-hour bubbling marinara sauce and cheesy garlic bread.

“Especially with Christian, he’s an unbelievab­le chef, the product itself is phenomenal,” the western New York native and diehard Don Mattingly fan added. Out of all the new additions on 161st Street — there are a great many new flavors from lots of barbecue to porchetta and carne asada — nothing hits home like Petroni’s pecorino romano, blasted fried, beef and pork mixed meatballs.

The Bombers have also introduced another Italian favorite: fried zeppoles with cannoli cream and chocolate and strawberry sauces served in a mini souvenir helmet at Section 127.

Petroni, who grew up a little north of Yankee on White Plains Road and 241st Street, is just as stoked to see snacks from the homeland make this year’s Opening Day roster. (Find the meatballs in Sections 125 and 310.)

Last season, he introduced a cheesy garlic bread to Yankees fans and wanted to raise the bar taller than Aaron Judge for 2024. He said doing fried meatballs — ones with “enough pecorino cheese to take out a flock of sheep” — plus a slow-cooked sauce is “not an easy ask.” However, bringing the elevated Italian food to a big venue is Petroni’s dream.

“Sitting at the stadium, eating nonna-level meatballs and garlic bread, pinch me bro,” he said.

However, there’s lots more on this food roster that’s worth a lap or some around the diamond.

NYC butcher Lobel’s, which delivers a cornerston­e steak sandwich from its left-field booth, is also offering filet mignon crispy tater tots for the first time.

“Everybody does french fries, let’s go a little old school with tater tots,” co-owner Mark Lobel told The Post of the barbecue-flavored bits served with cheddar cheese and crispy onions.

 ?? ?? FOOD SUPPLY: Christian Petroni holds his meatballs and eight-hour marinara at the Yankees’ annual stadium concession­s preview tasting event. Zeppoles served in mini helmets (inset) are also on the menu.
FOOD SUPPLY: Christian Petroni holds his meatballs and eight-hour marinara at the Yankees’ annual stadium concession­s preview tasting event. Zeppoles served in mini helmets (inset) are also on the menu.

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