New York Post

Hey, why doncha mangia business!

Go try out Tucci for great Italian

- STEVE CUOZZO Post restaurant critic

TUCCI is the city’s hottest new Italian restaurant in many a moon. Beautifull­y built atop fine 19th-century bones, it’s the first place that might give reigning boldface-magnet Carbone a run for its money — and for less money than that notoriousl­y hot spot.

Tucci — or TUCCI as they prefer to stylize the name — doesn’t have a rock-star chef like Mario Carbone in the kitchen, but it has a very good one in Ed Hong.

But what really sets Tucci apart is co-owner Max Tucci’s design flair and hospitalit­y wizardry.

He’s filled the joint with witty Tuscan touches, including Gucci “Tiger Leaf” wallpaper in the bathrooms.

“[They’re] a favorite spot for selfies, like the ones at the Polo Bar,” Tucci said of his washrooms.

The Tucci-Gucci connection is no joke. The fashion house is headquarte­red in Florence, Italy, which also happens to be Tucci’s ancestral home.

On the Noho corner of Broadway and Bleecker, he’s channeled the spirit of a central Italian villa with help from the building’s original undergroun­d brick-and-stone walls and archways.

A spot with history

They once belonged to Pfaffs, a rathskelle­r-like subterrane­an restaurant in an adjacent hotel that was known as a rare, mid-1800s gay-friendly establishm­ent and was a favorite watering hole of the great poet Walt Whitman.

“Part of the downstairs dining area is actually under the side walk,” Tucci said. Many first-time customers don’t know it’s there “until we ask them if they want to hang at the downstairs bar until their tables are ready.

Once they see it — especially younger ones — they ask for it next time they come.”

The menu offers a comforting mix of southern and northern Italian favorites and red-saucy Italian-American ones.

There’s no $85 veal parm like Carbone’s, but there’s juicy, 14ounce veal marsala ($64) with portobello and hen of the woods mushrooms and a house-made jus rich in herbs and spices.

Hong does great things with tomato sauce, especially with a marinara that’s mixed with Calabrian chili paste and served atop the best meatballs in town ($27 but enough for two).

But my favorite pasta was a different color entirely — agnolotti filled with Robiola cheese and fresh peas and sauced in corn and butter ($33). My friend declared it a “summer preview on a plate.”

The 100-seat trattoria is a “sister restaurant” to born-again landmark Delmonico’s in FiDi.

But his Italian joint remained under the media radar until days before it opened in March — unlike Delmonico’s, which was hyped a year in advance.

Tucci explained that he and coowner Dennis Turcinovic were too busy preparing for the steakhouse launch to worry about publicity for the trattoria.

But once they fell in love with the space, “The momentum happened very quickly,” he said.

The momentum’s now on display every night.

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 ?? ?? WORD IS OUT NOW: Co-owner Max Tucci didn’t put a priority on advance publicity for his Noho eatery Tucci — he just focused on fantastic Italian fare.
WORD IS OUT NOW: Co-owner Max Tucci didn’t put a priority on advance publicity for his Noho eatery Tucci — he just focused on fantastic Italian fare.
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