Little Italy’s — Great Italian Food Just Minutes From Wesley Chapel!

meatball

By Gary Nager

Where do you go in Wesley Chapel for great Italian food? It’s not a trick question. I know we have a lot of good pizza places in Wesley Chapel proper, but since D’Alessio, Ciao! Italian Bistro and even Primadonna have opened and closed in either New Tampa or Wesley Chapel, there really is no place for authentic Italian cuisine in either of our distribution areas.

However, there is a great little place that we’ve helped create something of a stir about (admittedly, with a lot of help from the Wesley Chapel Community on Facebook.com) that’s located just a couple of miles west of the Tampa Premium Outlets (TPO) mall, in the same space that used to be occupied by Bosco’s Pizza.

We may have helped stirred things up for them, but Little Italy’s Family Restaurant & Catering owners Carl and Chef Jessica Meyers have kept the sauce pot simmering nicely ever since with Jessica’s amazing recipes and the happy couple’s no-B.S. northeastern attitude and homemade Italian food “like mama used to make.”

canolliJessica is originally from Canarsie, a tough part of Brooklyn, New York, where she learned real Italian cooking, especially from her grandmother. This reporter is particularly happy that Jessica learned everything she needs to know about making the perfect red sauce, which most Italian food lovers (like yours truly) can’t live without.

First, let me say that although Little Italy is in no way fancy, it’s really a misnomer to call it a “pizza place — even though Jessica does offer amazing true Sicilian-style thick-crust pizza with a variety of great toppings, or try the “I Did It My Way” where the first three toppings are “on us.”

I’m not holding it against her that there’s no round New York thin-crust pizza at Little Italy’s, but I hope that when they expand into a larger location — which the Meyers are already trying to do — maybe they’ll add the thin-crust ‘za, too.

ravioliIn the meantime, Jessica says, “I use the best ingredients and make everything here, except for the actual dough for the pizza crust and the real Italian bread we make our ‘grindas’ with. That, we import from New York.”

“New Jersey,” Carl, who met Jessica in his native Rhode Island, chimes back.

“Somewhere up there anyway,” she laughs. “The best Italian bread I‘ve found.”

My favorite dish so far has to be the meatball parmigiana grinda ($9). Jessica’s big, homemade meatballs are literally too much to contain, even for the crispiest, most perfect Italian hoagie roll I’ve had in the Tampa Bay area, swaddled in a thick, red marinara.

chickparmThat bread also is no slouch when wrapped around Little Italy’s tender, but thick cut of chicken breast parmigiana ($9 grinda, $14 with spaghetti). And those to-die-for meatballs are also available in some of the best spaghetti and meatballs around ($13). All of these dishes make a great meal for two hungry people who both crave this kind of “comfort food.”

Other traditional Italian pasta favorites (all $12-$15 for a huge portion) on the menu are baked lasagna, eggplant rollatini or parmigiana, fettuccini Alfredo or bolognese (meat sauce) and some properly pillowy ravioli. I bet if enough of you ask nicely, Carl will even give the OK to adding his linguine with a loaded with clams zesty white clam butter sauce I’ve never tasted before sampled (but wasn’t allowed to photograph; just kidding) on my most recent visit. I’m so thankful that I’ve yet to get my shellfish reaction from clams, ‘cause I love ‘em and this was a dish worth risking it on, ya know?

salad

For starters, if your family loves any kind of cheese sticks, you have to try the mozzarella “half-moons,” which literally are so big more than two people can share them (for just $6!). Other of our office’s favorites to date are a great bruschetta appetizer ($6), an even better caprese salad with a beautiful balsamic finish and an excellent house salad. Other big-portion starters (all $5-$8) on the menu are Jessica’s own “smashed potatoes,” French fry and onion ring baskets and garlic and cheesy garlic bread.tomato3

‘Give Me That Calzone…”

Even when I lived in New York, I was never a big calzone guy. But, if you even like a traditional (with a unique tomato sauce, Bacio mozzarella and creamy ricotta, $10) or chicken parm, Buffalo chicken or “I Did It My Way” options (all $13). Just try to eat one of these bad boys without at least four other people…six in some cases.

BurgerEven if youse guys feel like a burger, Little Italy’s has you covered, with the already-legendary-in-our-office Godfather burger. It costs $10, but is an 8-oz. slab of made-to-order ground beef, salami and cappicola ham, encased with melted provolone, then topped with prosciutto ham and a balsamic glaze reduction, all on a garlic toasted bun. Add $3 for a huge portion of great fries or the thick onion rings pictured above.

Lil’ Goombas catch a break with smaller portions of those delicious “pa-sketti” and meatballs or cheese ravioli (both $5) or “chicky” fingers and fries for $6.

At least try to save some room for dessert because Jessica promises that no matter how busy she gets, she will always come to your table and hand-fill you one or two (or seven) of her crispy cannoli shells (as she is in the photo above) with the best cannoli filling I’ve had since a certain bakery in Elmont, NY, I mentioned in a previous article.

And, Jessica promises that she can handle your holiday catering order like nobody else. She and Carl started in Florida with a popular mobile food truck called “Little Italy’s Meatballs, where they served hundreds of people a day. In other words, she means it when she says, “No order too large or too small,” she says.

For more info about Little Italy’s Family Restaurant & Catering (24436 S.R. 54, Lutz, next to Walesby Vision), call 909-2122, visit LittleItalyFamilyRestaurant.com. It is open Tues.-Sat. at noon for lunch and dinner.

Indoor sports facility could be next for Wiregrass Ranch

Round-Rock-Sports-Center
If a new facility gets built, it could look like the Round Rock Sports Center in Round Rock, Texas, built in Jan. 2014. Photo: sportsplanningguide.com


Will the fourth time be the charm for a Pasco County sports complex?

After three failed attempts since 2001 to build tennis, baseball and outdoor facilities, Pasco County commissioners are poised to make another run at a sports facility in Wiregrass Ranch, this time an indoor complex on 8-10 of the 80 availa
ble acres just east of Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel (FHWC) donated by the Porter family.

The county also is discussing the possibility of the Porter family building and operating outdoor fields and green space adjacent to the indoor facility, which could be used to help with events like Dick’s Sporting Goods Tournament of Champions lacrosse tournament and rugby, soccer and other outdoor sports events

The commissioners are in the process of preparing a request seeking partners in a private/public partnership to build the indoor facility. Pasco County will contribute $8.5 million to the project in monies raised through its tourist development tax.

The cost to build similar facilities in Tennessee, Texas, Alabama and South Carolina ranged from $12-million to $25 million, according to an 88-page feasibility study put together by Johnson Consulting of Chicago at the request of the Pasco County commissioners.

“Initially, the feasibility study came back and I was a little surprised by the focus on an indoor facility,’’ said District 2 county commissioner Mike Moore. When the Porter family offered to build an adjoining outdoor facility that would be more available to the public at no costs, he was sold.

“That got me really excited,’’ Moore said. “With what the Porter family has proposed, it really gives us the best of both worlds.”

SportsFacilitiesInPascoAccording to Johnson Consulting, the outdoor facility market is saturated but there is a need for indoor facilities. In Florida, there are 25 tournament-quality outdoor facilities. The Wiregrass location would be just the eighth indoor facility.

The complex would go beyond just serving Pasco County residents, said county tourism manager Ed Caum, who sees it as a future hub for surrounding areas looking for a place for youth tournaments.

“This is a very specific complex that will meet the needs of Central Florida, not just Pasco County, and that’s what makes it unique,’’ Caum said, adding he hopes to see the facility eventually host major regional and national tournaments.

The commission held a workshop on Oct. 27 at the Pasco Government Center in New Port Richey, where Johnson Consulting presented its study and made its recommendations.

Johnson Consulting suggests a three-phase project, beginning with a multi-purpose indoor complex between 85,000 and 100,000 square feet on 5-7 acres.

The facility would have 6-8 basketball courts, which could be converted to 12-16 volleyball courts, elevated seating for 500-750, concession stands, 4-6 multipurpose rooms and a sports orthopaedic and healthcare partnership.

The county is negotiating with the Porter family to control the final two phases.

Phase 2 of the project (5-15 acres) would include 3-4 outdoor rectangular multi-purpose fields (two with lights), a Championship area, an interactive playground and splash pads.

Phase 3 (10-15 acres) would incorporate an alternative entertainment zone, indoor skydiving, zip lines, ropes course and driving range.

The remaining 25-35 acres would be for hotel development, themed retail, a community center, active and passive green space for the community, and trails for walking, running and biking.

“Pasco has many key characteristics and requirements to support a multi-use sports complex – namely solid population growth, access to regional, national and international transportation and county household incomes projected to increase at an above-average rate,” the report concluded.

IndoorFacilityRevenueJohnson Consulting, based on the average of other similar facilities in the United States, conservatively estimates more than 100,000 participants using the facility annually. Deficits are projected the first four years, but starting in year six the facility is projected to bring in over $200,000 a year in net profit.

One concern for commissioners is the small number of hotels rooms in the area, which will likely result in tournament participants spending their money in Hillsborough County. According to Johnson Consulting, there are 3,474 hotel rooms within at least 11 miles of the proposed location, though 800 of those are in Saddlebrook and only 322 are in Wesley Chapel.

Caum, however, said a Holiday Inn Express is scheduled to open in January, adding 75 rooms and 12 suites, and two other hotels slated for the 54/56 corridor are in the permitting process. And according to the Urban Land Institute, over the next five years the county will add 75-100 hotel rooms annually.

Moore thinks despite past failures, the latest proposal has an excellent chance to succeed.

“This is the perfect scenario,’’ he said. “We are going to make sure when we are accepting these bids that the funding is available. I’m confident it will work, and everyone seems pretty excited.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

UPDATE: Blight ordinance and Mike Moore's traffic thoughts

By Matt Wiley and Gary Nager

Mike MooreDist. 2 Pasco County commissioner (and Wesley Chapel resident) Mike Moore says that dilapidated businesses soon will no longer have a place in the county, now that the Pasco Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) has adopted new rules to eliminate local eyesores. Moore told the 20 people in attendance at the Nov. 12 Wesley Chapel Republican Club (WCRC) meeting (held at Wesley Chapel Hyundai on S.R. 54) that the so-called “Blight Ordinance” (which is actually called Pasco’s “Commercial Property Maintenance Ordinance”) he sponsored was passed unanimously (5-0) on Oct. 20 by the Pasco Board of County Commisioners (BOCC).

The ordinance gives Pasco the right to issue fines and even possibly put property owners who let their commercial properties become dilapidated in jail. Moore said the new law gives the county more power to clean up and even get rid of those dilapidated properties in order to attract new businesses, clean up the county’s image and help prevent the crime that occurs in buildings that aren’t maintained.

Moore noted that the ordinance, which was modeled after a similar Hillsborough County law, won’t go into effect until May 1, 2016, but at that time, property owners whose properties are abandoned and/or in disrepair a 30-day notice to get their blighted buildings repaired, or be subject to a fine. They will then be given another 30 days to fix the problem.

If the problem persists beyond those 60 days, the property owners will be subject to a fine of $500 per day until the problem is fixed. If it’s discovered by the county attorney that a business owner has the means to fix the problem or demolish a blighted building and still chooses not to, that person could even face jail time.

“What we’re trying to do here is tell people, ‘You need to fix the problem,’” Moore told the WCRC members in attendance. “Fix the problem or you’re going to get fined. It’s not good for the surrounding property owners, it’s not good for the community and it’s not good for the people of Pasco County.”

Moore also says that business owners have told him that areas that have vacant and rundown structures do not promote local business growth, they bring down property values and discourage other local businesses that are maintained properly.

Pasco Sheriff Chris Nocco said at a Sept. 30 town hall meeting about the ordinance that it also is important because it will help reduce crime — including drug use, squatting and other illegal activities — in the abandoned or run-down structures. He said the U.S. 19 corridor gets by far the most calls about crime at various rundown businesses, but that U.S. Hwy. 41, S.R. 54 and U.S. 301 also prompt calls by residents and other business owners, too.

“From a law enforcement standpoint,” Nocco said, “(ordinances like this) are things that we need. If we can limit the places crimes can occur, we can push crime somewhere else. And, we’re trying to push it out of Pasco County.”

Meanwhile, Moore said he is convinced the ordinance will deter current and future businesses from letting their storefronts and surrounding area from becoming unkempt.

“It doesn’t matter what corridor it is,’’ Moore said. “This ordinance will be a deterrent in the hopes that future commercial property owners will realize that if they let their properties become dilapidated, they’re going to get fined.”

According to Pasco’s senior assistant county attorney Kristi Sims (who appeared at the same Sept. 30 town hall meeting where Sheriff Nocco spoke), the new ordinance shifts the burden to the property owner to force them to spend their own money to either repair or tear down their dilapidated properties.

Also On Commissioner Moore’s Agenda…

Although he didn’t discuss the 2016 presidential election during his presentation to the WCRC, Moore did provide updates on a number of other topics, including the extension of S.R. 56 to U.S. 301 in Zephyrhills, which he said he strongly supports.

He noted that he believes that shortly after this issue reaches your mailbox, the State Legislature could approve the plan proposed in April of this year by Dist. 38 State Rep. Danny Burgess and Dist. 17 State Sen. John Legg to build a four-lane extension, rather than just the two lanes that are currently funded.

Moore added that he is a strong supporter of the Florida Department of Transportation’s concept of a “diverging diamond” to better handle the traffic at the S.R. 56 exit of I-75. “I’ve told my friends in Tallahassee that this has to happen way sooner than (the current plan of) 2021-22,” Moore said. “We need relief now.”

After being introduced by current WCRC president James Cracchiolo, Moore (the group’s president the previous two years) touted his support of stricter sexual offender rules in Pasco and the new indoor athletic complex in Wiregrass (see pg. 1) during his hour-long chat. He also noted that he’s still studying the proposed Bruce B. Downs Blvd. Bypass Loop Rd. concept discussed in our Sept. 26 issue.

The WCRC meets at Hyundai of Wesley Chapel (27000 Wesley Chapel Blvd.) the second Thur. of each month at 6:30 p.m., with the next meeting scheduled for Thur., Dec. 10. The club welcomes new members and guests. For more info, visit WCRepublicans.com.

Busy weekend ahead for area road construction

75trafficTraffic around the I-75 intersections at Bruce B. Downs and State Roads 56 and 52 are expected to be busy construction zones through the rest of the month, and especially this weekend so travelers might want to plan accordingly.

It’s all part of the ongoing widening project between E. Fowler Ave. in Temple Terrace to S.R. 56, which hoped to be complete by September but is now most likely finishing up closer to its originally planned completion time in the spring of 2016. The 11.4-mile, $96.6-million project to widen I-75 from four to six/eight lanes was delayed by the summer’s heavy and constant rains.

Most of the construction this weekend will take place at night, but those coming home from, say, the Tampa Bay Lightning game Saturday, will want to drive carefully.

Here are the area that will be under work, according to Florida Department of Transportation spokeperson John McShaffrey.

NEW TAMPA

Southbound I-75 exit to Bruce B. Downs may be closed two nights
The southbound I-75 exit ramp to Bruce B. Downs Boulevard (Exit 270) may be closed from 10:30 p.m. to 5 a.m. Sunday and Monday (November 22 and 23) nights. [This ramp will not be closed at the same time as the SR 56 exit]
DETOUR: Continue past Exit 270. Exit to Fletcher Avenue (Exit 266). Turn left at the bottom of the ramp and go east on Fletcher Avenue under I-75. Turn left and enter northbound I-75. Use northbound Exit 270 to Bruce B. Downs Boulevard.

Southbound I-75 exit to State Road 56 may be closed two nights
Southbound I-75 Exit 275 to State Road 56 may be closed from 10:30 p.m. to 5 a.m. Sunday and Monday (November 22 and 23) nights. [This ramp will not be closed at the same time as the Bruce B. Downs exit]
DETOUR: Continue south and use Exit 270 to Bruce B. Downs Boulevard. Turn left onto Bruce B. Downs Blvd. and cross under I-75, then turn left and enter northbound I-75 to Exit 275 (SR 56).

Night lane closures on Bruce B. Downs Boulevard at I-75
One to three lanes may be closed on westbound/southbound Bruce B. Downs Boulevard in the I-75 area (Dona Michelle Drive to Tampa Palms Boulevard) between 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. Sunday and Monday (November 22 and 23) nights. At least one lane will be open.

WESLEY CHAPEL

Night lane closures on northbound I-75 approaching State Road 56
One to three lanes may be closed on northbound I-75 between the exit to State Road 56 (Exit 275) and the State Road 56 overpass from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. Sunday and Monday (Nov. 22 and 23) nights. At least one lane will be open.

Night lane closures on southbound I-75 near SR 56 and I-275
One to three lanes may be closed on southbound I-75 from State Road 56 (Exit 275) to I-275 (Exit 274) from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. Friday night, Nov. 20 and Sunday and Monday (Nov. 22 and 23) nights. At least one lane will be open.

WESLEY CHAPEL/SAN ANTONIO

Night lane closures on I-75 in central Pasco County
One lane may be closed in each direction of I-75 anywhere from north of County Road 54 (Exit 279) to north of SR 52 (Exit 285) between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. Friday night, Nov. 20 and Sunday through Tuesday (Nov. 22 – 24) nights.

Night lane closures on State Road 52 in the I-75 area
There may be lane closures on State Road 52 between Old Pasco Road and McKendree Road between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. Friday night, Nov. 20 and Sunday through Tuesday (Nov. 22 – 24) nights. Watch for flaggers directing traffic.

Night lane closures on I-75 in upper Pasco County
One lane may be in each direction of I-75 from north of State Road 52 (Exit 285) to the Hernando County line (north of County Road 41/Exit 293) between 9:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. Friday night, November 20 and Sunday through Tuesday (November 22 – 24) nights.