Tony Mantuano
Chef-owner, Spiaggia
Chicago, Illinois
When chef Tony Mantuano opened Spiaggia in Chicago in 1984,
a customer told him: “You’re never going to make it if you don’t
put a meatball on the menu.”
At the time, the kind of food Mantuano was cooking—
ingredient-driven regional Italian food—hadn’t been seen before in
Chicago or, for that matter, most of the United States. Instead of
spaghetti with the obligatory meatballs, Mantuano was serving
squid-ink pasta. People were perplexed. But Mantuano, a large
man with a large presence, kept calm. And calm, I observe in my
time with him in his kitchen, is what allowed Mantuano to steer
the ship through those initial choppy waters, to help build
Spiaggia into a world-renowned dining destination, and to achieve a
status few others can claim: he’s President Obama’s favorite chef.
Unlike the chefs on TV who scream and shout, Mantuano
stands towering over the kitchen space and surveys it all with a
kindness and grace that seems out of place on a man of his stature.
He’s almost always grinning; he seems to regard the people and
activity around him with detached amusement.
That’s certainly the case with Spiaggia’s executive chef, Sarah
Grueneberg, who joins us when we get started in the kitchen. The