Hours
Open Today:
12:00pm-9:30pm
Monday4:30pm
-9:30pm
Tuesday4:30pm
-9:30pm
Wednesday4:30pm
-9:30pm
Thursday4:30pm
-9:30pm
Friday12:00pm
-9:30pm
Saturday12:00pm
-9:30pm
Sunday12:00pm
-9:30pm
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Restaurant Details
Delivery
No
Payment
Credit Cards Accepted
Parking
Valet, Street
Good for Kids
No
Attire
Dressy casual
Alcohol
Yes - Full Bar
Reservations
Yes
Cuisines:
Italian
Price Point
$$$
$ - Cheap Eats (Under $10)
$$ - Moderate ($11-$25)
$$$ - Expensive ($25-$50)
$$$$ - Very Pricey (Over $50)
WiFi
No
Outdoor Seats
No
Restaurant Description
Nestled among the antique shops, boutiques and cafes along Beacon Hill's famous Charles Street, Toscano Restaurant remains a staple of Boston's oldest neighborhood. Launching into its 25th year with new owners and a new design, this Boston favorite provides a perfect European landscape in which to enjoy a traditional Tuscan meal. At Toscano, inspiration is born from the wonderful Tuscan tradition of simple, delicious, homegrown flavors.
Restaurant Photos
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Reviews for Toscano Restaurant
#24 out of 187 restaurants in Beacon Hill
#4 of 11 Italian in Beacon Hill
Top Reviews of Toscano Restaurant
12/23/2007 - Foodophile
I think I have tried almost every restaurant that features Tuscan food. And finally I have found the motherlode. Homemade pastas, great grilled meats, fantastic and affordable wine lists, attentive servers--and an wonderful choice of informal and formal seating. What more could one ask for. Authentic and rare.
07/09/2006 - John
An intimate café and small lounge opens onto a secluded dining area where chef Vinicio Paoli serves soups, salads, pasta, and meat dishes that are meant to be enjoyed leisurely. The oak charcoal grill turns out beef, pork, veal, and Cornish hen.
No place else in Boston captures the simplicity and lack of fuss of real country Italian food, specifically food from Tuscany. That's because nowhere else is run by northern Italians who know how plain that food is. Florence-born chef Vinicio Paoli shuns trends, so don't expect overly decorated plates or nouvelle touches. Do expect properly prepared risotto, feather-light pastas, and Tuscan specialties such as charcoal-grilled sirloin that Paoli ages himself and cacciucco (a seafood stew in spicy tomato sauce and fish stock).
Real Italian food isn't about layering precious specialty ingredients into one impressive dish. It's about honest, simple ingredients that spotlight intense flavors. So it is at Toscano, Charles Street's beloved tribute to Northern Italy. The space, divided by brick walls hung with cooking instruments, antique maps, and hand painted plates, is rustic Tuscan through and through. As is the welcome. And the food. Chef Vinicio Paoli whips up such traditionalist as vitello tonnato, roasted veal sliced thin as a dime and smothered with fresh tuna sauce, and a risotto that highlights nothing more complicated than earthy, meaty wild porcini.