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Sue Kidd is the Lifestyle Editor at The News Tribune and the ringleader for the Food and Home&Garden sections. She has worked as a food journalist at Northwest newspapers since 1993, most recently as a food writer, editor and restaurant reviewer in King County before joining The News Tribune in 2004. Her food obsessions at the moment are honey, cheese and oysters.

Craig Sailor is the Arts&Entertainment editor at The News Tribune. He grew up on a garlic farm near Gilroy, Calif. and now farms oysters in his spare time at Willapa Bay. He’s traveled the world from Kyoto/Kuala Lumpur/Hong Kong to Zanzibar in search of great food.

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Good eats and drinks around Tacoma, Pierce County and South Puget Sound
Friday, August 22nd, 2008
Posted by Sue Kidd @ 06:17:22 am

Here is today's Drop-In Dining report from today's GO section. Drop-In Dining is a continuing series where a TNT staffer drops in unannounced and eats on the TNT's dime, then writes up a report about the experience. Have a restaurant you would like us to check out? Email tntdiner@thenewstribune.com.

Flying Tomato Italian Grill
10224 198th St. E., Graham; 253-875-0770.
Hours: Open 11:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Mondays-Thursdays, 11:30 am.-10 p.m. Fridays, noon-10 p.m. Saturdays and noon-9 p.m. Sundays.

By Bill Hutchens
bill.hutchens@thenewstribune.com

The Scene: Cozy hearth-cafe dining meets trendy pasta kitchen. The one-room dining area is dimly lit but warm, quiet and inviting.

Type of food: Tuscany reinvented. Dishes range from build-your-own wood fired “pisas” ($11.99-$20.99) to fancy schmancy seafood and steak (with pasta, of course). All of the basic – and many not-so-basic – pasta dishes ($11.99-$19.99) are here, too, so you can order your spaghetti and meatballs or tricolor tortellini or go for the Marco Polo, fettuccine alfredo with white shrimp and scallops.

Menu highlights: The Flat-Iron Steak ($24.99) is served with sun-dried tomato steak butter, rigatoni and mizithra cheese (add caramelized onions and mushrooms or marsala wine for $3). And the Wood-fired Honey Smoked Salmon Fettuccine ($18.99) comes with huge chunks of tender honeyed salmon. The Dessert Trilogy ($9.99) is a sampling of cannolis, tiramisu and a dessert-of-the-month (currently a lemon sorbet) – or sub in some spumoni.

People in the kitchen: Owner and chef Gary Walker was a part-owner of popular University Place eatery Mama Stortini’s. He moved with that restaurant to Puyallup before he sold his shares to another partner, took some time off and then started up the Tomato. Born in Italy, he learned his culinary ethics from his mother, who could “make something out of nothing,” he said. The Tomato is closer to home, smaller and easier to manage, he said, and almost everything is made from scratch. “It’s comfort food,” he added, “with great tasting flavors and great family value.”

Dishes sampled: Our Flat-Iron Steak was tender and juicy at medium rare. And, as mentioned, the large bites of honey-smoked salmon overwhelmed the fettuccine – in a good way. The Flying Famous Cheese Bread ($7.99) and the toasted sun-dried tomato ravioli filled with smoked gouda ($7.99) were favorites from the appetizer menu. And our big fat calzone ($9.99) was “the biggest fattest calzone ever,” according to one young member of our group.

Service: Fast (really fast) and friendly. Our server took care of several full tables at once but was absolutely on-the-spot with beverages, appetizers, main dishes and stuff we didn’t think to ask for (such as extra napkins and extra butter for the bread).

Most unexpected moment: When the “dishes” came out, they were more like platters, piled high with pasta, even when pasta was the secondary component of a meal.

Wild card: After your meal, spin the big wheel at the front desk to win a free menu item for your next visit. For a while, Gary said, his dark humor got the best of him, and the wheel had a “You Lose” segment. Hitting that spot earned spinners a $5 gift certificate to Olive Garden.

Pictured here is Owner, Chef, General Manager Gary Walker with one of his signature dishes, lasagna. (Darren Breen / The News Tribune)

Categories: Drop-In Dining reports 8 comments

COMMENTS:

Olemag @ 22:53 - Saturday, August 23rd, 2008 Email
My daughter and I had lunch today at Toscanos. It is on Main Street in Puyallup, just before the bridge into Sumner. Tom Pantley is still one of the best cooks in the Northwest. His wife, Cynthia, makes the soups. Today it was a creamy pumpkin coconut. She also makes the melt-in-your-mouth cheesecakes and chocolate truffles. The Angel hair pasta with chicken breast and cilantro was supurb. Lots of warm Italian sourdough bread to dip in balsamic vinegar and olive oil. Two weeks ago I took my guests from New York City to Toscanos and they claimed it was the best meal they had eaten on the west coast. The service is excellent. They have a full bar and outdoor eating area that is nice on warm days. PLenty of parking and nice handicapped equipped restrooms.
Olemag @ 16:36 - Sunday, August 24th, 2008 Email
Missed one ingredient in Toscanos great soup. It was curry? It was lip-macking good too.
Darrin4x4 @ 17:58 - Sunday, August 24th, 2008 Email
How rude, your comments have nothing to do with the article or resturuant featured...
Ray Brassard @ 21:46 - Sunday, August 24th, 2008 Email
Flying Tomato is a great place to eat. Really filling a need for good restaurants in the South Hill/Graham market. Warm and friendly staff with a really good selection on the menu. The Flying Tomato is also becoming a huge community presence by sponsoring and supporting local athletics and schools. Thanks for all that you do Gary!
Olemag @ 10:09 - Monday, August 25th, 2008 Email
Darren, the TNT article states specifically "Have a restaurant you would like us to check out? Mail to TNT Diner, etc..." My comments about Toscanos directly addressed their request. Learn to spell restaurant first, then be insulting and rude second. Same applies to my earlier comments about Coconut Thai.
NorthEndJustin @ 13:40 - Monday, August 25th, 2008 Email
Olemag,

Actually the comment at the top said "Email" the News Tribune if you had an idea, not post a review for another restaurant in the comment section.

I agree with Darrin4x4 100%.
tfowler @ 15:52 - Monday, August 25th, 2008 Email
If you are giving spelling lessons, 'supurb' is actually superb.
rivitman @ 09:57 - Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 Email
Domani?
Roselli?
Arrezio?

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