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Top Denver Italian Restaurant, Food Hall Expand to Vail

Some familiar Mile High staples are now serving in the high country.
Image: Pizza, ramen and other dishes from Avanti Vail vendors
Five vendors operate within Avanti’s new Golden Peak outpost. Max Ritter

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Toss aside the pocket bacon. There are better ways to dine at Colorado’s ski resorts this season — particularly in the Town of Vail. Over the past few months, this destination has welcomed several new restaurants, many of which built their brands in the metro area. They include Tavernetta, one of the best Italian eateries in Denver, and Avanti Food & Beverage which, in turn, brought Boychik and Glo Noodle House to the high country.

None of these Denver-based concepts had previously expanded outside the Front Range. So what made Vail the next target, despite its distance from home base? In many ways, it came down to the restaurants' excellent reputations and partnerships with the powers that be.

Four Seasons Resort Vail tapped Tavernetta

Over the past couple of years, Frasca Hospitality Group has surpassed one milestone after another. In 2024, Frasca Food and Wine celebrated its twentieth anniversary in Boulder and retained its Michelin star. Now, it's a 2025 James Beard semifinalist for Outstanding Restaurant. The openings of Pizzeria Alberico in Boulder and Osteria Alberico in Englewood have broadened the company’s fine dining portfolio, which also includes Sunday Vinyl and Tavernetta, both located at Union Station.

On December 16, a second Tavernetta restaurant debuted within the Four Seasons Resort Vail, marking the company’s first foray outside of the metro area. “We chose Vail because Vail, in a way, chose us," says Frasca Hospitality Group founder Bobby Stuckey. 

When Four Seasons was established in the ski town fifteen years ago, it had a resort-operated signature restaurant, Flame. Jerome Arribas, general manager at Four Seasons Vail, explains that while renovating the concept was an option, many of the enterprise’s other properties have teamed up with local businesses. After all, there’s power in partnership.
click to enlarge A leafly salad and tomato-based pasta dish from Tavernetta Vail
Discover new and familiar dishes at Tavernetta Vail.
Charles Townsend
Arribas was tasked with identifying a restaurant collaborator, and he considered several. But early on, he knew intuitively that Tavernetta was the right fit. “It was obvious that from a cultural standpoint, we were very aligned," he affirms.

Stuckey agrees: “It was as natural as two companies coming together could be.”

The Italian restaurant seamlessly fits into the village’s Tyrolean ambiance (inspired by Vail Resort co-founder Pete Seibert’s time serving in the 10th Mountain Division). Like the flagship location, Tavernetta Vail spotlights several regions of Italian cuisine but puts a greater emphasis on the northern Italian Alps with dishes like canederli — humble bread dumplings made rich with brown butter and speck.

From 3 to 5 p.m. daily, the slopeside restaurant also offers an Après-tivo menu featuring Italian wines and signature cocktails. With the exception of caviar service, the small plates closely mirror those of Tavernetta Denver’s happy hour — think creamy burrata atop Sicilian tomato pesto, crispy arancini, and comforting cacio e pepe sprinkled with pecorino Romano. “I think the recipes are magic for the location,” says Arribas. “There's something about a warm pasta and a glass of wine that makes après ski special.”

Additionally, Tavernetta Vail is the first within the Frasca group to offer breakfast. The selection is elegant and impressively balanced, catering to an American palate but unquestionably influenced by Italian fare. Light dishes like scrambled eggs with crème fraîche appear alongside a prosciutto Benedict with brown butter Hollandaise and an alpine omelet laden with gruyere, potatoes, bacon and goat cheese.
click to enlarge A table within Tavernetta Vail, featuring wood seating and earth tones
Tavernetta Vail embraces a mountain modern interior with warm, organic textures.
Charles Townsend
Tavernetta wrote the menu, oversaw staff training and continues to meet with Four Seasons Vail weekly and on a regular in-person basis, Stuckey notes. However, the resort runs day-to-day operations and through this partnership, the Frasca group workers who moved to Vail became Four Seasons employees. They include former Frasca sous chef Ethan Diamant, who stepped into the role of chef de cuisine; Michael Katzen, who was also at Frasca, now works as the assistant manager at Tavernetta Vail. Rylan Bonaccorsi, formerly employed at Tavernetta Denver, is the senior sommelier at the new location.

As for any other expansion plans, Stuckey says, “We don't have an arc in our offices saying, ‘This is where we want to be next year with another two restaurants.’ We don't do it that way. We do it more based on when we have the team that inspires us to grow.

“It would be much easier for me just to have one little Frasca on Pearl Street and not have all the other restaurants," he continues. "But as you evolve, you have team members who want different experiences; they want different growth. My job is to provide a path where people can grow within our company.”
click to enlarge The lodge-inspired exterior of Avanti Vail and its spacious patio, featuring green communal tables
Like its Denver and Boulder locations, Avanti Vail features a large outdoor space with a view.
Amber Boutwell

Vail Resorts approached Avanti

Avanti Food & Beverage has steadily expanded since opening in Denver nearly a decade ago. It launched its Boulder outpost on Pearl Street in 2020, recently announced major renovations to its flagship location in LoHi, and debuted its newest food hall in Vail on December 23.

As with the Frasca team, this is Avanti’s first venture outside the metro area. The company had been eyeing spaces in the mountains, as all three owners have ties to the High Rockies. Patrick O'Neill founded the Club, a now-shuttered bar that operated in Vail for 25 years. Rob Hahn lives in Edwards and previously worked in Aspen, as did Travis Christ at the Hotel Jerome.

The right opportunity came around two years ago when Vail Resorts approached Avanti in hopes that it could help revitalize the Golden Peak area. Although that's just a five-minute walk east of Vail Village and is often used by locals to access the mountain, Golden Peak has struggled to pull in the traffic attracted by the town’s main hub.

But that didn’t deter Avanti from signing a lease on its new, 10,000-square-foot location. “In Vail, you really can't beat that space, with the patio at the base of the mountain — it’s essentially ski-in, ski-out,” says Christ, who is also Avanti's director of operations.

The space had been occupied by Larkspur for nearly 25 years. “It was more of a fine dining, white tablecloth restaurant,” notes Christ. He praises its legacy and former chef Thomas Salamunovich, but suggests that it was similar to many other local dining options.
click to enlarge Three women in ski gear toasting cocktails on Avanti Vail's patio
Late-night hours make Avanti unique to the Golden Peak area.
Amber Boutwell
In Vail, Avanti breaks the mold by requiring no reservations, catering to large groups and offering free validated parking from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily, as well as complimentary parking after 5 p.m. Additionally, it serves full meals for under $20 and beer for as little as $6 a pint, which is a steal in the ritzy resort town.

At each Avanti food hall, pizza and burgers are standard provisions. Powder Crust Pizza and Backyard Burgers check those boxes in Vail, but there are also more familiar names. “When we open a new location, we really like to bring one of our OGs,” explains Christ. Quiero Arepas, for example, saw success at Avanti Denver before opening a second counter in Boulder.

This time, Boychik was the chosen one. The Middle Eastern and Mediterranean concept debuted at Avanti Boulder when the food hall first opened and has since launched a full-service restaurant inside Stanley Marketplace. Now, it has its first operation outside the Front Range.

Boychik’s Avanti stalls offer similar menus, but Vail has a larger selection of small, sharable bites. Options like marinated feta, turmeric pickled cauliflower and urfa biber-spiced nuts can be ordered individually or as a full mezze platter. The Vail location also features a vertical rotisserie with lamb gyro while another spins chicken shawarma, adding to the selection of proteins served in pita wraps and hummus bowls.

Although Boychik had an existing relationship with Avanti, this expansion hinged on a crucial factor: Who could be trusted to run the show while the co-owners, Charles Troup and Joel Chase-Devitt, remained in Denver? Fortunately, a close friend in the food and beverage industry, Joey Woodwell, happened to be keen on moving to Vail. Following three months of training at the Stanley Marketplace restaurant, he’s now the operating partner and executive chef at the Vail outpost.

“With [Joey] as the core, we felt comfortable moving forward. We really believe that a business doesn't work without great people involved,” says Troup. “If you treat people really well, invest in their success and act with integrity, you build a network of people who want to continue to do business with you.”

Those principles have brought about several growth opportunities for Boychik. Often, Troup and Chase-Devitt graciously pass — but not in the case of Avanti Vail. Ariana Teigland, who co-owns Glo Noodle House with her husband, Chris, mirrors this sentiment.
click to enlarge A person holding a pair of chopsticks, lifting up noodles from a Glo ramen bowl
Glo hired a former Larkspur chef to oversee its Vail outpost.
Amber Boutwell
“A lot of opportunities come our way. We don't take all of them. This one just made a whole lot of sense. After a long day of skiing, you want a big, hot bowl of soup,” she says, noting that even Glo's Denver location on Tennyson Street draws an après crowd.

According to Teigland, Vail's ramen offerings are limited and Avanti aimed to fill that need. The deal came about quickly: O'Neill and his wife dined at Glo this past fall, she recalls, and after just a couple of conversations, paperwork was in progress.

Those familiar with the Michelin Bib Gourmand restaurant will recognize some items on the truncated Vail menu, such as its umami-rich shoyu chicken broth and flavorful pork broth, which take 48 hours to prepare. But dish components have been reworked to create what is largely a brand-new menu. Warm up with an order of tonkotsu ramen topped with chashu pork or opt for the spicy vegetarian bowl made with roasted mushrooms and bok choy. Glo at Avanti Vail also has a larger selection of temaki — sushi-like hand rolls filled with yuzu salmon, yellowtail and other seafood options.

Surprisingly, Teigland says that compared to its Denver location, prices are a bit lower in Vail. “There's much less overhead that we have to deal with,” she explains, adding that the approachable price point will hopefully draw locals and the ski resort’s lunch crowd.

But Avanti aims to attract visitors at all hours. It's open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday through Wednesday, and 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Thursday through Saturday.

“People weren't thinking of Golden Peak as a nighttime destination,” comments Christ. But with major sports on multiple screens, live DJ sets and a slopeside bar serving late into the night, Avanti is set to become one of the state’s best après-ski spots.