Dieci closed at the end of September on East 10th Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue. EVG regular Blueglass notes that the space has been cleaned out.
The owners took to Facebook to post a brief goodbye message: "Unfortunately Dieci has closed its business. We hope to open again in the near future. Thank you for your patronage and we will keep you updated."
The owner and chef here are Japanese, but they served Italian fare that critics found interesting.
Dieci opened in this small, subterranean space in 2006.
7 comments:
Nooooo!! I never went, but would always stop and see their menu outside, salivate over the interesting ingredient combinations, and walk away thinking maybe for a special occasion, as it was a bit pricey for a casual drop in. That never happened : / --- its a real shame these resto's can't stay open that want to. They are not trying to strike it dirty rich just live a personal dream and ambition. Rip, hope they boomerang back or find future successes.
Oh nooooo! This place was awesome for date night with the wife. Their spicy ramen lamb bolognese was fantastic.
Sad to see another good restaurant go
It was delicious! They made the Italian and Japanese traditions blend very naturally.
that's unfortunate. dieci was definitely one of the best in the EV! it was a good alternative to basta pasta who is also rumored to shutter
Dieci you will be missed... :(
This is truly bad news and unexpected. Food, ambiance and service were all spot on. No other restaurant in NYC felt more welcoming and at the same time served such an amazing combination of Italian and Japanese with such unique ingredients. I went to Dieci for 5 years and I used to live on that block. I no longer live in NYC but every time I visit, I go to Dieci. It will be missed for sure.
This was one of the greatest restaurants of all time. So sad to see that it has remained closed. I held out hope it might re-open somewhere else. Every dish was perfection with a take on the much overdone "fusion" that was so truly refined yet unpretentious. I could not believe the ingredients Dieci kept stocked every night, at the price points they had (which made it possible to return on the regular, not just for a special occasion). Here you could enjoy the best seared foie gras, sweet uni, and delicate seafood, with the most perfect homemade pastas and fluffy gnocchi that the city could offer for pennies compared to some hyped up avocado-"trend"-restaurant and in the most hidden and seemingly secret and intimate of settings. The staff paid painstaking attention to detail, positioning silverware ever so precisely atop beautiful handmade papers between every single course.
It was this passion, love, refinement, and intention that made Dieci so special. I knew the whole menu by heart and nearly every dish was among my favorites in the city. The uni fettuccine, the crab gnocchi, the truffled black cod, the sesame rack of lamb, the beautiful steak tartare. Every dish delivered the best of eastern and western flavors, precisely paired and balanced without any gimmicks. It was indisputably good. It was the only place in New York I returned to often enough that the staff always knew my name. They would extend a courteous nod upon my entrance along with a personal welcome, and I always wanted to say if only you knew how truly my loyalty was earned there. Every meal had never been short of absolutely perfect. When I found out they closed, I felt I had lost a dear friend.
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