Sfuzzi
Multiple Locations: (Choose a location to see additional information)
Irving-Las ColinasSfuzzi 525 Meadow Creek Dr. Irving, TX 75039 |
UptownSfuzzi 2522 McKinney Ave. Dallas, TX 75205 |
Hours
- Sunday: 10 am-2 am
- Monday: 11 am-2 am
- Tuesday: 11 am-2 am
- Wednesday: 11 am-2 am
- Thursday: 11 am-3 am
- Friday: 11 am-3 am
- Saturday: 10 am-3 am
Special Features
- Afternoon Tea
- Breakfast All Day
- Brunch Menu
- Business Friendly
- Catering
- Delivery
- Dine at the Bar
- Extensive Beer List
- Extensive Wine List
- Fixed Price Menu
- Gluten-Free
- Happy Hour
- Kid Friendly
- Late Night Menu
- Live Music
- Open 24 Hours
- Outdoor Seating
- Private Dining
- Quiet
- Romantic
- Takeout
- Valet Parking
- Vegetarian Friendly
- Vegetarian Options
- Wheelchair Accessible
- Wi-fi
Alcohol
- Beer
- BYOB
- Full Bar
- Margaritas
- None
- Sake
- Sangria
- Wine
Reservations
- Accepted
- Not Accepted
- Recommended
- Required
- Make a Reservation
Payment Types
- American Express
- Cash
- Check
- Diner’s Club
- Discover
- MasterCard
- PayPal
- Traveler’s Check
- Visa
Profile
The Italian hot spot has made a comeback since its original opening on McKinney Avenue in 1987. For something that's both original and delectable, order the portobello mushroom fries with tomato-basil aioli. The patio offers prime viewing of the Uptown scene. Go for dinner; stay for cocktails. The bar stays open until 3 AM on weekends.
Full Reviews
Most Recent
Restaurant Review: Sfuzzi
By Teresa Gubbins
If you were alive during the ’80s, you probably don’t want to go back. But it wasn’t all oversize shoulder pads: there was Sfuzzi, which opened on McKinney Avenue in 1987, bringing upscale Italian, chic decor, and an incredible scene. Why wouldn’t restaurateur Robert Colombo want to revive that? Then again, decent thin-crust pizza isn’t as rare as it used to be, and the current wave of mixologized cocktails makes Sfuzzi’s trademark frozen Bellini seem quaint. Colombo himself has wised us up about Italian at his Villa-O restaurant, whose menu Sfuzzi mirrors, right down to the portabella mushroom fries. But Dallas can always use more good, fresh Italian. Like Eddie’s summer spaghetti: house-made noodles still laudably firm, tossed with artichokes, punchy bits of pancetta, and sweet cherry tomatoes. Or the egg and bacon pizza, its crust golden and toasty, topped with rumpled sheets of prosciutto, ribbons of fresh basil, and sunny-side eggs, oozing yolky richness. White bean bruschetta had a weirdly hammy flavor, and so did the servers. (Zing!) But the scene picks up right where it left off, with long waits for the patio, newly reconfigured to make the most of the dynamic L-shaped space that wraps around this prime McKinney Avenue spot—right across the street from where the old Sfuzzi was.
