The Restaurant
Tramonti opened on East Atlantic Avenue in 2003 and has been the city's traditional Italian flagship ever since. The dining room is unapologetically classical — white linens, low lighting, polished wood, framed prints of the Amalfi Coast — and runs at a tempo that European diners will recognise immediately: nothing rushed, multiple courses encouraged, the captain working the floor with quiet authority.
The kitchen is regional Italian without the modern-Italian flag-waving. The pasta is made daily on premise: a lobster ravioli that has been the signature dish since opening, a saffron risotto with shrimp and saffron pistils, a hand-rolled gnocchi al pomodoro. Mains run the full range — veal Milanese, osso buco, a whole branzino filleted tableside, a 12oz veal chop. The wine list runs over four hundred bottles weighted heavily toward central and southern Italy, with a strong Brunello and Barolo programme and a handful of older Tuscan trophies for big-night ordering.
Service is the differentiator. Long-tenured captains know the menu, the cellar, and the regulars. Special-request dishes are accommodated quietly. Birthdays are marked with a small ceremony — a candle on the tiramisu, a discreet round of prosecco — without theatrical excess. For a long Italian dinner with a date or visiting parents, Tramonti is the address that delivers the European format with American attentiveness.
Why This Is Delray Beach’s First Date Pick
For a first date that wants the classical romance setting without trying too hard, Tramonti hits the formula precisely. The room is dim enough to be intimate, the captain-led service creates structure (you do not have to manage the meal), and the pace is slow enough to give the conversation real space. Italian dining is a forgiving frame — neither party is overcommitted by the choice — and the wine list lets the host show care without ostentation. The tableside-filleted branzino is a small piece of theatre that gives the evening a shared moment.
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