Sag Harbor Express

News / Sag Harbor Express / 2167986

Sag Harbor Restaurateur Jack Tagliasacchi Shares His Story at Sag Harbor Historical Museum

icon 2 Photos
Sag Harbor restaurateur Jack Tagliasacchi spoke to a large crowd at the Sag Harbor Historical Museum on Sunday. STEPHEN J. KOTZ

Sag Harbor restaurateur Jack Tagliasacchi spoke to a large crowd at the Sag Harbor Historical Museum on Sunday. STEPHEN J. KOTZ

Sag Harbor restaurateur Jack Tagliasacchi spoke to a large crowd at the Sag Harbor Historical Museum on Sunday. STEPHEN J. KOTZ

Sag Harbor restaurateur Jack Tagliasacchi spoke to a large crowd at the Sag Harbor Historical Museum on Sunday. STEPHEN J. KOTZ

authorStephen J. Kotz on Jun 14, 2023

Achille “Jack” Tagliasacchi said that shortly after he opened Il Capuccino Ristorante in 1973, a New York food critic wrote that “when people discover it, they will line up to the end of the block.”

Like the crowd that soon overflowed his restaurant, Tagliasacchi entertained a standing-room-only audience at the Sag Harbor Historical Museum’s “Fifty Years in Sag Harbor’s Restaurants” on Sunday.

The talk, part of the museum’s “On the Porch series,” took place the museum’s Annie Cooper Boyd House.

Tagliasacchi, who retains his thick Italian accent, said that after World War II, he dreamed of moving to the United States. Trained as an accountant, Tagliasacchi, who admitted he disliked the profession, first moved to Argentina in 1952, where he found work as, of course, an accountant.

But not long afterward, he was able to buy a restaurant that was situated on the Pan American Highway and fortunate to have a large parking lot across the road. It became a regular stop for the truckers who hauled produce to Buenos Aires.

In 1958, thanks to the sponsorship of a brother-in-law in California, Tagliasacchi moved to Miami, where he quickly found work. With a new family, he also needed to buy a house and found one for $11,900. “Nowadays, that doesn’t buy a pair of shoes,” he said.

It was also in Miami that Tagliasacchi earned the nickname “Jack.” It was bestowed on him by a chef with whom he interviewed who could not pronounce his first name, Achille. He then asked, ‘“What is your last name?’” Tagliasacchi said. “He thought I had an easy last name.” Unable to pronounce that name as well, the chef asked, “Can I call you Jack?” and the name stuck.

After five years in Miami, Tagliasacchi moved to New York and soon found a job at the Canoe Place Inn in Hampton Bays, where, on opening night under new management, his kitchen staff served 800 people buffet style.

“I had a good time, I was happy, I was doing well,” he said. “I loved to mingle with people. I loved to see people smiling when the food was served.”

While at Canoe Place Inn, Tagliasacchi met Frank Barry, co-owner with his brother Bob Barry of Baron’s Cove in Sag Harbor. Barry offered Tagliasacchi the job of managing the inn’s restaurant, which was being expanded.

He pointed out familiar faces in the crowd of about 100 people who worked with them. “We had a lot of fun,” he said. “We worked very hard.”

Cocktail hour at Baron’s Cove was legendary. “If you were somebody, you were there for cocktail hour between 5 and 7,” Tagliasacchi recalled — and sometimes longer. That’s because the imposing bartender launched a tradition that if someone said he wanted to buy a drink, he would set them up for everybody at the bar. “Sometimes they would have three glasses in front of them.”

Although Sag Harbor was still a rough-and-tumble town in the mid-1960s, Tagliasacchi said Baron’s Cove had its share of celebrities. One time, Tagliasacchi recounted, a waiter approached him in the kitchen to inform him that he thought he recognized someone in the restaurant. “I think these people are in show business or something,” the waiter said. “I sort of recognize him.”

It turned out to be Frank Sinatra, who had come by boat and stopped in for dinner with his entourage.

Besides the author John Steinbeck, a seasonal regular was Paul Newman, who raced cars at the Bridge Race Circuit and stayed at Baron’s Cove with his crew. Newman, who was famously married to the actress Joanne Woodward for 50 years, would make it a point to say hello to the women who gathered outside the restaurant to see him, Tagliasacchi said.

Running a restaurant is like conducting an orchestra, Tagliasacchi said. “You have to make sure everyone is on his part at the right moment.”

Speaking of Il Capuccino, he said despite its small size, the kitchen could turn out 250 meals on a typical evening.

“You’d be amazed, really surprised,” he said, “and the question how can the people do it?” The answer, he added, is “people are crazy.”

Tagliasacchi, who went on to open Il Monastero restaurant in East Hampton, said that he always loved working in restaurants.

“I never felt like I went to work,” he said. “It felt like work when I was working as an accountant.”

Tagliasacchi, who pointed out family and friends in the audience, said he was proud to have helped so many young people pay for their college educations by working in his restaurants.

“I’m very grateful to be part of this community,” he said. “This community welcomed me, a little foreign boy from Italy, with open arms.”

You May Also Like:

Sag Harbor Receives $1.8 Million Grant for Sewer Project

Sag Harbor Village has secured a $1,795,219 grant from the Southampton Town Community Preservation Fund’s Water Quality Improvement Plan that will help it cover a shortfall in its funding to extend sewer lines. “Even though the project is already underway, the town has been willing to help,” said Trustee Aidan Corish, who has overseen the grant writing and planning for the sewer expansion project. “They appreciate the fact that the village is committed to the project.” The village has been planning the expansion for several years, with the goal of using excess capacity at the plant, which mainly serves commercial ... 25 Nov 2025 by Stephen J. Kotz

Estia's Little Kitchen Placed on the Market

Estia’s Little Kitchen, a tiny restaurant with a big clientele, has been put up for ... by Stephen J. Kotz

Sag Harbor Businesses To Launch 'Sag Saturdays' Promotional Effort

A group of Sag Harbor business owners have teamed up to launch a monthly promotion ... by Stephen J. Kotz

DA: Fourteen Charged in Suffolk Porch Pirate Scheme

Fourteen members of a “porch pirate” ring that targeted many Suffolk County communities, including Sag Harbor and Montauk, have been indicted for enterprise corruption and related charges, District Attorney Ray Tierney announced on Monday. The criminal network used insider tracking data to steal electronic devices from residences and businesses, according to the district attorney’s office, which said the charges stem from a two-year investigation into thefts that occurred between October 2023 and February 2025. “For two years, this alleged porch pirate ring plagued our community and built a criminal enterprise on the backs of Suffolk families and businesses,” Tierney said ... 24 Nov 2025 by Brendan J. O’Reilly

Bonac Swimmers Earn More Personal Bests Upstate

The contingent of four girls who represented the East Hampton/Pierson/Bridgehampton girls swim team at the ... by Drew Budd

Thankful, and Not

Thanksgiving is synonymous with harvest. Reaping what you have sown, you walk across the threshold of the field, your machete idle but ready to swing, to neatly lob off a head of broccoli. The level of satisfaction is hard to replicate in layman’s terms, somewhere between basketball’s slam dunk and capturing the flag. Harvest is what gave us some primordial ease, that the dark, cold months will not be hungry ones. The ancient discovery that successful agriculture could offer its practitioners self-reliance — to a degree — is what set us on the path to discovering other things, like gratefulness. ... by Marilee Foster

End the Tyranny

Re: “Sound Familiar?” [Letters, November 6]: Yes, it sounds familiar. I have been giving a lecture called “The Tyranny of Landscaping” for 30 years in over 200 venues across Long Island. The “tyranny” is as follows: First, it’s complete and utter ecosystem destruction. Next comes the turf grass, along with trees and shrubs from other parts of the world that need life support to live here. Next, it’s the pesticides, the water use, the emissions, and then that damned life-ruining noise of the !+@%”*#*^*! “Infernal Gadgets” [Letters, November 13] — leaf blowers! Why? What is wrong with us? Why are ... by Staff Writer

Q&A: Dr. Marc Siegel's New Book, Written in Sag Harbor, Explores Miracles in Medicine and Science

Dr. Marc Siegel ended up as a Sag Harbor homeowner — and it was kind ... by Joseph P. Shaw

Sag Harbor Receives Town Grant for Marine Waste Collection

Along with a nearly $1.8 million grant for sewer line extension work, Sag Harbor Village has received a $78,816 grant from Southampton Town’s Community Preservation Fund Water Quality Improvement Plan to cover the cost of removing the waste collected by pump-out boats from boats visiting the village harbor. “The role and efficiency of the pump-out boat is a key piece of our program to promote clean water and adhere to the no-discharge regulations,” said Village Trustee Jeanne Kane, who oversees the village docks as part of her responsibilities on the Village Board. The village currently contracts with Quackenbush Cesspools Inc. ... by Stephen J. Kotz

Evelyn Ramunno To Step Down as Sag Harbor Community Food Pantry Director

Evelyn Ramunno, the face of the Sag Harbor Community Food Pantry, where she has been ... by Stephen J. Kotz