As Denver’s great chefs go, so goes the city’s fine-dining scene—at least in the case of Sapore Prime Italian, which debuted in Littleton this past March. The kitchen is helmed by Brent Turnipseede, who honed his chops (and filets and strips) at downtown’s Guard & Grace and West Highland’s American Elm before moving from the Mile High City to Littleton this spring. Since restaurateurs Terrence Gibbons and Daphnee Heiberg opened the upscale steak house—a rarity in the area—it has become a mainstay for fresh-made pastas and locally sourced meats prepared with elevated touches. Start with the beef carpaccio: Paper-thin slices of raw house cuts are drizzled with black garlic aïoli and watercress vinaigrette and accompanied by lacy Parmesan crisps. Then, indulge in a New York strip or Berkshire pork chop from Denver-based Buckhead Meats alongside tortellini filled with Grand Lake’s Mystic Mountain fungi and set atop a pool of mushroom brodo. Suburbanites can spend the gas money they saved by not commuting downtown on cocktails such as the raspberry-scented summer Negroni or a glass of Italian red or white from the well-curated wine list.

This article was originally published in 5280 September 2022.
Riane Menardi Morrison
Riane Menardi Morrison
Riane is 5280’s former digital strategy editor and assistant food editor. She writes food and culture content. Follow her at @riane__eats.