On October 14, 2020

Taso on Center braces for winter

To-go meals all packed and ready.

Area restaurants face uncertainty and challenges due to Covid restrictions and approaching cold weather

By Brooke Geery

Downtown Rutland restaurants, including Taso on Center (22 Center St.), took full advantage of the warm weather and additional outdoor seating possibilities this summer in order to stay afloat amid Covid restrictions. But now, as winter approaches, a new strategy is required.

“We are not in normal times,” Taso owner Jay Sabataso said. “We are adapting and thinking outside the box. The seating downtown has been awesome outside, we’ve had good weather and the Downtown Partnership has been great, but the weather shifts and the outdoor seating is done.”

In the early days of Covid, Taso was active in helping the community. They donated all their draft beer proceeds to the community cupboard and donated lots of meals to feed people at the hospital and nursing homes, as well as police and firefighters. Over the summer, they did everything possible to maintain a sense of normalcy.

Meals for the staff of Mountain View Center.

“We tried to stay with local entertainment, even though we don’t have enough business to support it, we continue to have local artists just to make it feel more normal,” Sabataso said.

The live entertainment did help to bring in more young diners, and though the restaurant has been consistently busy, at 50% capacity it is hardly enough to make ends meet. Sabataso also noticed far more small parties — lots of two tops instead of big groups— and tables turning over only once, or not at all, versus two to three times per night as usual. The biggest decrease is in diners in the 60+ age range.

“I think the over 60 population is afraid to go out,” Sabataso said. “I think there’s less people around. I think everyone is working a lot harder to make a lot less.”

One of the biggest changes for Taso this winter is offering its food through delivery services such as DoorDash and Uber Eats. “It’s something I’ve never thought I’d want to partner with, but we are missing such a large part of the operation,” Sabataso said.

Feeding our firefighters.

With more focus on food-to-go, Taso also plans to add complete family dinners-to-go. They’ve also converted the small restaurant events space to dining to accommodate seating. These changes have come with additional costs. To keep up, Taso hired four new employees, and made technology upgrades as well. This is in addition to increased prices on everything from food to cleaning supplies.

Sabataso has added a list of responsibilities to his own job description. He is cleaning the restaurant himself, spending extra time to ensure everything everything is cleaned according to CDC and state guidelines. And he’s already looking towards next spring, when Taso will add 40 seats with a covered deck out the back of the restaurant. But first, they will have to survive the winter.

“We are in it for the long haul, knowing it’s not gonna be easy,” he said. “We have partnered with a lot of different area groups and restaurants. Everyone is in the same boat, there’s no right or wrong way, we’re all trying to figure it out right now. It’s certainly challenging. Unfortunately I think we’ll lose more restaurants during the winter. It’s really difficult to do business right now. ”

The best way to help Taso or any of your favorite local restaurants is to go out and eat or order in. “I would like to thank everyone in the community for their continued support and to remember to shop local this year,” Sabataso concluded. “This is the year to support your neighbors.”

Cammy Errington performs.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Camp Sangamon offers local boys an affordable, unforgettable summer adventure in the Vermont outdoors

June 4, 2025
By James Kent Just 10 minutes north of Rutland, tucked into the hills of Pittsford, Camp Sangamon offers a summer camp experience that feels like it stepped out of a storybook—treehouses, blacksmithing, sailboats on a shared pond, and cabins dating back to the 1950s. Since 1922, boys from across the country have spent their summers…

Education bill hits an impasse, Legislature to reconvene mid-June

June 4, 2025
By Shaun Robinson and Ethan Weinstein/VTDigger After a drawn-out day of disagreements and false starts, the Vermont Legislature bailed on its plan to wrap up business for the year on Friday, May 30, failing to come to a deal, at least for now, on this year’s landmark education reform bill. So strained were the talks, the House and…

MVSU braces for impact of education funding reform, weighs pros and cons of PCB testing

June 4, 2025
By Polly Mikula The agenda was jam-packed at the final Mountain Views Supervisory Union (MVSU) board meeting of the school year, Monday, June 2. The nearly 3-hour meeting covered a spectrum of issues, but two will have far-reaching implications for the district’s future: namely, the impact of education funding reform on the district’s budget and…

How Killington became The Beast Part 13

June 4, 2025
By Karen D. Lorentz Editors’ Note: This is part of a series on factors that enabled Killington to become the Beast of the East. Information is from author interviews for the book Killington, “A Story of Mountains and Men.” The rapid learning with GLM was made possible in part by the use of top-of-the-line equipment.…