When we were seven years old, we started
helping out: mopping floors, peeling potatoes, washing dishes," says
Lou Lanzi. "My parents always said, 'A little work will never
hurt you.'"
That simple approach has carried three generations
of Lanzis to success in the restaurant business.And nowhere can you
see the success more clearly than in Partner's Pub in Johnstown.
"Everythung's
Homemade" including the family's own salad dressing. "We've
had it since 1957," Chris Lanzi, executive chef, explains. "My
father had just opened up Lorenzo's, and he wanted something unique
to draw people in. My brother Lou first made up the dressing; my father
tasted it and said, 'Geez, it has potential.' It's kind of a creamy
Italian, but we threw a few other things into it, and there's really
not another one like it." Salad devotees can buy bottles of the
special dressing, not only at our restaurants, but also at Chatterbox
in Amsterdam - owned, naturally, by two Lanzi sisters.
The reward for such outstanding cuisine
comes from the patrons. "I get tons of comments," says Lou. "Just
last Friday, we served people from New York City that have a camp near
here. His job is entertaining clients in Manhattan, so he goes to all
the best restaurants. He told us our food was as good, if not better,
than any restaurant in Manhattan. That was quite a compliment."
Creating all this success began with the
ingredient that carries it to this day: hard work. "When our grandfather
came over from Rome, he worked on the railroad and in the carpet mills," Lou
recounts. "He worked two jobs because he wanted to own his own
business." In about three years, he realized that dream by buying
a small store. From that humble start, he eventually owned a Prohibition-era
speakeasy and Amsterdam's only banquet house complete with professional
boxing in the back room.
Growing up in those circumstances was Lorenzo,
who learned the trade at his father's restaurants and shared his entrepreneurial
spirit. "In the '50s, Dad wanted to get out on his own," Lou
says, "so he broke away and opened his own restaurant" -
the same Lorenzo's that still delights Amsterdam patrons. True to his
upbringing, Lorenzo set his own nine children to work in the new restaurant.
The result? His five sons: Lou, Chris, Tony, Joe and Larry now operate
Lanzi's on the Lake, Sport Island Pub and Partner's Pub not to mention
a flourishing off-premises catering business.
Even with this kind of success, the Lanzi
vision is not yet complete. The brothers have built a 300-seat lakeside
banquet hall to cover the increasing traffic in weddings and parties.
And then there's the work of passing on
the business to the next generation - a process that, according to
Lou, is already beginning. "My eight-year-old loves to be a waiter
- he puts the apron on, writes the specials down, takes water to the
tables, sets up. He's very serious about it. He said to me the other
day, 'Dad, how old do you have to be in order to be a busboy?' I said,
'Thirteen.' He said, 'Darn it!"'
Not to worry. His day will come - because
the Lanzi legacy should continue pleasing patrons for generations.