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Peter Brunel, put the Nikkei kitchen (but not only) a stone's throw from Garda – Italian Cuisine

Peter Brunel, put the Nikkei kitchen (but not only) a stone's throw from Garda


A few kilometers from Garda Trentino, the talented chef from Fassa is conquering gourmets with one of the most eclectic cuisine in Italy. With the extra touch of Nikkei vision, dear to him, and in a beautiful designer restaurant. We went to see him

Let's start with the surprise: to find in the menu of a restaurant on a "stradone" between Arco and Garda a tasting called Experience Nikkei is comparable to crossing the lake by kitesurfing after a one-hour course. It becomes doable clearly if your name is Peter Brunel and despite being Trentino doc (from Val di Fassa) you have a whimsical vision and a great cooking experience: on the subject, however, in 2014, at the service of the Lungarno Collection, launched the Nikkei Fusion Bar & Restaurant in Florence, in the light of his passion for Asia and Latin America. "With this restaurant I have made many little dreams come true," says Peter.

It opened a year ago

Back not far from home, thanks to a passionate entrepreneur such as Lorenzo Risatti, Brunel opened the sign that bears his name in a space of pure design, very bright and refined, with an international style. A real home, a place where Brunel can welcome guests with an informal and refined look at the same time. "To create the various areas, I worked alongside the architect, designing the tables and furniture. Then, I wanted to create a glass window framed like a large mirror, to show the pastry . They are 200 square meters, characterized by an elegant, smart and contemporary style, leaving nothing to chance. "For example, since the lake is one kilometer from the restaurant, I thought of creating a sort of swimming pool on sight, a pool that gives the sense of water, with three sails that are used to break the noise of the road and a waterfall, ”he explains.

A real home, elegant

A restaurant designed as a large apartment, with the intention of welcoming guests in different spaces depending on the gastronomic moment they experience, from a welcome drink to after dinner. Here then three areas, a living room and two rooms – the Gourmet and the Dehors overlooking the garden – in addition to the red and white wine cellar. An intimate space, characterized by the absence of doors and by many communicating environments, which are inspired by D'Annunzio's Vittoriale and the concept of pleasure. Velvets, designer light points, travel memories, but also colorful details and vegetal motifs surround the rooms and lounges complete with turntables, where guests are seated for a drink.

The three tasting

Let's go back to the kitchen. The 45-year-old Brunel is in a happy moment, and can be seen in the ability to propose dishes for three tasting menus, also allowing himself to hold a card with sixteen proposals that do not fit into it. The first is called The families of vegetables and the Garda olive, which should definitely be considered more like the green menu than the homage to the territory. The second is that of The great classics which allows you to taste again (or discover) many of Peter's excellent dishes, starting with the iconic Lofoten where three marinated anchovies arrive resting on a fennel breadstick held up by two supports, under sea water. The image recalls stockfish hung out to dry: the breadstick is broken with a fork and the anchovies fall into the "sea", in a game with a surprising taste. The third – incredible, considering where the restaurant is located – is theExperience Nikkei.

Trentino and Peru

It is one thing to be born in Lima and come to Italy preparing ceviche and tiradito for fans. Another is to be Italian and perhaps have done an internship in a large Peruvian restaurant to propose some Peruvian touches on the way back. Still another is to study the topic and create an entire menu that goes beyond the mere concept of uniting Trentino and Peru, because it includes foie gras, tequila, octopus and whiskey sour. It is not fusion, because the vision is absolutely personal and of clear Italian vision, since Brunel always finds the thread and in some cases touches remarkable peaks such as in Nikkei Pizza & Mountain Tuna: pink trout, quinoa wafer, red onion, white corn, sweet pepper and guacamole. Technique and imagination as in Cevice between lake and sea: char, trout, cuttlefish, sea bass, beetroot leche de tigre and coriander. But also that subtle balance between very different products: potato praline, white chocolate and broad beans, pork and chocolate that become the dessert 50 & 50.

A large cellar

We also enjoy the happy support of Christian Rainer – from St. Hubertus – who manages a young, attentive service, but above all manages a cellar where the Central European soul finds a series of dishes that are perfect for pairing. Obviously all the Italian and French cult are not lacking. The desserts are part of the Loretta Fanella's selection. In just one year since the opening, Brunel has already covered many miles despite the very strong wind upwind for three whole months: which gives great hope when he finds him downwind or downwind. After all, his launch pad was Riva del Garda, where he conquered in 2003 his first Michelin star when he was just 28 years old. It was time for him to go home, ultimately, given the result.

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The stray pizza chef who put the sea on the pizza – Italian Cuisine

The stray pizza chef who put the sea on the pizza


Enrico Chambertin's itinerant pizza project stopped at a seafood restaurant in Rome, where the challenge was to study a seafood pizza menu

His name is Enrico Cappuccini, but everyone knows him as Enrico Chambertin, his alter ego social. He was born as a computer consultant, but at some point in his life he was enlightened on the Damascus street of pizza. Which then in Rome is via Ozanam, where the Gatta Mangiona by Giancarlo Casa, his mentor with dough and flour mixes. The project Wandering Pizzas he was therefore born with the advice of the latter and with the complicity of an engineer friend, Carmine Piano, who helped Enrico modify an F1 oven and who accompanies him in the production of pizzas. This is a semi-professional electric oven created for true pizza enthusiasts, but which in the case of Enrico has been made more performing, to reach higher temperatures in less time and get closer to Neapolitan cooking.

Style and pizzas

In conclusion, a kind of dismantled motor like in the eighties, on the saddle to which Enrico goes to the restaurants that host him, even to the houses, bringing his dough and his style. At the base, in fact, there is a blend of organic flours, on which the Sicilian tumminia prevails. The rest does it there long leavening, at least 48 hours, and rapid cooking at very high temperature, in the Neapolitan style. There are classic pizzas, such as margherita, but also those that take their cue from the place where Enrico is at that moment, because the value of Pizze Vaganti is also that of knowing how to adapt to the "culture" of the place.

The last stage of the pilgrimage is almost on the sea route, in via Tiberio Imperatore, in the Eur / Ostiense area: turn the corner and you are on Colombo, where you can run straight on the Pontina and arrive at least in Ostia. But if you stop there is a surprise: the da Michele restaurant, where Enrico is with his pizzas from Thursday to Sunday. In the hall Marco Pignotta, son of the patron who gave the name to this place. Not the classic fish restaurant as it is meant in Rome, we are head and shoulders, because the fish is very fresh, well-worked, with an unpredictable menu and fair prices. Outside the neighborhood almost nobody knew him, until Enrico arrived, with whom shortly after the lockdown they also started delivering the pizzas.

Mussels and pizza and other crazy pizzas

The prolonged stop by Michele gave Enrico the opportunity to multiply the tests, for adapt Michele's workhorses to Enrico's dough. More than successful experiment: if the idea of ​​mussels on pizza gives you the chills it is because you have not tasted stray pizzas and in particular Michele, dedicated to the owner of the restaurant and his workhorse: fior di latte, mussels, pecorino cheese, wild pepper and parsley. In practice it is a reinterpretation of a dish that has always been a cult in Roman fish restaurants: spaghetti with mussels and pecorino.

Then there is the variant with potatoes, mussels, pesto, which is a real treat. P.A.M is a divertissement: provola, smoked herring and apples. But there are also apparently classic pizzas like the Naples, on which the anchovies are raw and cooked very quickly thanks to the heat of the oven, or tuna and ciponne, which is trivially like tuna and onions, but here the onions are from Tropea and are caramelized and the quality of the tuna used, in fillets, is excellent.

Just a note: you have to understand that the oven that Enrico uses is small and allows you to make one pizza at a time, so don't expect everyone to order his pizza and see it appear at the table. The real game of such a menu is to unite a few friends for a nice tasting. Enrico will be with Michele at least until September, even if there is still no precise plan. His pilgrimages can be followed on the Facebook page of the Pizze Vaganti.

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Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle! – Italian Cuisine


Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle!
Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle!
Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle!
Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle!
Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle!
Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle!
Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle!
Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle!
Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle!
Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle!
Summer 2020: books to put … in the Kindle!

True, i books it's nice to own them, browse the pages, arrange them in the home library according to our personal order. But in summer you have to deal with the space in your suitcase! Here then is the excuse to switch to digital books.

E-book, 11 ideas for this summer

If thissummer you want to stay lighter and carry wherever you go wherever you go e-reader with all the books you want to read inside without having to choose just a few for logistical problems, here we have selected for you some news (and more), for all tastes, to download to your Kindle.

It is not a last release, but we suggest, for example, The Hummingbird of Sandro Veronesi, recently announced as the winner of the 2020 Witch Prize, a hymn to vital energy that allows us to survive in the darkest moments. For fans of serial books, in mid-July it will come out instead Riccardino the last act of Commissioner Montalbano of Andrea Camilleri, one year after the disappearance of the writer. In our selection there are also the labors that have had light in quarantine and that show us that moment from many points of view, such as the last book of Chiara Gamberale; books that help us understand the present moment (looking to the past) like that of Corrado Augias, and then rediscovered readings, but always contemporary (and futuristic) like the works of Margaret Atwood. There is no lack of sentimental thrillers (see the book by Ferzan Ozpetek), detective novels capable of keeping us on the edge with constant twists (we refer to the last of Joël Dicker, author of world hits including The truth about the Harry Quebert case) and highly anticipated detective stories (the latest novel by Don Winslow in Italy from 9 July). The story out of the pen sways between adventure, fun and melancholy Tito Faraci, or that of a cartoonist who decides to change his job by opening a fish shop in the illusion of having an easier life (but it will not be). And if finally, the night of San Lorenzo, you asked yourself by chance impossible questions like: "If all the stars come down?", know that someone has tried to answer between game and science, but also that someone has imagined The sea without stars.

Browse the gallery to find out all the e-books to read this summer!

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