BARBERINO-TAVARNELLE, TUSCANY— Yesterday I was having a conversation with one of my travel guests who was talking about being homesick when she was sent to camp as an eight-year-old. I tried to remember a time, over the past 61 years, when I might have been homesick. I have a vague memory of visiting some cousins in the Washington D.C. area, when I was six or seven, and not wanting to spend the night there. It had nothing to do with them. They are wonderful people, it's just that I was missing my mom and brother who were staying across town with my aunt and uncle.
I went to summer camp several years and don’t remember ever being
homesick. I always looked at it as a new adventure. I’m sure my mother saw it
as the chance to get a few weeks of peace and silence at home.
In 2011, when I was on a six-month trek across Europe with
my wife and two kids, I was never homesick because the things that mattered to
me most were with me.
These days I get businesssick, more accurately— restaurantsick.
When I am gone from my homebase for any length of time I miss our restaurants. A
few years ago, I started spending three months a year hosting tours through
Europe. I love doing it— and judging by the amount of people who join me to
travel repeatedly (I currently have a lady who is with me for her sixth trip)— my
guests love it, too. I have no plans to stop doing it any time soon, but after
six or seven weeks over here, I grow restaurantsick.
It's not that I’m sick of restaurants, to the contrary. I am
in restaurants three times a day while traveling. I love restaurants, whether
they belong to me, or someone else. It’s that I begin to miss mine, deeply.
I have a lot of job titles, surely “dad” is the most
important. But when we peel back all the layers, I am a restaurateur. I have no
hobbies, at least in the typical sense. I don’t hunt, I don’t fish, I don’t
play golf. I love movies, music, and football. But I’m not sure those are actual
hobbies. I love to travel, but that gets handled by hosting tours a quarter of
the year. My hobbies are restaurants, restaurants, and restaurants.
When I’m home I am either in one of my restaurants, in my restaurant
office, at home working on restaurant stuff, researching things for the
restaurants, or on my laptop developing new concepts for restaurants. My mom often
asks, “When are you going to retire?”
The answer is always the same, “Never.” When she presses, I
tell her, “Why would I retire? I love what I do. The restaurant business is my ‘fun.’
I am blessed that my hobby is also my career.” I hope to draw my last breath—
in my sleep sleep— somewhere in my late nineties after a busy opening shift at
a restaurant we’ve just opened. That would be a perfect world.
I left the United States back in early October. It was only
two weeks after we opened our new Italian restaurant in Ridgeland, MS. The
typical honeymoon period for a new restaurant is anywhere from two to three
months. The way the scheduling worked out I was only able to spend 16 days in
the newly opened restaurant before heading overseas for work. I hated to leave,
but there were hard scheduling dates in Italy— and commitments— I needed to
fulfill. It was my 24th restaurant opening and the first time I've not spent
almost every shift in a restaurant for the first three months of its operation.
I have been handling business over here turning people on to
the people, places, and restaurants I've discovered over the years. But the
restaurants back home are always on my mind. I am down to the remaining five
days and am lucky that this final week is with a Tuscany group I have traveled
with before, we’re just doing all new things.
I look forward to adding new, authentic Italian items I’ve
learned over here to the menus of our Italian restaurants. But there are other
things I’ve been dreaming about lately.
I want to eat a stack of pancakes— as big as my face— at the
Midtowner. I eat there every morning when I’m back in town. At Crescent City
Grill it will be hard to decide between a roast beef po-boy or a fried shrimp
po-boy and will probably order both. I miss the Tex-Mex Nachos and the Beef Chimichanga
at El Rayo. I won’t be in town too long before I eat a cheeseburger, tots, and
a chocolate malt at Ed’s Burger Joint.
Taste testing for the new bakery is just around the corner and during that
process I am likely to put on the five pounds that I’ve lost over here.
My first stop on American soil is usually the Popeye’s Fried
Chicken in the Atlanta airport— and I will surely do that— but I will eat a country
fried steak with mashed potatoes, black-eyed peas, fried corn, green bean
casserole, and fried okra at the Midtowner on one of my early lunches back
home.
I’ll sit at my desk in my office and work on the next two
concepts we have on the drawing board and catch up on where Extra Table is as
we reach year’s end. Budgets for the restaurants will be due in a matter of
weeks, but I’ll have to catch up on these food cravings before I can focus on
any financial matters.
The past six weeks have been a deep dive into Italian
history, architecture, and culture, and a very deep dive into the Italian
cuisine of Rome, Amalfi, Naples, and Tuscany. That’s over 120 authentic Italian
meals since early October. I’m ready to hit the ground running creating new Italian
dishes for the restaurants. But I’m also ready for that stack of pancakes as
big as my face.
Onward.
Pasta Roberto
I developed this for a friend’s birthday hosted at my home. It works well with large groups of all ages.
I brought it in as a potential menu item during the initial recipe-testing phase of Tabella. It didn’t have a name, but – as a joke— I listed the temporary, tongue-in-cheek title as “Pasta Roberto,” assuming that we would find a better name before we opened.
As
we were getting the restaurant ready to open in the weeks before the launch, I
cooked it often for the manager and staff lunches. They called it Pasta
Roberto, too. We never came up with an official name and it still on the menu
as Pasta Roberto.
1 lb. Dry fusilli pasta
1 gallon Water
¼ cup Kosher salt
2 TB Extra virgin olive oil
½ lb. Italian sausage
links, roasted or grilled, quartered, and sliced
¼ cup Shallot, minced
½ lb. Porcini mushrooms,
sliced (other mushrooms can be substituted)
½ cup Red bell peppers, cut
into matchsticks
2 TB Dry white wine
¾ cup Parmigianino Reggiano,
grated
¾ cup Marinara sauce
¾ cup Alfredo sauce
Cook fusilli according to the directions on the
package.
Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the shallots and cook,
stirring frequently until softened, about 2 minutes. Add the sausage, mushrooms
and red bell peppers and cook, stirring frequently, about 6-8 minutes. Deglaze
the pan with the white wine and allow the wine to cook out completely, about
2-3 minutes.
Fold in the marinara and Alfredo and stir until hot. Add the hot fusilli pasta and the cheese and combine thoroughly.
Divide among six serving bowls.
19 comments:
When you get back, step it up at "Enzo". No lunch menu, and dinner fare is just "ok". Been twice and meh both times.
I agree with 10:19! I know it can be done and hope that you will personally see to it.
Robert, have you ever tried Mario's? Great food, you might get some ideas about 6 blocks down the street rather than traveling across the big water.
Have been to Enzo for lunch. Beautiful building and very good service. The quality of three different meals left a lot to be desired. Really needs some work. Won’t go back until he can work on it.
This dude defines “overrated”
Robert, I can completely understans being himesick for specific food dishes. Been there, felt that way, too.
Here is one, worth longing to have as dinner. Officially, it is a chicken dish with no name.
Chicken rolls with spinach and mushrooms
Ingredients:
2-4 boneless skinless chicken breasts, pounded flat (put fully thawed breasts between pieces on plastic wrap and beat then with the bottom of a flat bottomed pot until they flatten out.
1 cup raw baby spinach leaves, chopped
1 cup whole mushrooms, sliced very thin
1/2 cup shallots, diced
1 cup parmesan cheese
1 cup mozzarella cheese
1/2 cup cooked pork sausage, crumbled and well drained
Splash of white wine
1 Tablespoon minced shallots
a few slithers of fresh mushrooms
1 Tablespoon butter
2 Tablespoons Olive Oil
Some butcher's string
2 or 3 servings pasta I normaly use Angel Hair
Directions:
Butterfly the chicken breasts with a sharp knife.
Pound the butterflied chicken breasts to 1/8 inch thickness, between layers of plastic wrap.
Season breasts with pepper and a little Lawry’s garlic salt and then layer mozzarella cheese, spinach, shallots, mushrooms, sausage and parmesan cheese on top of the flattened breast.
Season with a light dusting of Creole seasoning, carefully roll the breasts and tie with a piece of string.
Lightly saer the rolled breasts with a little olive oil in a hot sauté pan, rolling them as the sides brown until all sides are cooked. Cook slowly enough that the inside ingredients cook.
This should not be difficult as all of the ingredients cook quickly and the sausage is already cooked.
When the portions are cooked, remove them from the pan and deglaze the pan with a little white wine, add a tablespoon of minced shallot, a few slithers of mushroom and a pat of butter, cook at a low simmer until the shallots and mushrooms are tender.
This makes a good sauce to go over the chicken, which is plated over al dente angel hair pasta tossed in some melter butter and a little lawry's garlic salt if you like. Top with a little chopped parsley or sliced green onion tops.
Serve with crusty bread and a green salad.
My only experience at Enzo's so far was average at best. As a matter of fact, every meal that I ate there when it was Biaggi's was better.
2:17. I agree. Damn.
It’s the same menu.basically as Biaggis.
I've eaten at Enzo's twice and had take out once. The food was excellent! It is so much better than Biaggi's. The staff are doing a great job!
Hate to pile on but Enzo’s was a big disappointment. Was really looking forward to it as I have enjoyed all of his Hattiesburg restaurants. Not sure where the disconnect is, but the food is just not good. Thought maybe it was just me but obviously not based on previous comments.
Based on these posts, after naming the restaurant after his good friend, hopefully Enzo will not be upset with Mr. St. John.
@11:30 AM, I agree with your recommendation on Mario's.
If you could just bring Tabella's to Enzo's, that would be fine. You could add others as you develop clientele. We need you here but Enzo's doesn't feel like a second trip.
4:42. Not even close. ENZO doesn't even have a lunch menu. The Shrimp Scampi was just bland. 4:47. Rigggght.
where is this mario's?
Robert could write a cookbook named "Recipes from Anonymous Internet Commenters" starting with ZeroBear's dubious contributions.
Mario's is in Hattiesburg
@6:24 setting a pretty low bar for Enzo's
Italian restaurants in Hattiesburg
#1 tie Mario's on Hwy 49 and Mario's on Hwy 98 (new location)
#2 Olive Garden
#3 tie Tabella's and Pizza Hut buffet
As info the owners of Mario's spend a couple of weeks each summer in Italy (not sure which region) in order to attend their family reunion.
Went to Enzo last week. Food was good but server promised to bring out bread three times. Guess what…no bread!
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