(September 8th-13th) I am, as you can imagine from all of my running, a huge fan of everything pasta. That being said, I was completely unprepared for how extraordinary pasta could be when made fresh and served right! I won't recount every meal in detail, but a few special places stood out during my time in Torino.
'A Furcina (just a Google page, most places didn't have web pages). This neighborhood gem was precisely that: the type of restaurant that would be my go-to neighborhood haunt if I lived here. Between the waitresses that were all happy to help me make heads or tails of the Italian menu, and the splendid food, this place never failed to satisfy me on my multiple visits. My first visit led me to enjoying aubergine (eggplant) as a first course, and orichette with tomato and
ricotta salata as a second with the house wine, which smelled like grape juice (very
fruity) but had a sharp, full taste.
The aubergine was almost like a calzone: ham,
cheese, but eggplant instead of bread. And the orchilette, fantastic fresh
pasta...al dente, but slightly thicker than we're used to...wonderful
texture. After this trip, I can confidently say that orchilette is my favorite form of pasta now. Over top of the orchilette was ricotta salata. One word: wow! It was so fresh and pure. I didn't know you
could shave ricotta like that.
For the most part, my dining schedule was diametrically opposed to the Italian schedule of eating. Whenever I was ready for a meal (at a normal American time), it seemed that nowhere was open. Restaurant after restaurant would be closed till well after 1 pm...but just when I had given up hope during my daily wanderings, a street
market would appear, complete and full of vibrance. 1/2 mile long, 1/3 of stalls
were food...fresh produce with giant, round eggplants, teardrop shaped
heirloom tomatoes, fish being carved straight from the carcas (a sword
fish)
Before I get into my favorite restaurant of this trip, a few assorted dishes:
You can't very well go to Italy without having a pizza. So fresh, crispy, and delicious. A true carb-lover's paradise!
A typical salad. Lot's of great, high quality ingredients adding layers of flavor.
Don't ask me for the name of this traditional Piedmontese dish, but it was vegetables fried in dough. As I said, a carb-lover's paradise!
Gelato! Me and my colleague from Oxford enjoying a few different flavors.
A different take on brussel sprouts.
Caprese salad with aubergines.
Pasta with mushrooms. Nothing else. So simple, but so incredibly good.
Fresh octopus carpaccio.
A calzone. The bread was fried just right. Fantastic.
And now for the other restaurant that I wanted to highlight,
La Barrique. This highly rated restaurant was something that I was saving for my last night in Torino. I splurged, a bit, too, by enjoying their fish tasting menu.
Everything on the menu looked so good; I couldn't decide.
Luckily the tasting menu had most of the dishes that I was
contemplating (except the fresh eel, but I'm sure that I enjoyed the
red mallet much more than I would have the eel). I'm trying to think of
the last time that I had a meal this satisfying...certainly, this was
better than the multi-starred restaurant in Paris.
Course 0: goat cheese mousse with raspberry sorbet. Light, creamy, but melted
in your mouth. Very smooth, I didn't know that you could get that
texture out of goat cheese.
Course 1: marinated, raw scallops, toasted quinoa, daikon, burrata sauce.
Textures complimented each other perfectly. Scallop flavor paired well
with burrata sauce, though a little rich. And the toasted
quinoa...crunchy but still quinoa, one of my favorite grains.
Course 2: fish of the day, a red mallet, served with burraba beans, a seaweed
cream wine reduction, topped with salmon roe and finishing salt. The sal
de mar, cubed, had just the right crunch and taste to finish the dish
off as the other flavors were all mild. Italian white wine from nearby
piemonte. Hints of pear amidst its floral notes. In contrast to the
later wines, almost had a Chardonnay flavor....but very subdued compared
to an actual Chardonnay... much more pleasant really.
Course 3: squid ink tortelli, stuffed with angler fish in a wine sauce. Wine
pairing was a local piemontese grape I had never heard of (Erbaluce).
Slightly creamy with a wee bitter note at the end. Very graceful (i.e.
smooth and pleasant). Matched the sauce well. Just about the thinnest
pasta of my whole trip. Delicate, but flavorful. Accentuated the
angler fish stuffed inside.
Course 4: white fish (mollet? From sea south of Italy) with porcini, creme de
celery, mustard sauce, wilted spinach. Tamarind decorating sides of
plates. The fish was a bit like rockfish, but much larger. Wine from umbria....subtle flavor to contrast the potency of
the celery cream and mustard. Finishing salt a flake...punctuated other,
creamy flavors.
Course 5: goat cheese cheesecake, with raspberries and pistachio ice cream
topped with crushed pistachios. Slightly nutty and chocolatey base. All
together, fantastic. Different texture than a normal
cheesecake....creamier really. Harkened back to the goat cheese mousse
that started the meal. To drink, a Sicilian dessert wine. Very sweet and
thick like a port, but lighter in character.
Course 6: a medley of morsels. First, a chocolate and crispy rice...reminiscent of voodoo donuts. Next, a cookie:
slightly nutty cross between a french cookie and a butter cookie. Nut
covered tart filled with a lemon cake. Pistachio canolli...ricotta cream
was so fresh and va bene. Macaroon with extra dark chocolate shavings.
So bitter by themselves, but an after thought with the creamy macaroon.
Raspberry custard tart...trio of flavors and textures meshed so
well...tart alone like an egg tart. Cinnamon cookie had a pleasantly
contrasting texture to other morsels. Perfect compliment to the
espresso. Truffle: uncoated chocolate ganache rolled in bittersweet
chocolate. Very soft, melted in mouth.
And yes, I ordered an espresso for the sake of everyone back home since I don't drink coffee.
It's amusing to think that I was worried that I'd leave hungry when I
first came in here. For one of the first times since I arrived in
Italy, I am full.
The description of restaurant exactly as billed, though easier to find.
Inside it was elegant, like Lauduree but with ample spacing between
tables. Louis Armstrong gently played in the background, and my timing
had been impeccable as the restaurant went from empty to full within
minutes (I was the first dinner guest at 7:50).
The evening grew late, Louis continued to serenade me, and the wines slowly were embibed...