Naples native Roberto Rispoli of Il Carpaccio talks about how he went from cleaning fish to helming the first Michelin-starred Italian restaurant in Paris
Born in Pompeii near coastal Naples, Italian chef Roberto Rispoli honed his craft under the tutelage of Alain Ducasse’s La Trattoria Toscana in Milan before taking the helm at the newly revamped Il Carpaccio within Le Royal Monceau, Raffles Paris in 2010. Just three years later, the restaurant won its first Michelin star, making it the first Italian restaurant in Paris to be awarded by the Michelin Guide.
The amiable 35-year-old chef is in town from 17 May to 21 May as a guest chef at Raffles Hotel Singapore’s Raffles Grill, where he showcases dishes such as a beautifully arranged Artichoke Salad with Fava Beans, and a Roasted Veal Loin Calzone with zucchini flower, ricotta cheese and spinach, each one harmoniously marrying his Southern Italian heritage with his French culinary training.
We had the privilege of spending some time with him to find out just what makes this exciting, young culinary mind tick.
How did you begin your journey in the kitchen and what made you discover your passion for cooking?
I started out in the kitchen when I was just 15 years old. My first job was in a family-run fish restaurant near my hometown in Naples, where I cleaned fish for six months. It was nice, but there was a little too much fish for my liking.
After that, I moved around different kitchen stations, learning new things every day and observing the kitchen. To me, the kitchen is a personal space where I have to think about what I am cooking. You have to keep an open mind and look around the kitchen and see what you have to work with when you come up with recipes. For example, when you can’t source the same ingredients here in Singapore as you would in Paris, you just have to find a solution.
Squid Ink Farfalle with Gamberoni Prawns, Winkle, Mullet Fish Roe and Preserved Lemon
You’re a chef from Naples, but you’ve built your career and reputation in the one Michelin-starred Il Carpaccio in Paris. How much of an influence has France and French cuisine had on your cooking, and has it influenced your approach to Italian cooking in any way?
Firstly, we must know the difference between the two – the French kitchen is technical and symmetrical. Square, even. The Italian kitchen is more family-oriented, like home cooking.
For me, going to France was important. I wanted to go to Paris because that is the country of gastronomy. I took my time to see and learn new techniques in Paris, then adapted these techniques to my own cooking. There are some dishes on my menu that are 100 per cent traditional Italian dishes from Naples, but there are also some dishes that have a little influence from France.
But the most important thing is to keep my identity, even if I add a little bit of the French techniques to enhance that identity. I adopt a French approach to plating to make the presentation of my dishes nicer and more elegant. When you cook Italian dishes traditionally, it usually looks like it comes out of a mother's kitchen, and if you bring them that kind of food into a classy restaurant people will question it, even when the food is good. But at the same time, what I serve in my restaurant is definitely not fusion. When someone comes into the restaurant to get a risotto, they know they will get a risotto. If they order a potato gnocchi, they will get a potato gnocchi.
Roberto Rispoli's Artichoke Salad with Fava Beans
Il Carpaccio won its Michelin star in 2013, how has that changed or not changed the way you run the restaurant?
I’ve never thought about earning a Michelin star for my restaurant. And even after we got it, I don't think about it because everything is still the same as before.
Whether or not your restaurant has a star, you still have to just think about the food. If you start thinking about [cooking for stars], then you start feeling more pressured and it becomes about the stars and not the food. The biggest judges, to me, are the guests. The guests are the ones who are there every day. It is important to be in the kitchen everyday and just make the best food you can make.
Raffles Grill, where Chef Roberto has taken up residency between the 17th and the 21st of May.
What are your three most favourite ingredients to work with, and why?
The first is pasta. Pasta is so representative of my country and I use it in so many dishes. One more ingredient that I like is the tomato. Find me somebody that doesn't like tomatoes. It's light and suits many people, especially those who like to eat healthy nowadays. And number three is anchovy water. It is made by putting the anchovies that are broken or not good enough to serve in dishes into a press and squeezing out the liquid. It is really salty and I use it a lot for seasoning because it offers a uniquely Italian flavour.
What advice would you offer to aspiring home cooks when it comes to Italian cooking?
When you're cooking pasta, don't fully cook the pasta in the water. You cook it to about 75 per cent in the water, then you take it out and finish the pasta together with its sauce. That way, the texture of the pasta will not be overcooked and the flavour of the sauce can go into the pasta. The pasta will help to thicken the sauce till it is just nice.
And one more thing, always use good ingredients. It is difficult to make great food with cheap ingredients because everything is about quality.
Written by
Ignatius Tan
Poet in his private life and occasional dabbler in the kitchen, Ignatius Tan comes from a family of restaurateurs and food enthusiasts, all of whom have assiduously nurtured his affection for all things edible.
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