Monika and I had a wonderful time in Italy in March, it was a great time to reconnect with my roots, visits friends (you all remember our chef friend from Siena, Stefano) and family (my mother and father).
I thought I would post our photos for those of you who have asked to see them.
We started in Modena, the home town of Pavarotti. Modena is famous for it's balsamic vinegars. We moved on to Bologna, an education hub in Italy and of course is known for Bolognese sauce.
On to Siena where we visited a pasta factory. The woman you see is the only one who still make tortellini by hand, she is 75 years old. There was lots of good salumi and you'll see me hamming it up under some Prosciutto di Parma.
Monika and I got some time on the ski slopes and then it was time to come home.
I know I'm not Rick Steves and this is a pretty quick tour but then again Rick Steves can't cook.
Showing posts with label Riccardo's Adventures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Riccardo's Adventures. Show all posts
Thursday, May 08, 2008
Modena, Bologna & Siena - Oh My!
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
Dinner at Dara's
Being a chef, people are hesitant to cook for you. That can be a bad thing and that can be a good thing. Now that I have prefaced with that statement, I move forward with my story.
Dara Bunjon and I have been friends since we met when I started out here in Baltimore at Sotto Sopra. Dara organized cooking classes in restaurant kitchens throughout the city with her Epicurean Club of Maryland for 12 years. Over the years our paths had crossed on many occasions. When Dara left her corporate job as the public relations and marketing director of Vanns Spices to start her own business I was first in line. Her sense of food is impeccable and her humor runs parallel to mine. Now, that history lesson is done.
Dara has been insistent on having Monika and I over for dinner. It took a year to set the date. I was antsy about the dinner because what if it is bad? You know your hostess is looking for you for praise and looking to see if you were eating what was on your plate. You know they have worked hard. They don't have the staff you have in the restaurant, all the food prep, dining room set up, sommelier, dish washing, all on one person. No one to mise en place those shiitakes.
Dara thought it would be interesting to have the new Italian chef coming to Baltimore, Stefano Frigerio and his wife Dusty Lockhart to dinner as well. We are all the same age; Stefano was from Northern Italy like me. Stefano was the executive sous chef at Maestro restaurant in N. Virginia and spent a number of years working in England. He even did a stint with Marco Pierre White and lived to talk about it. His restaurant, Osteria Cinghiale should be opening sometime in September/October in the East Harbor.
My PR princess was wise and went with a Southern themed dinner. We gathered for hors d'oeuvres in her ...hmmm, she calls it a den. She had pickled shrimp and bourbon spiced pecans-that broke the ice, some wine and we all relaxed.
So conversation around the table was very good and it was all in English. Our salad was a watermelon salad with tomatillos with honey citrus vinaigrette. It was quite tasty and refreshing.
The main course was the juiciest pork I've ever eaten. It was a rack of pork loin that Dara brined in sweetened tea for 48 hours. Monika says it was the best pork she's ever eaten. Dara served oven roasted potatoes and haricot verts with shiitakes and morels.
For dessert she poached pears and made a Melba sauce. She did say she didn't make the ice cream...do you think I should hold that against her?
After I got back to the restaurant I called her and told her I was pleasantly surprised and how I enjoyed the dinner. I think a couple days later I offered her a job in my kitchen.
For those of you who would like the watermelon salad recipe and sweetened tea brined pork recipe you will have an opportunity the end of October when her compilation cookbook she co-authored with Jeff Spear comes to market. The book is called YUM-Tasty Recipes from Culinary Greats - recipes from top chefs and cooking instructors from Charlie Trotter to Sara Moulton, Nick Malgieri to Steven Raichlen, Sherry Yard to Elizabeth Faulkner, Rick Bayless to Michel Richard and last but not least Chef Scott Peacock's Watermelon Salad and Chef John Fleer's Sweetened Tea Brined Rack of Pork.
Feel free to check out her blog http:www.diningdish.blogspot.com and sign up for her foodie e-newsletter.
Let me close with the most important thing about this dinner or any dinner - to share food, thoughts and ideas, to smile and break bread with others is what food is all about. It always tastes better with good company.
Dara Bunjon and I have been friends since we met when I started out here in Baltimore at Sotto Sopra. Dara organized cooking classes in restaurant kitchens throughout the city with her Epicurean Club of Maryland for 12 years. Over the years our paths had crossed on many occasions. When Dara left her corporate job as the public relations and marketing director of Vanns Spices to start her own business I was first in line. Her sense of food is impeccable and her humor runs parallel to mine. Now, that history lesson is done.
Dara has been insistent on having Monika and I over for dinner. It took a year to set the date. I was antsy about the dinner because what if it is bad? You know your hostess is looking for you for praise and looking to see if you were eating what was on your plate. You know they have worked hard. They don't have the staff you have in the restaurant, all the food prep, dining room set up, sommelier, dish washing, all on one person. No one to mise en place those shiitakes.
Dara thought it would be interesting to have the new Italian chef coming to Baltimore, Stefano Frigerio and his wife Dusty Lockhart to dinner as well. We are all the same age; Stefano was from Northern Italy like me. Stefano was the executive sous chef at Maestro restaurant in N. Virginia and spent a number of years working in England. He even did a stint with Marco Pierre White and lived to talk about it. His restaurant, Osteria Cinghiale should be opening sometime in September/October in the East Harbor.
My PR princess was wise and went with a Southern themed dinner. We gathered for hors d'oeuvres in her ...hmmm, she calls it a den. She had pickled shrimp and bourbon spiced pecans-that broke the ice, some wine and we all relaxed.
So conversation around the table was very good and it was all in English. Our salad was a watermelon salad with tomatillos with honey citrus vinaigrette. It was quite tasty and refreshing.
The main course was the juiciest pork I've ever eaten. It was a rack of pork loin that Dara brined in sweetened tea for 48 hours. Monika says it was the best pork she's ever eaten. Dara served oven roasted potatoes and haricot verts with shiitakes and morels.
For dessert she poached pears and made a Melba sauce. She did say she didn't make the ice cream...do you think I should hold that against her?
After I got back to the restaurant I called her and told her I was pleasantly surprised and how I enjoyed the dinner. I think a couple days later I offered her a job in my kitchen.
For those of you who would like the watermelon salad recipe and sweetened tea brined pork recipe you will have an opportunity the end of October when her compilation cookbook she co-authored with Jeff Spear comes to market. The book is called YUM-Tasty Recipes from Culinary Greats - recipes from top chefs and cooking instructors from Charlie Trotter to Sara Moulton, Nick Malgieri to Steven Raichlen, Sherry Yard to Elizabeth Faulkner, Rick Bayless to Michel Richard and last but not least Chef Scott Peacock's Watermelon Salad and Chef John Fleer's Sweetened Tea Brined Rack of Pork.
Feel free to check out her blog http:www.diningdish.blogspot.com and sign up for her foodie e-newsletter.
Let me close with the most important thing about this dinner or any dinner - to share food, thoughts and ideas, to smile and break bread with others is what food is all about. It always tastes better with good company.
Wednesday, June 06, 2007
One Good Thing Leads to Another

One Good Thing Leads To Another
I've talked of my three-week honeymoon in Italy and all of the exciting places where Monika and I dined. Osteria del Coro in Siena, Italy was the stand-out meal. The food was so good, you could taste the chef’s passion for his local cuisine. I swore then that I would bring the executive chef, Stefano Azzi, to the U.S. to cook a special dinner at Sotto Sopra. This dream was realized this spring when Chef Azzi prepared two sold-out Sienese dinners for our Sotto Sopra clientele as well as the Italian Consul from Maryland and the Mid-Atlantic States.
True Italian cuisine is wonderful. At its core, it embraces fresh, quality and local ingredients – a philosophy I share. Before Chef Azzi returned to Italy, I wanted to help him spread the good word on Tuscan products. We had two impressive meetings in New York City. Our first was with the CEO of StarChefs.com, Antoinette Bruno (a former Baltimore native). The second was with Iron Chef, Mario Batali at Otto, one of his many restaurants. I was surprised to learn that Chef Batali has 1,400 employees. 1,400 – that’s huge! Mario said he is looking forward to going to Chef Azzi’s restaurant in Siena this summer and will keep Sotto Sopra on his radar should he be in the Baltimore area. It was a great meeting.
Stay Informed
Subscribers to Sotto Sopra’s e-mail news received the special invitation to Chef Azzi’s dinner. It was not advertised. You too can receive all the up-to-the-moment, exclusive, customer appreciation special events notices as well as bonus birthday and anniversary rewards. Subscribing is easy and free, just fill in your e-mail in the box here on the blog. We don’t want you to miss out.
It Is All About Passion
When you dine at Sotto Sopra I want you to taste my passion for Italian cuisine in every bite, just as I did with Chef Azzi’s meal in Italy.
Buon Appetito!
Riccardo
I've talked of my three-week honeymoon in Italy and all of the exciting places where Monika and I dined. Osteria del Coro in Siena, Italy was the stand-out meal. The food was so good, you could taste the chef’s passion for his local cuisine. I swore then that I would bring the executive chef, Stefano Azzi, to the U.S. to cook a special dinner at Sotto Sopra. This dream was realized this spring when Chef Azzi prepared two sold-out Sienese dinners for our Sotto Sopra clientele as well as the Italian Consul from Maryland and the Mid-Atlantic States.
True Italian cuisine is wonderful. At its core, it embraces fresh, quality and local ingredients – a philosophy I share. Before Chef Azzi returned to Italy, I wanted to help him spread the good word on Tuscan products. We had two impressive meetings in New York City. Our first was with the CEO of StarChefs.com, Antoinette Bruno (a former Baltimore native). The second was with Iron Chef, Mario Batali at Otto, one of his many restaurants. I was surprised to learn that Chef Batali has 1,400 employees. 1,400 – that’s huge! Mario said he is looking forward to going to Chef Azzi’s restaurant in Siena this summer and will keep Sotto Sopra on his radar should he be in the Baltimore area. It was a great meeting.
Stay Informed
Subscribers to Sotto Sopra’s e-mail news received the special invitation to Chef Azzi’s dinner. It was not advertised. You too can receive all the up-to-the-moment, exclusive, customer appreciation special events notices as well as bonus birthday and anniversary rewards. Subscribing is easy and free, just fill in your e-mail in the box here on the blog. We don’t want you to miss out.
It Is All About Passion
When you dine at Sotto Sopra I want you to taste my passion for Italian cuisine in every bite, just as I did with Chef Azzi’s meal in Italy.
Buon Appetito!
Riccardo
Labels:
Mario Batali Story,
Riccardo's Adventures
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
You Missed a Great Party

If you didn't make Sotto Sopra's 11th Anniversary Party you really missed a great party. I ended up serving many salads, prosciutto and melon, 1/2 lobsters for everyone, lamb chops, braised lamb, langostinos, the two risottos, and enough wine to take down a giant.
We all had some prosecco and mingled and headed to the communal tables to dine. Monika and I used some great candle holders to decorate the tables. As you can see from the photos below there were many antipasti on the table awaiting the guests. As it became dark the restaurant had a nice glow from the candlelight, everyone was convivial passing platters and chatting. Dinner started at 7 p.m. and the dessert platters were put on the table around 10:15 p.m.
Many stayed and continued the party. Wish you had been there. Don't miss our next special event when Chef Stefano Azzi visits from Siena Italy to prepare a true Tuscan feast on Wednesday, May 9th.
I'm so full from last night's party even my fingers hurt typing.
ciao............Riccardo
Tuesday, January 23, 2007
From Will Smith to Riccardo Bosio
LA DOLCE VITA
After meeting Executive Pastry Chef Joanne Gregory at the Women Chefs and Restaurateurs Conference in Atlanta, Sotto Sopra’s public relations and marketing representative, Dara Bunjon knew that Gregory and I should meet. Gregory, selected as one of the Top 10 Pastry Chefs in Los Angeles, recently left her job as the Executive Pastry Chef at Universal Studios as her husband’s job brought them to Baltimore.
As the executive pastry chef at Universal, Gregory created the studio’s high quality, high volume, and all-scratch bakery: a 2000 square foot state-of-the-art production bakery. She supplied cakes, pastries, cookies, petit fours, miniature desserts, pies, tarts, breakfast items and custom cakes to 20 casual restaurants, 2 catering operations, a retail bakery and 5-star, fine dining restaurant for studio executives and celebrity guests.
I asked Joanne to name three memorable events she was involved with at Universal. The top of her list was the opening of Jurassic Park, the theme ride as well as the movie. “When the Grinch came out at Xmas, we created a Grinch village six feet by five feet out of pastillage and royal icing” stated Chef Gregory.
“Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith were celebrating their dual birthdays so they leased out a sound stage. The theme was Will as Superman and Jada as Superwoman. I worked with Universal Studios animators to draw the Smiths. I created a 6 foot by 5 foot Gotham City, which we lit. Then the 2 feet tall Will and Jada figures were added, standing mighty, overlooking Gotham." quipped Joanne.
So what is Joanne Gregory doing at Sotto Sopra? Chef Gregory has been working as a consultant, recreating the desserts I remember so well from Italy, even our cookies. From the start of your meal to the sweet finish, I want it to be memorable.
La Dolce Vita
Riccardo
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
The Bride and Groom

Riccardo and Monika at their 'white' wedding this past July. Although they were married a couple of years ago in the courthouse they went back to Monika's home in Poland.
Click here to check out additional wedding shots. Their photographer works for National Geographic.
The couple honeymooned in Italy!
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