Italian restaurants should only employ Italian cooks, says leading chef Aldo Zilli

'I don’t think anyone else from outside that country is going to understand that food'

Olivia Petter
Wednesday 17 April 2019 05:22 EDT
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Italian restaurants should only employ Italian cooks says award-winning celebrity chef Aldo Zilli

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A leading restaurateur and celebrity chef has said that Italian food must be cooked exclusively by Italian chefs in order for it to be authentic.

Speaking on ITV’s Good Morning Britain on Monday, Aldo Zilli, who helps run several Italian restaurants under the San Carlo group, revealed he only hires Italian chefs to work for him.

“You grow up in Italy, you grow up with your parents, you grow up with those flavours and I don’t think anyone else from outside that country is going to understand that food," he said.

Zilli went on to criticise Italian restaurants in the UK that serve spaghetti bolognese, which he said “does not exist in Italy”.

“It’s not a national dish,” he continued before adding that spaghetti carbonara, which is also popular in the UK, is not traditionally made with cream in Italy as it is here.

“If you go to Chinatown, no restaurants have an Italian chef, they’ve got Chinese chefs. If you go to Brick Lane, Indian chefs everywhere, Indian restaurants everywhere. But Italian food has to be Italian food,” he added.

Zilli made the remarks as part of a debate on the daytime show about cultural appropriation in the food industry.

The conversation was tied to the recent criticism aimed at British chef Gordon Ramsay, who described his new Mayfair restaurant, Lucky Cat, which is set to open in June, as an “authentic Asian eating house,” prompting people to accuse him of belittling Asian culture.

Angela Hui, a freelance writer for London-based food publication Eater, described the restaurant as a “real-life Ramsay kitchen nightmare”, remarking that she was the “only east Asian person in a room full of 30 to 40 journalists and chefs” at a recent preview event.

Ramsay responded to the criticism on Instagram, writing that while it’s important for critics and reviewers to have “freedom of speech”, the “slew of derogatory and offensive social media posts that appeared on Angela Hui’s social channels, were not professional".

“It is fine to not like my food,” he added, “but prejudice and insults are not welcome.”

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