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A Rare Italian Symphony
PHILADELPHIA --- As I sat feasting a few weeks ago
at a corner table in the small and intimate restaurant
run by Marc Vetri, I could have closed my eyes and believed
I was in Italy. A passionate Italian cook would be alone
in the kitchen, cooking his heart out, creating a rare
symphony of fare that depended upon great ingredients,
an inborn knowledge of how they must go together, and
a palate that would out match anyones in a heartbeat.
That is Vetri in a nutshell: A 10-table, three year-old
restaurant in the center of Philadelphia, the creation
of young Marc Vetri, an American who worked in Italy,
New York and Los Angeles before settling here in 1988.
The next year he was named one of the 10 Best New Chefs
in America by Food & Wine magazine. And the phone
has not stopped ringing since.
When Italian food is great, it cant be beat for
simplicity, sensitivity, sensibility to ingredients.
Vetri gets all this, and he also understands balance.
His pasta dumplings are delicious on their own, but
it is as if he understands exactly how much sage (the
herb that kill a dish with its pungency) and how much
pancetta will create a perfect balance that ends up
in pure, warm, ethereal pleasure.
I felt the same exactness of measured ingredients in
his spinach gnocchi, teamed up with shaved smoked ricotta
and brown butter. Butter you say? But somehow, here,
with perfect balance, the butter was an essential, cant
leave it out ingredient. Not butter for butters
sake, but because it HAD to be there to make the dish
the star it is.
The lightest touch of all was his ricotta with fresh
fava beans with just a few drops of walnut oil, making
for a refreshing mid-meal pause.
But I would go back again and again just to same his
perfectly roasted spring baby goat, served with simple
parslied fingerling potatoes. What is it about goat?
So subtle, tender, pure when roasted to a crisp. There
is that touch of wild about goat meat that makes one
feel daring as a diner. And you palate says thank you
for not offering it the same old tastes, day after day.
Vetri
1312 Spruce Street (between Broad and 13th Street)
Philadelphia, PA 19107
Tel: 215 732 3478
All major credit cards. Open for dinner only, Monday
through Saturday. About $50 per person, not including
wine or service.
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