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Chef of
the Year:
Pino Posteraro, Cioppino's/Enoteca
Fork, knife, gourmet spoon!” Pino
Posteraro barks to one of his servers from the open
kitchen of his Yaletown restaurant; his voice carries
through the dining room. It’s a busy night and
the next course is coming, but the server has no idea
what it is. Nobody does. But if the plate is headed
for your table, you’re in luck. It means Pino’s
cooking for you.
Why did our judges vote him Chef of the
Year? “The genius of his cuisine lies in its simplicity,”
remarked one. “Pino is incredibly smart. He takes
an academic approach to his cooking. [He was studying
to be a cardiologist before he turned his formidable
focus to the kitchen.] He realizes that great food requires
careful thought.” Discerning diners who put themselves
in Pino’s hands are rewarded with legendary tasting
menus prepared à la minute. In fact, his shouts
of “Fork, knife, gourmet spoon” have become
such a regular refrain that his employees have created
a Facebook group of that name.
What sets Posteraro apart, besides his
prowess in the kitchen, is his acute understanding of
how a restaurant works. He holds his staff to an intensely
high standard. He patrols the dining room every night
and visits every table. He’s praised by friend
and contemporary Tojo for his passion and his tireless
work ethic. (When a Japanese chef admires your dedication,
you’ve truly arrived.) Wine expert David Scholefield
marvels at his incredible palate: “He has an innate
ability to pair food and wine. I’ve seen him taste
a bottle he’s never seen before and then head
straight for the kitchen. Before you know it, he’ll
emerge with an astonishing dish that highlights elements
of the wine that most chefs would never discover. It’s
absolutely remarkable, yet I’ve seen Pino do it
dozens of times.”
This was Posteraro’s year. You couldn’t
walk past a bookstore without seeing his cookbook, A
Lifetime of Excellence in the Kitchen. He hobnobbed
with bad boy chef/author Anthony Bourdain and hosted
Jennifer Aniston’s birthday dinner in his private
wine room. The Canucks make regular appearances. When
celebrity chef (and Lumière’s new headman)
Daniel Boulud arrived in Vancouver, his first meal was
at Cioppino’s; the menu included spot prawn consommé,
seared Qualicum Bay scallops with cilantro pesto, pappardelle
with wild sea bass, and local lamb saddle with chickpea
fries and ratatouille. Boulud, who’s not easily
impressed, was impressed.
Posteraro’s crowning achievement
was a Gold Medal Plate award for his most inspired dish
yet: a roasted chestnut and porcini soup with foie gras
brioche croutons, vanilla Chantilly cream, and shaved
white Alba truffles. “I love to cook with chestnuts
because they remind me of my childhood in Calabria,”
he says. The end result is a meticulous, ethereal mélange
of tradition, inspiration, and smart spontaneity—much
like the chef himself.—Chris Gonzalez
Cioppino’s/Enoteca
1133 Hamilton St., 604-688-7466
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