If there’s one thing that epitomises the Italian way of life, it’s the refusal to scrimp on quality. And that goes double for Italian cuisine, which embraces fresh, wholesome produce, home cooking, regional specialities and the importance of provenance in sourcing ingredients.
Now, with the opening of Eataly, a food emporium that combines multiple cooking stations with a cafe and gourmet farmers’ market, we can all take a little piece of Italy home in the hope of our dinner guests exclaiming: “Delizioso.”
With 50 workers in the kitchen – including five key chefs flown in from Italy – Eataly opened its doors earlier this month in The Dubai Mall, a 2,000-square-metre homage to its sister spaces in Italy and New York.
The Eataly chain began life in Turin in 2007 in a rundown former vermouth factory. Founded by the electronics entrepreneur Oscar Farinetti, it quickly expanded to 12 outlets across Italy, of which the biggest is a vast 8,000-square-metre complex in Rome, opened on the site of a former train station.
The New York site, which is more than twice the size of its Dubai cousin, followed in 2010 after Farinetti formed a partnership with the celebrity chefs Mario Batali, Lidia Bastianich and her son Joe. Americans, many of whom can trace their ancestry to Italy, were quick to embrace its philosophy, and the outlet has since become an institution in its own right.
Italian wonderland
It has been dubbed “the Disney World of foodies”, while Batali calls it a “temple … where food is more sacred than commerce”.
While Batali and the Bastianich family have no involvement in the UAE venue – which is expected to be the first of several across the region – the franchise was brought to the Middle East by Azadea, which runs the Butcher Shop and Grill restaurants and Paul cafes.
“Even without advertising, we already have a lot of Italian customers,” says a spokesman for Eataly.
“A lot of customers are already familiar with the concept. We have tried to create a luxury shopping environment and somewhere you can enjoy products from all over the country in a relaxed, comfortable atmosphere. The emphasis is on the quality of food and authenticity of ingredients.”
That means importing the bulk of ingredients for its multiple restaurants and produce for the store from Italy, from aged Parmigiano vacche rosse made only from red cows to Pugliese burrata and olive oil and Gragnano dried pasta, made near Naples for more than 400 years.
Shop and snack
The outlet makes its own fresh mozzarella every day, as well as creating about 100 rounds of scamorza, a curd cheese made from cows’ milk and shaped into delicate pear-like baubles, which resemble Christmas-tree decorations. Hundreds of them are strung enticingly from the tiers of the cheese counter, which also sells grano Padano and pecorino Romano.
Eataly’s motto is “eat, shop, learn” and customers drawn into the brightly lit Dubai branch are given a pamphlet explaining how to shop and eat there.
“It can be overwhelming when you walk in,” says the spokesman. “Part of our job is to guide customers around and teach them where the food comes from.”
The Italian venues are homed in historical buildings, while the New York site has a rustic feel, with seven different restaurants under one roof.
Diners have to hop between venues to sample dishes in each, but, in Dubai, there are two central eating areas and one menu, offering customers the chance to order from its five restaurants.
They include a rosticceria with pollo arrosto (a roasted half-chicken) and prime rib beef to either buy and take away or eat in store, stands for paninis and piadina (traditional, thin flatbread from the Romagna region) stuffed with
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