The ponytailed chef, who can be seen on the Food Network's "Iron Chef America" and other television programs, also touts a line of products including cookbooks and kitchenware.
Education: Graduated from Rutgers University with a double major in Spanish theater and economics. Enrolled in Le Cordon Bleu in London but dropped out after 3 1/2 months, a move he called "another example of my nascent stupidity. You should finish what you do."
First taste: While attending college, Batali got a job as a dishwasher at a pizzeria called Stuff Yer Face. He later became a pizza and stromboli maker, and said the experience got him hooked on the "adrenaline rush" of working in a kitchen.
Learning curve: As a young sous-chef at a London pub, Batali butted heads with renowned chef Marco Pierre White.
"He was a tempest; he was a storm brewing at all times," Batali said. "There's a well-documented incident where he threw a pan of risotto at me from 5 feet away. . . . In his opinion, the risotto wasn't right. I explained to him I was Italian and he was English, but he didn't like that."
Italian flair: After sharpening his skills at several establishments including hotel restaurants and a catering company, Batali headed to Italy when he was 29. For the next three years, he received culinary training as an unpaid cook at a restaurant in the tiny village of Borgo Capanne.
Big break: Batali borrowed $20,000 from three friends to start Po, an Italian restaurant in Manhattan, with business partner Steven Crane. The pair leased a small, 34-seat space for $3,000 a month and bought chairs, tables and other fixtures at a failed-restaurant auction. When Po opened in 1993, the menu featured a six-course prix fixe option for $29 and pasta dishes for $10.
"It was kind of a dreamy, hole-in-the-wall, sneaky Italian place that uptown people would tell some of their friends and not all of them because they didn't want them to discover it," said Batali, who has sold his stake in the restaurant.
Essential ingredient: Extra virgin olive oil. "I use it in just about every single thing I ever make, including desserts."
Can't stomach: Durian. The tropical fruit "smells like a gas station bathroom in the summer," he said.
Mozza madness: With most of his restaurants in New York, Batali agreed to venture into the L.A. market to work with longtime friend Silverton. The Mozza restaurants opened to intense hype (the pizzeria debuted in 2006; the osteria followed the next year) and are still among the hardest reservations in town. This summer Mozza 2 Go, a takeout and delivery service featuring pizzas and other Mozza favorites, opened next door.
Expansion: Batali will open two Mozza restaurants in Singapore next year with Silverton and Bastianich. They are also thinking about bringing a Pizzeria Mozza to Orange County and are brainstorming a new restaurant concept for Las Vegas, but Batali said he's "not one of those guys that wants to operate restaurants in every town in America."
Recession dining: "Our check averages are under $100 in every restaurant," Batali said. "You can always come and get a $15 or $18 bowl of pasta and a salad and a glass of wine and get out of there for $35. . . . We take great pains to make sure that the food is delicious, that it's fairly priced and that there's accessibility."
Personal: Batali, 49, splits his time between Greenwich Village and Northport, Mich., with his wife, Susi, and their sons, Benno and Leo.
Does Susi ever get to cook? "Get to cook? She doesn't want to cook," he said. "She makes my birthday cake every year -- that's about the extent of it."
What's with the clogs? Batali is rarely seen without Crocs, which he called "the most comfortable shoes in the world." He owns 50 pairs -- all orange, except for one red pair that he wore for a Bono charity event -- and washes them in his dishwasher.
Key to Italian cooking: "It's less about the hand of the chef and more about the quality of the ingredients. The greatest dishes in Italian cooking have removed all that white noise and it's all about that little noodle and the perfect peas and the Parmesan," he said.
"It's greatness without doing too much to it. If it's asparagus, I want it to taste like asparagus; if it's an apple, I want it to taste like an apple.
Title: Mario Batali first job dishwasher
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Post by 6:47 AM
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Post by 6:47 AM
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