After celebrating Christmas with your family, make the most of the bubbling activity in the Lagoon to hunt for romanticism and tasty bites. Venice, a gourmet town? Well, put this way, it may seem a laughable statement for the enjoyment of those who, spending little time here and being unable to avoid commonplaces, continue to see it as a tourist-trap, with very bad quality food and extremely rare decent establishments. 
On the contrary, the list of places you can count on (at all levels: restaurants, inns, bacari) is much longer than one would imagine: from Ridotto to Covo, from Carampane to Vecio Fritolin, from Santa Marina to Vini da Gigio, from the Wildner to the brand new Centrale – just to name but a few, without including the starred restaurants – the list is long. But there’s an interesting phenomenon that is getting a foothold: the great attention paid by the hotel industry to restaurants, the desire to put food at the centre of their project, entrusting young, passionate and driven chefs.

Luca Veritti, Met 's new chef (foto Porzioni Cremona)
In Italy, hotel restaurants are always looked at with suspicion: very often with reason, other times by mistake, the food in hotels is considered bland and banal. Except, right in the Lagoon, the desire to heighten the level of the cuisine seems a pleasant virus contaminating the most prestigious establishments, as if the “
Corrado Fasolato effect” – already two Michelin stars at the 
Metropole – had bequeathed a remarkable desire for emulation, even now that he is back to the 
native hills of Schio.  
The owners of the 
Met, for example, reacted to parting with the chef from Vicenza by entrusting 
Luca Veritti, a 32 year old chef from Friuli, with the task of carrying forward the 
Tracontemporaneo menu created by
 Oscar Cavallera, a list with some Italian classics in their traditional version, and a parallel one, with the same recipes but reviewed, starting from the truly Venetian 
sarde in saor: in the contemporary version, the sardine appears in a geometrical shape, paired, but not blended, with the onion, while the vinegar perfumes of raspberries and the raisins are softened with Verduzzo.
Even the spectacular and brand new 
Centurion Palace, a five star luxury hotel overlooking Canal Grande and a short walk from the 
Peggy Guggenheim foundation, has chosen to invest in the kitchen of the 
Antinoos and in 
Massimo Livan, a prophet in his own home (he is a pureblood Venetian). He is modern but respectful of tradition (his forte are risottos) and of the seasonality of products, without following trends, and with tasty dishes that have a limited use of butter and flour. 

Hiraki Masakazu, japanese, new chef at De Pisis
Even the luxurious 
Londra Palace, recently included in the Relais&Chateaux list, believes in the strength of food and of 
Loris Indri, another young chef from Friuli, who has full scope to give vent to creativity and concreteness. 
Alberto Fol, instead, is a young chef from Veneto (he’s half from Treviso and half from Belluno), who has spent the past 6 years at the 
Europa & Regina – another classic, with a splendid terrace overlooking Canal Grande – and at the restaurant 
La Cusina, where he creates tasty, fascinating and healthy high-quality dishes.
It’s nice to notice, also, that all these important establishments have focused on chefs from Veneto and Friuli. Except one, namely 
De Pisis. After starting with
 Giovanni Ciresa, the fascinating restaurant of hotel 
Bauer, with a spectacular view on the basilica of St. Mary of Health, has chosen Japanese chef 
Hiraki Masakazu, an apprentice, amongst others, of 
Gualtiero Marchesi, in the old establishment of the master in Kobe.