Andrea Berton

 Credits Brambilla-Serrani

 Credits Brambilla-Serrani

Berton

viale della Liberazione, 13
Milano
+39.02.67075801

A little before being 40 years old, Marchesi Boy Andrea Berton became an adult. It’s not just a vital statistics. Nor a statement coming from an important goal he scored recently: his Trussardi alla Scala restaurant got 2 Michelin stars one year after the other (2008 e 2009), a rarity only occurred to the maestro Gualtiero Marchesi between 1977 and 1978, in Bonvesin della Riva, the same temple where our pivot from Friuli exhibited his early classy plays. He became an adult because he was able to prove Fela Kuti’s theory to be wrong: in Milan fashion restaurants around piazza Duomo in Milan never go beyond the expensive shit the Nigerian musician complained about through the lyrics of that (great) song. And it’s a great achievement, twice greater if we consider that the owner of the restaurant is a famous fashion company.

But, let’s throw away common places and let’s spy under the greyhound dress: there’s a beautiful shape and a great tasteful substance, assembled through gestures that emancipate from the teachings of the maestro, a sign of professional maturity. The visual and tasty array of ingredients and flavors, clear and sharp-cut, is indeed an explicit acknowledgement of filiation. But then contemporary techniques stepped in to cut the umbilical cord: the slow cooking of the pigeon, the risky irony of the roasted cuttlefish with liquorice, the forethought of signing dishes aware of higher demands (and complains) of lightness.

All flight paths that plough the starry spaces of taste, always ejected from the launch-pad of excellent ingredients. Indeed, if the boy made a long way, he owes a lots to all the other persons and restaurants who aided him to build his vision: Mossiman’s in London, Pinchiorri in Florence, Alain Ducasse in Monaco. And, most of all, Taverna di Colloredo in Monte Albano, near Udine, the home sweet home Berton went out from to see (and collect) the stars.

Has participated in

Identità London, Identità Milano, Un risotto per Milano, Shanghai


by

Gabriele Zanatta

born in Milan, 1973, freelance journalist, coordinator of Identità Golose World restaurant guidebook since 2007, he is a contributor for several magazines and teaches History of gastronomy and Culinary global trends into universities and institutes. 
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