Cook’s Tour of Italy
- Share via
Every Wednesday night at Alto Palato in West Hollywood, chef Roberto Perotti prepares a three-course regional menu. The cost is just $25 per person. Ordering the evening’s menu also gets you 40% off on any bottle of wine, so drink up. That bottle of Barolo won’t set you back much more than a good Chianti Classico on a normal night.
Since there are 23 regions in Italy--and few people have visited or can even name more than a handful, it will take close to half a year before they begin to repeat. And by the time the Marche or Sardegna roll around again, Perotti will be cooking a different menu anyway.
He himself is from Piedmont, home to the regal red wines Barolo and Barbaresco, the fabled white truffle and--as he would no doubt tell you--some of the best cooking in all of Italy.
Modestly, the young Italian-born chef didn’t begin the series with Piedmont; his home region doesn’t roll around until March 19. In recent weeks, he cooked a menu from Liguria (fresh calamari in mushroom and tomato sauce, trenette al pesto, and rabbit stewed with olives, walnuts and red wine “San Remo style”) I’m sorry to have missed.
I finally made it in for Trentino Alto Adige night. The menu from the mountainous region close to the Alps and to Austria, hence the Austro-Hungarian influence in the cooking, began with salcrauto e salsiccia all’ Altesina (a delicious sweet-sour sauerkraut with house-smoked sausage). Then came canederli alla Triestina (tender bread-and-salami gnocchi sauced with beef ragu), and finally spezzatino di vitello alla Bolzanese (veal stew with paprika). It’s quite a deal for $25. And, hey, I won’t have to use up all my frequent flier miles to get there.
Coming up: Basilicata, Feb. 26; Friuli Venezia Giulia, March 5; Valle d’Aosta, March 12; and Veneto, March 26. Call or pick up a schedule at the restaurant.
BE THERE
Alto Palato, 755 N. La Cienega, Los Angeles, (310) 657-9271. Open seven days for dinner, Friday and Saturday for lunch. Major credit cards accepted. Valet parking.
More to Read
Sign up for The Wild
We’ll help you find the best places to hike, bike and run, as well as the perfect silent spots for meditation and yoga.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.