Magazine Dichecibo6.it

Navigation
  • English
    • Italiano (Italian)

Recent Posts


  • FOOD, BEER AND WINE IN ANCIENT EGYPT – THE SHEDEH OF TUTHANKAMON AND THE MAREOTICO WINE OF CLEOPATRA
  • SI CUCINE CUMME VOGLI’I…(If you cook as I want)
  • What pet food r u? – Delicious bowls
  • New Atlantis by Francis Bacon Land, food, Neverland and all that goes with it
  • Bauerngarten: the essence of South Tyrol in a few square metres
  • Food and jazz sound good together
  • The protein-based diet of the mycenaean heroes. Red meat and game for Achilles, Odyssey and Agamemnon.
  • New Atlantis by Francis Bacon: Land, food, Neverland and all that goes with it
  • Numero Six 2021-08-02
  • Number Five 2021-03-22
  • Number Four 2020-06-15
  • Number Six 2021-08-02
  • Number Tree 2020-03-16
  • Number Five 2021-03-22
  • Number Two 2019-12-09
  • Number Four 2020-06-15
  • Number One 2019-09-20
  • Number Tree 2020-03-16
  • Events
  • Number Two 2019-12-09
  • Staff
  • Number One 2019-09-20
  • Number Zero 2019-05-01
  • Staff
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
info@dichecibo6.it
instagram
facebook

Quarterly Num.R.G.2728/2019 - num.reg.Print 6093 in date 28/02/2019 registred at Tribunale di Firenze

Copyright © Magazine Dichecibo6.it. 2025 • All rights reserved.

Hydra WordPress Theme by EckoThemes.

Published with WordPress.

Related Articles

Filter by Category

  • Food and History(27)
  • Food and Society(20)
  • Food and Art(16)
  • Interviews(13)
  • Man and Food(9)
  • Food and Science(8)
  • In Vino Veritas english(7)
  • Food and TRAVEL(4)
  • Food and innovation(4)
  • Food and yong people(3)
  • food-and-fashion(1)
  • Food, Biology and Nutrition(1)
  • Editorial(1)

Filter by Author

  • Agnese Raucea (2)
  • Alice Dini (2)
  • Andrea Battiata (2)
  • Anna Cafissi (19)
  • dichecibo6? (4)
  • Carlotta Fonzi Kliemann (2)
  • Chiara Murru (2)
  • Denata Ndreca (2)
  • Fiamma Domestici (14)
  • Francesca Cialdini (2)
  • Franco Banchi (29)
  • Giovanna Frosini (2)
  • Ilaria Loli (2)
  • Ilaria Persello (26)
  • Luca Galantini (10)
  • Marco Maldera (8)
  • Marta Mariotti (2)
  • Massimo Bartoli (2)
  • Monica Alba (2)
  • Nicoletta Arbusti (41)
  • Paolo Baracchino (6)
  • Rossana Gravina (4)
  • Sasha Perugini (2)
  • Silvia Ciappi (2)
Back to Latest Articles
Editorial

Preface 2023

Preface – magazine 2023 A contemporary magazine feeds upon dynamism and vigour. It instantly perceives the inputs deriving from the readers and evolves, offering its best at...

Posted on 30th January 2023 by Nicoletta Arbusti

Interviews

Filippo Saporito / The five senses in the kitchen

There is the scent of freshly cut grass in the air, the grass of the magnificent gardens of Villa Bardini, on Costa S. Giorgio, overlooking Florence. The Villa takes its name from...

Posted on 20th September 2019 by Nicoletta Arbusti

Food and Art

Appetite comes by looking

Food in the cinematic imagination From its origins, cinema has described the relationship between man and money, investing it with cultural connotations that range from ethnic to...

Posted on 1st May 2019 by Carlotta Fonzi Kliemann

Interviews

Eugenio Alphandery / San Carlo Spa, from history to the future.

Officina Profumo-Farmaceutica di Santa Maria Novella in Florence is one of the oldest pharmacies in the world, founded by the Dominican friars in 1221 and open to the public since...

Posted on 1st May 2019 by Nicoletta Arbusti

Interviews

Chef, female style.

It’s a sunny day; the hot coffee is excellent. We are sitting next to the window inside the bar where we agreed to meet for our interview. The smile of Anna Maria Visconte,...

Posted on 1st May 2019 by Nicoletta Arbusti

Food and Art

THE TASTE OF ART

when art masterpieces inspire healthy and tasty recipes Take the professionalism and passion of an art critic, Caterina Corni, with the passion for contemporary Indian art, the...

Posted on 1st May 2019 by Fiamma Domestici

Food and yong people

DICHECIBO6? Surprisingly, young people choose quality and culture.

The adventure of our magazine starts with young people and a mission announced as quite dangerous. On an almost spring morning, we have had a long conversation with the girls and...

Posted on 1st May 2019 by Franco Banchi

Food and History

Food’s magic

Leonardo da Vinci: a genius in the kitchen We have used to it. After Dan Brown’s and Marco Malvaldi’s Leonardo, we are all somehow “from Vinci”, especially in this...

Posted on 1st May 2019 by Ilaria Persello

Food and Society

The food-pleasure list

We are used to making lists and catalogues, especially now that our phones measure everything, our steps, and the time we spend on the phone or on social media or disposing of...

Posted on 1st May 2019 by Sasha Perugini

Food and Science

Does flour have a soul?

Let’s look at the Flour! Every day we come across a wide variety of food, both from animal and vegetable origin. We handle it, look at it, sometimes cook it, and eat it. Often, we...

Posted on 1st May 2019 by Marta Mariotti

View Latest Posts
Logo
Interviews

Filippo Saporito / The five senses in the kitchen


Nicoletta Arbusti
Filippo Saporito / The five senses in the...
Posted on 20th September 2019 by Nicoletta Arbusti
  • Italian
  • English

There is the scent of freshly cut grass in the air, the grass of the magnificent gardens of Villa Bardini, on Costa S. Giorgio, overlooking Florence.

The Villa takes its name from Stefano Bardini, the “Prince of antique dealers”, who bought it in 1913, making this 17th century Villa his retirement place, despite the fact that his real home and his Gallery were in Piazza dei Mozzi and Via S Niccolò, further downhill, near the Arno, nowadays a prestigious museum that houses his private collection.

The panoramic terrace of the Leggenda dei Frati overlooks the city, right in the lower part of the Villa, to the side of the gardens.

It is the prestigious restaurant of the starred Chef Filippo Saporito, opened in 2015.

He meets me here and joyfully greets me with his open and captivating smile. We had not seen each other for quite a while.

Filippo Saporito, as well as a famous chef, is also a fine observer, a witty, friendly, spontaneous person, and even a fan of art and rugby.

We start talking, sipping a coffee and tasting two delicious cakes he kindly offers me as we meet.

There is a calm, elegant and sparkling atmosphere in the Legend of the Friars: Saporito surrounds himself with young chefs, a rich, excellent brigade.

He works here with his wife Chef Ombretta Giovannini he met during the years at the Catering Institute in Chianciano.

He immediately speaks about her with passion: “She is very gifted; she is able to prepare fantastic food with just a little flour and two eggs”. As if to say, she was born with the gift of knowing how to combine creativity, skill and talent.

I immediately ask him if, according to him, we perceive food with the five senses, as some psychologists claim, and he promptly answers: “We do perceive with the five senses! Eating is tasting. A chef then needs to accustom the palate to “feel”.

The kitchen today has taken a step forward for the visual aspect. Just think about how important it is to “see” a pleasant dish. The visual aspect is important: the choice of colours, the shape. Consider the green colour: when scalding, vegetables become greener.

But the taste is fundamental.

I always ask my students if, for example, some of them have ever tasted a raw cauliflower, and the answer is always the same, no, nobody has.

Teenagers lack the joy of their grandmother’s cooking, the aromas and flavours of home cooking, as well as rolling around in a field of daisies, explore the smells and tastes. They need to get accustomed to the basic flavours of the kitchen, to understand if the dishes are too seasoned, to feel the pepper, and spicy food”.

What about the smell?

“Oregano, basil, garlic. The smell of freshly baked bread while you break it. Memories of fragrances perceived when we were children. They enter your mind and never leave you. They are a part of the perception you carry with you for a lifetime.”

The sense of touch?

“ We have just mentioned the cauliflower, touching it is feeling, it is feeling its crunchiness, for example. In cooking, the touch allows you to “understand” if a food is cooked, if the chicken is cooked, such as the fish, and the vegetables. Touch is feeling the bread in your hands as you cut it. You learn to perceive with the hands.

Sight, touch, taste, today it is all about just seeing and less about touching and feeling, but it is the smell that makes you understand if a dish is excellent or not! The sound of cooking is also part of the whole. Look, when cooking, the senses all go together in the relationship with food. And this is something really important to instil in young people ”.

Is there a difference between men and women chefs?

“ The kitchen is a masculine work, by tradition, for the heaviness of the work. However, a woman has a greater sense of smell, and thus a greater touch and delicacy. The quality of sensing tastes is more feminine. A woman has more nuances. Nevertheless, I could not say whether there is either a female cuisine or a male cuisine. Many women chefs have a male touch, and many male chefs have a female touch. I met many female chefs whose dishes could easily have been those prepared by men ”.

Smiling, at the end of our meeting, he tells me, with pride, that he is very happy with his son, who, at twelve, already has a passion for cooking and for rugby, like his father. Life goes on, and with such a Master, the future will be rich in knowledge and rewarding, that is for sure.

“ I am very happy because my son likes the genuine things in life, things that give you real joy ”

Photo made by carmeli / bedarumica.org
Nicoletta Arbusti
@narbusti
  • Share Article:
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit

Related Articles

Food and innovation

Edmund Mach Foundation in San Michele all’Adige (TN)

Discovering the educational and training activities of the Edmund Mach Foundation in San Michele all’Adige (TN) Excellence in the agricultural, food and environmental sectors. The...

Posted on 2nd August 2021 by Nicoletta Arbusti
Interviews

The Virtues of Olive Oil

An encounter with the agronomist Sonia Donati The clear blue sky, the approaching spring light and the vision of Florence from the rooftop bar where we meet: it all looks like a...

Posted on 16th March 2020 by Nicoletta Arbusti
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.AcceptReject Read More
Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT
  • Italiano
  • English