Carlo Cracco
Carlo Cracco (born October 8, 1965) is an Italian chef and television personality.
Biography
Cracco attended the Pellegrino Artusi institute of hospitality management in the region of Veneto, Italy. After graduating, he worked at the restaurant Da Remo in Venice. A turning point in Cracco's career came in 1986 when he began to collaborate with fellow chef Gualtiero Marchesi in Milan. Later, he worked at the restaurant at La Meridiana, a resort in the province of Savona. Cracco then lived in France for three years, where he studied French culinary arts.
After that, Cracco returned to Italy, where he was chef at the Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence. The restaurant was awarded two Michelin Stars. Soon Cracco was invited by Gualtiero Marchesi to collaborate once again, this time on the opening of his new restaurant L'Albereta in the region of Lombardy, where Cracco worked as chef for three years. He then opened a restaurant in the Piedmont region called Le Clivie, which earned a Michelin Star.
A few years later, Cracco accepted an invitation from the Stoppani family, owners of the Peck marketplace in Milan, to open a new restaurant called Cracco Peck. He continues to work there today as Executive Chef.[1] Since 2007, the restaurant has been known simply as "Cracco."
The Italian food and wine magazine Gambero Rosso gave Cracco's restaurant "three forks" (their highest rating). In 2007, la Repubblica named it one of the 50 best restaurants in the world.[2]
In February 2014, Cracco founded a bistro in Milan called Carlo e Camilla in segheria ("Carlo and Camilla in the sawmill"), which takes its name from the disused sawmill in which it resides.
In 2011, Cracco began hosting the show MasterChef Italia with Bruno Barbieri, Joe Bastianich and, since 2015, Antonino Cannavacciuolo. Cracco has served as president of the nonprofit organization Maestro Martino since 2012. On February 13, 2013, he appeared at the Sanremo Music Festival, to introduce the artist Annalisa. Cracco was a host on the first and second seasons of Hell's Kitchen Italia on the channel Sky Uno.
Cracco has two daughters from his first marriage, and two sons by his current wife Rosa Fanti.[3]
Filmography
- MasterChef Italia, Cielo (2011); Sky Uno (2011–)
- Hell's Kitchen Italia (2014–)
Bibliography
- L'utopia del tartufo bianco, Casalnoceto, Folini, 2002. ISBN 88-7266-061-0.
- La quadratura dell'uovo, Casalnoceto, Folini, 2004. ISBN 88-7266-068-8.
- Cracco. Sapori in movimento, con Alessandra Meldolesi, Milano-Firenze, Giunti, 2006. ISBN 88-09-04791-5.
- Panettone a due voci. Carlo Cracco, Davide Oldani e il lievito delle feste. Storia, tradizioni, cucina d'autore, con Davide Oldani, Firenze, Giunti, 2010. ISBN 978-88-09-75561-1.
- Prefazione a Academia Barilla, 222 ricette facili della cucina italiana. Pasta, Vercelli, White Star, 2011. ISBN 978-88-540-1714-6.
- Se vuoi fare il figo usa lo scalogno. Dalla pratica alla grammatica: imparare a cucinare in 60 ricette, Milano, RCS Libri, 2012. ISBN 978-88-17-05914-5.
- A qualcuno piace Cracco. La cucina regionale come piace a me, Milano, RCS Libri, 2013. ISBN 978-88-17-06948-9.
- La grande cucina italiana. Carlo Cracco presenta le ricette regionali. Corriere della Sera Editore 2014.
- Dire, fare, brasare. In 11 lezioni e 40 ricette tutte le tecniche per superarsi in cucina, Milano, RCS Libri 2014. ISBN 978-88-586-7464-2.
References
- ↑ Intervista a Carlo Cracco, Living24.
- ↑ I 50 chef migliori del mondo, la Repubblica.
- ↑ Carlo Cracco «Barba e capelli più lunghi Il mio cambio di look per amore di una donna», Corriere della 1 Sera.