Lunch at Il Talucco in Valdengo
Friday, 29th April 2011 | 12 Comments
The list of restaurants where I could happily move in next door and be content to eat in every day got a bit longer this week after a visit to Il Talucco. The organic restaurant, which its owners Valentina Aimone and Nico Zara define as “atipico” on their business card, is also a B&B. So the whole moving in next door plan isn’t so impractical.
Il Talucco is located in Valdengo in northern Piedmont, a short distance from Biella. It occupies part of a retired monastic complex; part of this is dedicated to the restaurant, the rest to the B&B and living quarters of Valentina, Nico and their daughter Francesca. Valentina’s parents also live in the complex.
Il Talucco’s food philosophy is guided by the Kousmine Method, an approach to eating that promotes the nourishing and health promoting function of food. The dishes are a mixture of organic, biodynamic, and healthy ingredients that rely on closely studied sourcing, mainly from small local producers.
Lunch started with a tall glass La Farinela’s rice beer, fragrant cumin bread baked by Eugenio Pol, and an assortment of cold antipasti: roasted peppers, couscous, goat cheese with pink peppercorns, spinach salad, beans with carrot and onion, cured olives, spelt salad, eggplant “carpaccio”, raw shrimp with strawberry puree. (I was surprised to find seafood on a table deep in the heart of landlocked Piedmont, but the chef is from northwestern Sardegna, so the shrimp are a nod to his distant origins.
Next came a platter of fried things: lemon, squash, artichokes, and paper thin slices of eggplant. This was seriously one of the best things I have eaten in the past decade. The fried lemon was a revelation and everything was so impossibly light and crispy.
The first course was a dish of home made ravioli stuffed with a mild cheese and vegetable filling. The ravioli were served with sautéed sugar snap peas, scallions, and garlic shoots, and garnished with borage.
The second course was a simple baked lamb shoulder cooked with mirto, a liquor from Sardegna. The lamb was fragrant and sweet, cooked to perfection. Apparently lamb is one of Nico’s strong suits, along with baked suckling pig. The dish was paired with Luigi Castino’s Barbera d’Asti.
Desserts are Valentina’s thing. She is strongly influenced by her mother’s French origins and prepared me a lovely île flottante with crystallized rose petals and served it with a glass of Recioto di Soave. To conclude, cocoa beans and dark chocolate (70 and 100%) and a nip of 20 year old rum.
Via Raffaello Sanzio 31
13855 Valdengo (BI)
iltalucco.com
Closed Monday & Tuesday













April 29th, 2011 at 8:43 pm
[...] English Text. [...]
April 29th, 2011 at 9:02 pm
[...] is dedicated to the restaurant, the rest to the B&B and living quarters of Valentina, … permalink Condividi la [...]
April 30th, 2011 at 10:49 am
Fried lemon?!
April 30th, 2011 at 7:44 pm
We would like to hope on the next plane and join you.
May 1st, 2011 at 12:08 am
Ditto to Tom and Ann! Cant wait to visit Piemonte! Looks like you found some amazing “food finds”. Great job — as always:-)
May 1st, 2011 at 12:40 am
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May 2nd, 2011 at 10:20 pm
This is the second time today I read about fried lemon. Is this becoming the new thing? It’s on the shrimp burger at the Richard Blais restaurant Flip Burger in Atlanta. Does the lemon flavor come through?
May 2nd, 2011 at 10:27 pm
@Natalie yup. i was shocked. it was the last thing i expected when i bit into it.
@Tom & Ann how bout the fall?
@Mamma Parla ditto!
@Kelly my mouth just watered reading your comment and thinking about fried lemon. the taste does come through. Im not sure everyone has the knack nico has in the kitchen. his food is so great. i’d love to try the shrimp burger in Atlanta for comparison sake. Have you tried it?
May 6th, 2011 at 7:34 pm
[...] The kitchen of this fine dining restaurant is led by 30-year old Luca Zecchin. I first encountered this chef’s baking on easter Monday, when a picnic in the countryside ended with his spectacular colomba. Light, airy, fresh, and fragrant, this typical Easter bread was one of the best things I ate in Piedmont. (It tied with Nico Zara’s frittura di verdure that I had at Il Talucco in Valdengo.) [...]
June 18th, 2011 at 12:10 pm
ciao niko a presto
November 3rd, 2011 at 10:00 pm
I have had fried lemon but I cannot recall where. I liked it. but I like all fried food.
February 3rd, 2012 at 11:48 pm
no fair. why isnt there a photo of the pudding?
the lamb in mirto sounds divine, what an amazing idea. x s