Crafting pure Italian cuisine without frills
She goes to a market every time she travels to Italy, most recently to Sardinia, because the market is where she gets all the information she needs. She checks out what’s available and how nearby restaurants use the ingredients in their dishes. The regions she chooses are different each visit, as she also wants to check out farms and merchants who could provide products to her restaurant in Seoul. She learns how to better serve the cheese or truffles she uses and also meets with merchants and farmers to suggest ideas for new products. She thinks those experiences are much more valuable than hitting up big name restaurants all over the world.
“It’s all about what I care for, and what I intend to experience,” said Park. “The more I experience things, I sense that my taste and my style start to develop, [and could avoid being] influenced by what’s ‘trendy’ at the moment.”
She explains that she’s not someone who follows trends. She is not very good at multi-tasking and doesn’t even know what functions her phone has besides simple voice calls and text messaging. But this has helped her stay focused on the few things she has done, such as working at the same restaurant for close to a decade.
“Many have told me that I should be better paid at a different job or I, with my level of experience, should be doing something else, but that never was so important for me because I wanted to continue [by myself]. I have my own identity I can confidently call my cooking style,” said Park. “Some might say I’m stubborn, but I think my forte is that I continue no matter what.”
She started her career in cooking Italian at Sortino’s in Hannam-dong, central Seoul, and served as an executive sous chef and a founding member of Italian restaurant Grano in Gangnam District, southern Seoul, while working for Italian chef Santino Sortino for about nine years. There, she was certain that she wanted to learn what she liked and disliked, and picked which direction she wanted to go in to build her future as a chef.
She found a residential home built in the 1950s and transformed it into a multiple-story restaurant with a rooftop and a small garden-like entry way to the main door. As the restaurant would be where she and her staff will work everyday, she wanted her work place to be in an area she finds fun to walk around and where she can enjoy the view of the sky along with the mountains. To make the restaurant feel more like another home in the neighborhood, she used props like giwa, traditional style roof tiles, to decorate the walls.
Now that she’s confident her first-ever restaurant is running smoothly with a system run by experienced staff, she’s exploring a new opportunity to branch out. She has been considering having a more casual place for food and drinks, and the concept may become a reality in southern Seoul.
“Over the past five years, I have tried to perfect what I did for the previous eight years so that I can take on another challenge,” said Park, adding that if she opens a new eatery, it will be a place where small portions of simple Italian dishes are served with drinks. “The main body has to be sturdy so that the tree can have many branches and twigs in the future.”
Although all the plans she has revolve around Italian cooking, she doesn’t think that she will only stick to Italian cuisine. She could also branch out to cooking Korean food, as her mother has been part of a local group in North Gyeongsang trying to hand down the local food there to the next generation and also runs a reservation-only restaurant right next to her home and garden.
“Not all the branches and twigs I will grow in the future will be Italian,” said Park. “I’m Korean, what I eat often is Korean food, so I will take slow steps later to maybe make something other than Italian cuisine.”
BY LEE SUN-MIN [summerlee@joongang.co.kr]
with the Korea JoongAng Daily
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