Welcome to blogs.villagevoice.com
Blogs
  • News
    • » News Home
    • » Daily News
    • » Runnin' Scared - News Blog
    • » Tom Robbins
    • » Wayne Barrett
  • Music
    • » Music Home
    • » Top Picks
    • » Find a Bar or Club
    • » Pazz & Jop
    • » Down in Front
    • » Sound of the City
    • » Siren
    • » Submit an Event
    • » Jukebox
    • » Join Music Newsletter
    • » Entertainment Ads
  • Calendar
    • » Calendar Home
    • » Top Picks
    • » Comedy Events
    • » Submit an Event
    • » Entertainment Ads
  • Restaurants
    • » Restaurants Home
    • » Restaurant Guide
    • » Restaurant Reviews
    • » Sietsema's Counter Culture
    • » Find a Bar or Club
    • » Fork in the Road (column)
    • » Fork in the Road (blog)
    • » Sponsored Online Menus
    • » Choice Eats Tasting Event
    • » Join Dining Newsletter
    • » Restaurant Ads
    • » Happy Hours App
  •  
  • Arts
    • » Arts Home
    • » Calendar
    • » Books
    • » Theater
    • » Art
    • » Dance
    • » Obies Theater Awards
  • Films
    • » Films Home
    • » Now Showing
    • » Movie Showtimes
    • » Reviews
    • » Join NY Film Club
    • » Movie Ads
  • The Ads
    • Ad Index
    • Flip Book
    • Media Kit
    • » Fitness Health & Beauty Guide
    • » Sponsored Online Menus
  • Classifieds
    • Free Online Classifieds
    • Real Estate For Rent
    • Sexy Black Book
    • Virtual Career Fair
    • Personals
    • Real Estate for Sale
    • Place an Ad (print)
  • Blogs
    • » Runnin' Scared
    • » Sound of the City
    • » La Daily Musto
    • » Fork in the Road (blog)
    • » All City
  • Columns
    • » La Dolce Musto
    • » Tom Robbins
    • » Sex
    • » Horoscope
  • Best Of
    • » Arts & Entertainment
    • » Bars & Clubs
    • » Food & Drink
    • » People & Places
    • » Shopping & Services
    • » Sports & Recreation
    • » Best of Ads
  • Bars/Clubs
    • » Bars/Clubs Home
    • » Gay Bars & Clubs
    • » Bars/Club Ads
    • » Happy Hours App
  • Archives
    • Advanced Archive Search
    • Locations Map
    • Event Search
  • Reader Recommendations
  • Promotions
    • Street Team
    • Join The Street Team
    • Contests & Promotions
    • Text Alerts
    • Buy Village Voice Merchandise
    • Supplements Archive
  • Site Map

Top

blog

Stories

  • Good Stuff

    DIY Dim Sum: The Lazy, Cheap Way

    By Sarah DiGregorio

    1
  • Featured

    Our 10 Best Sausages

    By Robert Sietsema

    2
  • Featured

    Strong Place Will Most Likely Open by May 1

    By Rebecca Marx

    3
  • Featured

    Mary Ann's Seized by the Tax Man

    By Rebecca Marx

    4
  • Events

    Nurse That Post-St. Patrick's Day Queasiness at ...

    By Chantal Martineau

    5
  • Taste Test

    The New Taco Bell Pacific Shrimp Taco

    By Robert Sietsema

    6
  • Behind the Bar

    Amity Hall's Jason Keogh Talks Beer, Jager Bombs, and St. Paddy's Day

    By Chantal Martineau

    7
  • Battle of the Dishes

    Guinness Pours: Molly's Shebeen Versus Swift's H...

    By Sarah DiGregorio

    8
  • Featured

    A Dim Sum Renaissance Is Upon Us

    By Robert Sietsema

    9
  • The Early Word

    Kaz An Nou, New French-Caribbean in Prospect Heights

    By Sarah DiGregorio

    10
  • Chatting With

    Eugene Mirman on Beef Navels, the Brooklyn Food ...

    By Keith Wagstaff

    11
  • Behind the Bar

    Chatting With The JakeWalk's Ari Form

    By Chantal Martineau

    12
  • Featured

    The Chiquita Banana Sticker Gets a Facelift

    By Rebecca Marx

    13
  • Featured

    Will a Chihuahua Actually Eat Taco Bell?

    By Sarah DiGregorio

    14
  • Featured

    SXSW Restaurant Guide

    By Robert Sietsema

    15
 
Chatting With

Chatting with Mathieu Palombino on the New Motorino, Pizza Fetishes, and Classic French Food

By Sarah DiGregorio, Wednesday, Sep. 16 2009 @ 5:19PM
Comments (2)
Categories: DiGregorio, Featured

0U7G1337 SMALLER.jpg
Mathieu Palombino
​
Belgian-born chef Mathieu Palombino's culinary roots are in classic French cuisine. He was the chef de cuisine at BLT Fish when the restaurant was awarded a Michelin star, and three stars in the New York Times. But he harbored a secret passion for Neapolitan pizza, and left fine dining to open Motorino, a wood-oven pizza place that has earned a rabid following.

This week, he opened a second Motorino in the East Village, in the old Una Pizza Napoletana space. Last night, there was a line out the door, but the wait for to-go pizzas was only about 15 minutes. (And they were beautiful.)

We caught up with him for a chat.

It seems like you have a really good thing going on in Williamsburg. Why expand across the river?

Well, I always had the hope of expanding one day. I never thought it would come so fast, but when I heard Una Pizza Napoletana was for sale--this spot and this location, the set up is so good, there's already an oven. It's one of those things. You go for it. I knew I had to move on, so I bought it right away.


Do you have different goals for the two restaurants?

No, both restaurants specialize in Neapolitan style pizza. The Motorino in Manhattan is much more restricted by size. Basically the venue is much smaller than in Brooklyn. There, we have artisanal cheese, salumi, specials, special desserts...We cannot have that here in Manhattan. But by being limited in size, we actually get closer to the original idea of what a Neapolitan pizzeria is, which is very very simple.

I don't have too much room, so I have to be able do everything in a comfortable manner. It's so small, but the simplicity of it creates its own charm. It wouldn't make sense for such a tiny pizzeria to offer wide array of pizzas. That's why Anthony [owner of Una Pizza Napoletana] was doing very small, and I do the same.

Here we have some antipasti, the pizzas, and soft serve.

Why the soft serve?

Because I like it a lot. And also it's very practical. The machine is so good. It's such a good product. It's been churned the minute before you eat it.

Will you stick with chocolate and vanilla, or will you change the flavors?

I like the chocolate and vanilla the most. I have to see, and make my selections, but those are my two favorite ones--you can also get them combined together. I just like vanilla and chocolate, so I'm not very fun on this. I tried a green apple soft serve that was horrible, and sour cherry that was barely edible.

Have you had any former customers of Una Pizza Napoletana come in?

Yes, and the ones who came to see me said they loved it. We [he and Anthony, of Una Pizza Napoletana] are both very respectful of tradition. They way he prefers to do dough, and the way I do, it's a matter of personality, but the product is the same. It's comparing apple to apple.

Are there particular ways that your dough differs from Anthony's?

It's very similar. There's not so much variation that can be brought to a dough recipe. One baker might prefer it a little wet or a little less wet to accomplish the project, depending on structure needed for the bread. But a dough is a dough, although the final touches are very personal.

Me, I like a very well-fermented dough, and to me the perfect pizza has char--not burned--but I like rustic, and for the pizza to have this rustic character. Very airy, light structure, big bubbles and nice char: This is just the way I like it, and the way I believe in it.

How has it been, working with an unfamiliar oven?

Now I know what a good oven is. This one is very forgiving. Like a good car, it's very easy to drive. The one I have in Brooklyn is much more temperamental, much more difficult to keep at the same range. This oven is very, very friendly. It makes a nice pizza. The temperature of the stone is always in balance with the temperature of the inside of the oven, so that the pizza is cooked on the top and bottom in the same time. It's not raw on top and burned on the bottom.

It was imported from Italy, right?

It was made in Napoli and imported from there. There are only a few in this country. It's a very expensive oven, especially once you go there and bring it back, and everyone has robbed you, from Napoli to here! It ends up being an expensive oven!

But worth it?

Yeah, it's worth it. What price, though, I don't know. He told me $40,000. I think it's $20,000.

Do you still make your own mozzarella?

No, I'm no longer doing it. Here in Manhattan we didn't have room anyway, and we're doing strictly imported buffalo mozzarella.

Honestly, I found a guy making fiore de latte better than mine, and I just had to admit it.

Who do you buy it from?

I'd rather not say. But yeah, now I buy it. I realized what was the real truth behind the mozzarella. People think it's good to do it yourself, but you can only do it from the curd. Instead, you have to get it from a guy who does it from the milk, not the curd.

Curd is made in mass quantities in a factory, so the little guy can buy it, remix it and say they make their own fiore de latte. It's kind of true, but it's not the real mozzarella, the way it should be. Curd is an American invention. It's easier for transport. The real fiore de latte is made from milk to ball, in one application, not this quality-killing process that curd is.

Click through to find out what Mathieu thinks about New York's current pizza obsession.

 1  |  2  | Next Page >>
Comments (2) Write Comment
Share

Related Content

  • Eight Arms to Hold You January 22, 2002
  • Push Push in the Flatbush November 6, 2001
  • Dancing (Naked) in the Dark August 19, 2003
  • A Scene Grows in Brooklyn November 6, 2001
  • The Bohemian Diaspora October 18, 2005

More About:

  • Mathieu Palombino
  • Napoli
  • Jim Lahey
  • Pizza
  • Foods

Comments (2)

GiorgioNYC says:

I finally made it out to Motorino recently and have to say, if what I had that evening was typical, this place is highly overrated. The margherita DOC had four little measly disks of mozzarella, no basil, and bland tomatoes. The anchovy pizza, which was like a Neapolitan marinara, was somewhat better, but I had to pick out all the chunks of garlic. I know Americans like lots of garlic, and they think that Italian food must be loaded with it to be authentic, but good Italian cooks don't overdo the aglio like this. Good dough, but it wasn't enough to make what I had any better than fair.

Posted On: Wednesday, Sep. 16 2009 @ 10:02PM
Hai Holguin says:

How ya doing? You picked the ones closed to my heart too, despite the fact I know I am guilty of #1 when I don’t pay attention.

Posted On: Thursday, Mar. 18 2010 @ 9:24PM

Write Comment


Comments may not show up immediately after submission. Please wait a minute after posting a comment for it to appear.

All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By clicking "Post," you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms.

Tools

Search Fork in the Road


Follow

Email tips to tips@villagevoice.com

SlideShows»

  • Brooklyn Taco Experiment
  • Cookie Takedown
  • Chili Takedown 2009
  • More Slideshows >>

Most …

  • Posts of the Week
  • Donatella Arpaia Confirms Her Cooking Show, Suggests She Might Replace Michael Psilakis with Herself
  • Amanda Cohen Chats About Her New Menu, Diners Who Photograph Their Food, and the Demands of Lost Fandom
  • A Colicchio Backlash; More Pulino's Hype (From Everyone Except the Pizza Blogger)
  • The Caveman Diet Has Spawned a Caveman Bakery
  • More Recent Entries...
  • A Dim Sum Renaissance Is Upon Us (16)
  • The New Taco Bell Pacific Shrimp Taco (14)
  • Humping The Hump, Santa Monica's Whale-Serving Sushi Bar; Jonathan Gold Connection in the Fracas (10)
  • Where Am I Eating? [Updated with Hint] (8)
  • Five Most Annoying TV Food Commercials (7)
  • Our 10 Best Sandwiches
  • A Dim Sum Renaissance Is Upon Us
  • The New Taco Bell Pacific Shrimp Taco
  • Our 10 Best Sausages
  • Mary Ann's Seized by the Tax Man

Twitter Feed

Follow forkintheroadVV on Twitter

More Twitter >>

VVM on Digg

  • 56
    diggs
    Twitter finally made useful with Choose Your Own Adventure!
  • 1
    diggs
    California Man Arrested For Pot Twice In One Day
  • 1
    diggs
    Matthew Davis - When Things Get Dark - Peace Corps Story
  • 110
    diggs
    Naked man dancing on billboard stops traffic in Dallas [SFW]
  • 1
    diggs
    Moron Juror Stole Credit Card During Credit Card Trial
  • 1
    diggs
    Really Hot toys battle-damaged Iron Man Mark III figure
  • 1
    diggs
    Topless Robot - Grand Theft Anime
  • 1
    diggs
    Topless Robot - The 9 Worst Types of Podcasters
  • 1
    diggs
    Topless Robot - 10 Horrible Paintings from Atari 2600 Game B
  • 1
    diggs
    Topless Robot - This Is What Happens When British Nerds Don'
  • 508
    diggs
    F^*k Google Analytics (Pic)
  • 476
    diggs
    Online Threats Not Protected Speech
  • 346
    diggs
    Texas Oil Companies Fight CA Law to Combat Global Warming
  • 485
    diggs
    Wikipedia now on the menu at Chinese restaurants - WTF?
  • 340
    diggs
    (PICS) Burlesqueland: Disney-themed Burlesque Show
  • 250
    diggs
    21 Examples of Contemporary Billboard Art (PICS)
  • 358
    diggs
    Old Man Charged With Hate Crime for Grabbing Woman's Butt
  • 180
    diggs
    Firefighter Can't Extinguish Flame of Passion - In His Pants
  • 414
    diggs
    Sign This is Going to Be a Long Day (Pic)
  • 254
    diggs
    Malnourished Easter Bunnies Seized
  • 8776
    diggs
    Legalization of Marijuana Bill in California
  • 5801
    diggs
    Guess Who is Facing 21 Years in Prison?
  • 5051
    diggs
    Guys Dates Several Prostitutes. No Sex. Just Regular Dates.
  • 4605
    diggs
    Get Up, Stand Up: Ammiano Introduces Marijuana Legalization
  • 3753
    diggs
    Denver Airports Controversial 32 FT Zombie Mustang Sculpture
  • 3750
    diggs
    Guy Dumps His Cheating Girlfriend Live on Radio (Audio)
  • 2720
    diggs
    Meet Scientology's Worst Enemy
  • 2695
    diggs
    Decision Tree: Should I Buy an iPad? (PIC)
  • 2631
    diggs
    The best (PIC) of Colin Powell you'll see today.
  • 2589
    diggs
    Police Get The Wrong House In Galveston, Assault 12-Year old

Links

  • Eater
  • Grub Street
  • Serious Eats
  • Midtown Lunch
  • eGullet New York
  • Chowhound
  • Gothamist Food
  • Sietsema on Gourmet.com
  • Guardian UK: Word of Mouth
  • Eating in Translation
  • Food Buzz
  • Amateur Gourmet
  • Cheap Ass Food
  • Food in Mouth
  • The Girl Who Ate Everything
  • Blondie and Brownie
  • Eat Drink One Woman
  • Not Eating Out in New York
  • Time Out's The Feed
  • The Feedbag
  • Eat Me Daily
  • Hungry Beast
  • Saveur
  • Slice
  • A Hamburger Today
  • The Atlantic's Food Channel
  • The Food Section
  • Gastropoda
  • NYT: Diner's Journal
About Us | Work for Village Voice | Esubscribe | Free Classifieds | Advertising | Privacy Policy | Problem With the Site? | RSS | Site Map
©2010 Village Voice, LLC. All rights reserved.