- On The Line
- Season 1
- Episode 2
A Day With a Michelin-Starred Chef, Making Fresh Pasta & Running a Kitchen
Released on 04/27/2022
What people don't realize in Italia
is that there's 20 different regions.
Each region has its own style of cuisine,
and we focus on the region of Emilia-Romagna.
The cuisine of Emilia-Romagna is based on pasta all'uovo,
pasta made from eggs.
Normally, it's made by a nonna, could be a rezdora,
whoever is the head of the household is, right,
rolled al mattarello, with a huge rolling pin.
We want the feeling of when you walk
into someone's house at the end of the day.
[upbeat music]
Hi everyone, welcome to Rezdora in New York City.
I'm Stefano Secchi, the chef here.
Come on in.
From 9:00 AM, we're about to get started.
[upbeat music]
[upbeat music]
So the kitchen's divided into two areas.
This is kind of like where we expo
and where all the cooking gets done.
We have arrosto here on the left-hand side.
Right behind there is pasta.
We have two wells.
We have a combi oven.
Antipasto, Sam's cutting up fettunta for tonight.
Let me take you on down to the other part of it.
Perfect example of working in basements in New York City.
I mean, I've hit my head so many times,
but it doesn't matter anymore.
But yeah, it's the thing, this is a small space,
but it's the best, we get a lot done here.
And then on the right-hand side,
you're gonna see where all the pasta gets made.
They're there from 9:00 in the morning
until 6:00 at night, all day, seven days a week.
[upbeat music]
We'll start making pasta doughs at around 9:00, 9:30.
We have around nine different pasta doughs
that we use right now.
All of our pasta has been handmade
and that's what we specialize in at Rezdora, right?
Whether it be, you know, extruded, rolled, on mattarello.
Who are we if we're gonna borrow our cuisine to not like
have respect for the history and the tradition of it?
All right, so we're gonna make the spinach cappelletti dough
for Nonna Walking Through the Forest.
This is what built the restaurant.
Grandma Walking through the Forest,
that's based on antipasto and primi
that I used to eat with this nonna every Sunday
when I was off of work over there.
She served it to me once, for the first time,
and she put that down with little pieces of parmigiano
and just a little affetati as well, or prosciutto.
I cut into it.
I put in my mouth, and I was like, This is incredible.
I've got these really beautiful heirloom eggs
that we use for all of our fresh pasta.
And my father's from Sardinia and we have a farm there.
And all the vegetable scraps and the watermelon rinds
and everything, we feed to our chickens.
And then you get these really dark yolks.
You can't go to the supermarket and find yolks like that.
It gets me really excited.
Small little things in life
and this is one of them, definitely, right?
For that spinach that we just blanched,
we're gonna blend this with those beautiful eggs
that you saw, the dark orange yolks.
We're gonna pour all the spinaci in.
And this will give the cappelletti
the beautiful dark green color that we're looking for.
We extrude all the spaghettoni today
for the ricci di mare, the sea urchin pasta
'cause we're getting fresh sea urchin in
a little bit later this morning.
It's new.
It's gonna be sea urchin with salsa pomodoro.
And then we're gonna finish with more fresh sea urchin
on top, extra virgin olive oil, and mollica,
so you get like the texture as well.
So we get the color
from the inchiostro di calamaro, the squid ink.
Do you see these ridges that I think are so important?
I make my dough a little bit wetter than you're supposed to
just 'cause I want the ridges from the bronze dye
'cause all that, it's gonna attach
to the salsa ricci di mare,
which is pomodoro and blended up ricci.
Again, that pasta has like three ingredients tops,
but it's intense, you know, sea urchin flavors.
So that's what we're looking for.
It's gonna be amazing.
Now I'm also gonna work on doing strozzapreti dough,
which is gonna be the one pasta dough
that we do without any eggs.
It's just water, semolina and doppio zero.
Doppio zero flour, it's like highly refined.
It makes just a beautiful, soft wheat pasta.
And so strozzapreti means pre-stranglers
because the rumor is, is that like a priest used to come
invite themselves over to houses and like they would eat
all the food of the nonnas of the family.
So these nonnas started coming up with this pasta
that it would be called strozzapreti or pre-stranglers
'cause they were hoping they ate so much
that they would never come back again.
See how the spring back was so quick there?
That's what we're looking for, okay?
[upbeat jazz music]
Okay, so we're gonna hand-shape the cappelletti right now.
This is the Ferrari of pasta machines, Monferrina.
Why is it the Ferrari of pasta machines?
Because there's a rumor that
Fiat is made in Piedmont, in Turin, right?
And so like there's a rumor that engineers
from Fiat were like tired of making cars.
They're like, listen, we're gonna go
and make pasta machines.
So it's got some horsepower to it.
It's incredibly sturdy.
Rarely fails.
Accept no substitutes, yeah?
And one thing that we do at Rezdora that you don't see
at a lot of places is that we laminate our dough.
So you get like more of an al dente texture
when you have fresh pasta, right?
Like the heart of our food is
pasta all'uovo and handmade pasta.
We have so many different shapes that
it stays in rotation.
It stays really fresh, right?
So yeah, you can freeze it and you can
put some in the fridge and things of that nature.
But when you have so many shapes,
you're consistently making it all the time.
So there's a lot of turnover.
So and we just choose for that to be the case.
We'll start going through extruded pastas first,
put 'em on a sheet tray, and then let that rest
so they can dry a little bit before we bag those guys up.
We only have five hours 'til service, 'til service begins.
Pastry chef is working to set up her station,
Dominica, Dominique.
Anthony's upstairs.
He's gonna be doing costata.
We have like an amazing team upstairs,
and we gotta kick it into gear, yeah.
100%.
[upbeat jazz music]
We get most of our deliveries
around 12:30 to 1:00 PM window.
And we probably have, I think on our list,
25 to 30 different purveyors, so it's massive.
Some purveyors do way better job
on one or two ingredients than others do, right?
And the idea for us is
that we are very ingredient-driven.
So we wanna find the best of the best
that we can get our hands on, and then take it from there.
People wait for like a month,
month and a half to get a reservation here.
It's like, we're gonna get the best that we can.
We just got it.
The sea urchin in from Maine,
Tim from Regalis just brought 'em.
I mean, just look, they're still moving,
really beautiful.
Those super cold waters this time of year
lead to that really bright vibrant color
and that extremely sweet finish to it,
just pure essence of the ocean really.
These will be the base of the top
for the spaghettoni that we do a little bit later, yeah?
I mean, to be honest with you,
there's nothing that's better than that, yeah?
I mean, it's unbelievable.
What you guys are all gonna taste right now.
I mean, we're going,
we're breaking the fourth wall right now.
You have to taste it.
[Cameraman] Thank you so much.
Of course, when it's so cold in the water,
and they're just sweet like that, it's unbelievable, right?
You cannot describe that to someone unless they taste it.
It's impossible.
[upbeat music]
2:00 PM, I encourage the staff to experiment
and really get behind doing, putting up dishes.
I mean, that's like the best part
is the experimentation side.
So Ottavio is a sous chef here,
and we've been talking about mozzarella for a long time.
He's got an amazing idea to do
a mozzarella affumicata, smoked mozzarella.
So what we're gonna do is we just got our mozzarella
in today so basically the hard part of the leek,
the outer part of the leek,
I use it to wrap around the mozzarella
so that when I put it in a smoker,
it's actually gonna start getting the flavors of leeks.
And after 20 minutes, we have a nice smoked mozzarella.
So we have leeks four different ways.
We have the leek puree.
There's also some apple vinegar inside
so it adds some acidity to the plate.
Mozzarella.
Here we're gonna have our braised leeks.
This has been braised for about an hour.
Some nice maldon salt.
The fried leeks on top,
which adds a nice crunch to the plate.
And we'll go through three or four renditions
of this plate to find something that we really like.
So mozzarella affumicata,
you have the sweetness of the saba,
you have the sweetness of the leeks,
and you have the beautiful green leek oil to finish it off.
And again, we're in the early stages and this is what we do.
We'll put three or four or five different dishes up
until we kinda like all of us talk, we taste
and we're like, this is what we're happy with, you know?
Definitely a group effort, a hundred percent.
[smooth jazz music]
We gotta get the costata cut right now.
We have to powder it.
We have to tie it.
We have to get all the pasta set up.
We gotta get all the arrosto set up.
I mean, we really gotta pick it up.
So we have one big steak on our menu,
which is like our large format dish
that people are meant to share, and we hand cut it,
so it's a different size every time,
and then we rub it with porchini.
In the middle of Modena,
they have all these porcini mushrooms
that are drying from the season, right?
We dry this out in the oven.
We blend them with 3% salt,
and it becomes the powder for the costata.
You get this really earthy incredible
delicious funk from the 68 dry-aged
plus the porcini as well and the brown butter.
[Anthony] And it's like- It's next level.
Yeah, it's really delicious.
Really, really delicious.
So Anthony's our executive sous.
He's a legend at breaking down lobster.
So we've already steamed it,
but we steam it around 10 to 15% of the way.
And then we're gonna break it down.
We're gonna use the shells for the stock
that we're gonna make.
And then we're gonna take the meat,
and that's gonna go in the strozzapreti
that you saw me rolling earlier
with lobster stock and pomodoro.
We have, you know, a couple hours left before service
so we really have to start hustling now.
We have to get going so we can be fully set
for the dining room at five.
[smooth jazz music]
We don't have too many changes,
but we reprint the menu daily based on the changes.
So like instead of finferli chanterelles,
we're gonna now move on to spugnole,
which are morels in Italiano.
We're gonna take off the sage
'cause we're gonna have brown butter and spugnole.
We're gonna do that ricotta, egg yolk,
spugnole, and black truffle.
Really, really delicious.
And that's really the only change
that we have for the menu today.
We have to put menus down in the covers.
We have to get everything prepped and set up over here.
And like we have what [speaking foreign language]
one hour and fifteen minutes
plus family meal to take down so.
[upbeat music]
We have a pre-shift meeting every night.
So the chefs come with like all of our 86s,
what we're low on, what we'd like to try and push,
like what things are really delicious.
Food notes, we've changed the chanterelle,
the finferli, on the Uovo to spugnole.
We have these really beautiful morels
that come from the Himalayans.
They're so big, this size, so delicious, so beautiful.
Have a great service, guys, grazie.
[staff claps]
[upbeat music]
Okay, so 4:53, we open in seven minutes.
I'm just gonna show you,
lemme show you the spread of covers tonight.
So at five o'clock, we have a good hit.
This is where we list everyone coming in,
people that we know, or that are regulars
of the family, and any allergies at all.
7:00 to 7:30, we get a really big hit,
25, 30 people, more or less.
[indistinct] 9:30, 9:46 is always a good one
because you know a lot of people that live
in the neighborhood that like are like just finishing work
or like want to come and relax
and the ambiance is amazing.
[upbeat music]
It's like the calm before the storm.
We have three or four tables coming in.
The bar's gonna slowly get full up.
It's gonna get very crazy, very quick.
Sal is the one that makes it all happen.
He's a monster.
You'll see during service, like we, none of this would work.
None of that would work.
And none of this would work.
This is what it's all about. You learn from the best.
Easy, easy, easy.
So we've got three chits in already.
Our chits pretty much talk little bit about people
that are coming in to dine with us.
This a birthday here for Evan.
They have to be out by 7:00 PM for instance.
Okay, so first order gnocco fritto, cacio.
We split the course line, put the table in bold.
They have to do a cacio, which is a lettuce,
so that'll be about two or three minutes.
[speaking foreign language]
And so the gnocco, we're gonna fire
three or four minutes afterwards.
Our GM's parents are in too
so we're gonna like we're gonna spoil him.
It'll be great.
[Stefano speaks Italian]
[smooth jazz music]
[smooth jazz music]
[smooth jazz music]
I think you always feel somewhat of the pressure, right?
But it's just because I love what I do.
I wouldn't do anything else.
The adrenaline you don't find anywhere, right?
You can't tell me, sitting in front of a computer
on a Excel sheet gives you that adrenaline, right?
So like, so for me to be able to get really excited
and start to ramp up,
that's something that I think is inherent
in a lot of cooks, to be honest.
[smooth jazz music]
[man speaking Italian]
[smooth jazz music]
[smooth jazz music]
[smooth jazz music]
[smooth jazz music]
Okay, guys, thank you.
We'll see you later.
I got three more hours.
We got four more hours of this.
So we're signing off right now, all right?
See you very soon [indistinct]
A Day Running A Family-Owned Venezuelan Restaurant, From Prep to Dinner Service
A Day With a Michelin-Starred Chef, Making Fresh Pasta & Running a Kitchen
24 Hours at a Michelin-Rated Restaurant, From Ingredients To Dinner Service
A Day at a 143 Year-Old Restaurant With NYC's Most Iconic Desserts
A Day At Portland's Best Mexican Restaurant
A Day With A Line Cook At Brooklyn's Hottest Chinese Restaurant
A Day With the Chef de Cuisine at a Top NYC Restaurant
A Day with the Bartender at Rockefeller Center's Legendary Bar
A Day with the Sous Chef at One of America's Most Influential Restaurants
No Stoves, No Ovens, All Live Fire: A Day With the Sous Chef at Osito
A Day With the Executive Chef at NYC’s Hottest Seafood Restaurant
14 Seats, 16 Courses, 1 Chef: A Day With The Yakitori Master at Kono
How a Burmese Street Vendor Serves Over 500 People at the Queens Night Market
The Most Exciting BBQ Joint in Texas is Egyptian
A Day at Austin's Top Caribbean Restaurant Cooking Whole Wild Boar
24 Hours Until Opening LA's Hottest New Restaurant
A Day With the Executive Chef at Austin's Freshest Seafood Restaurant
Making Pastry in Hollywood With 2 Michelin Stars: A Day at Providence
100 Hour Weeks: How a Master Italian Chef Runs an Elite Restaurant
Making 28,000 Pastries a Week in a Small Brooklyn Bakery
The Best New Restaurant in the Country is in New Orleans
A Day Making the Most Popular Pancakes in NYC
A Day with the Saucier At One of New Orleans’s Oldest Restaurants
The Soba Master Hand-Making Some of the World’s Most Difficult Noodles
A Day Making The Most Famous Sandwiches in New Orleans
Only 16 People a Night Can Eat This 17-Course Omakase
This Deli Turns Into Philadelphia’s Best New Restaurant at Night
The Former NOMA Chefs’ Wild New Restaurant
Brooklyn’s Hottest Pizzeria is Reinventing The New York Slice
A Day Making NYC's Most Hyped Burgers at Hamburger America
Miami's Best New Restaurant Serves a Peruvian Grandma’s Recipes
Miami’s Best New Chef is Making The Vietnamese Food of His Childhood
NYC’s Most Famous Bagels Are Made By A Ukrainian Refugee
The One-Man-Show Making & Delivering NYC’s Hottest Sandwiches
Las Vegas’ Most Iconic 24-hour Restaurant is on a Casino Floor
Chicago’s Last Original Drive-in Has Been Family-Run for 76 Years
The Fine Dining Restaurant in a New York City Subway Station
A Day at Chicago’s Only Michelin Star Indian Restaurant
NYC’s Best New Restaurant is Reimagining Filipino Cuisine
Charleston’s Chinese BBQ Joint With a Southern Spin
The Dock-To-Table Restaurant Taking South Carolina By Storm
This Restaurant is NYC’s Hardest Reservation
LA’s Cheapest Michelin Star Meal is Served in a Food Court
This Neighborhood Restaurant Has Kept a Michelin Star for 11 Years