Pepenero Public House

71010, PESCHICI, Italy

🛍 Pub, Pizza, Carne, Europeo

3.3 💬 80 Bewertungen
Pepenero Public House

Adresse: 71010, PESCHICI, Italy

Stadt: PESCHICI

Gerichte: 35

Bewertungen: 80

"Splendidi ravioli e gamberi e crema chef (osks, poi mangiare dalla fame). Pasta con lo scarico (pieno di conchiglie rotte, il dentista grazie) Seppia dura. 70 euro mai"

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Splendidi ravioli e gamberi e crema chef (osks, poi mangiare dalla fame). Pasta con lo scarico (pieno di conchiglie rotte, il dentista grazie) Seppia dura. 70 euro mai

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Kategorien

  • Pub Entdecken Sie eine gemütliche Atmosphäre mit herzhaften Mahlzeiten, Craft-Bieren und klassischem Pub-Essen. Genießen Sie Komfort-Food-Favoriten wie Fish and Chips, Burger und Wings, gepaart mit einem erfrischenden Pint oder einem kreativen Cocktail.
  • Pizza Tauchen Sie ein in unsere perfekt gebackenen Pizzen, zubereitet mit handgeworfenem Teig, reichhaltiger Tomatensauce und einer Mischung aus Gourmet-Käsen. Jede Scheibe platzt vor frischen Belägen und sorgt für einen köstlichen Bissen jedes Mal.
  • Carne Entdecken Sie unsere köstliche Fleischauswahl mit fachmännisch gegrillten Steaks, zartem Huhn und geschmackvollen Lammgerichten, die alle bis zur Perfektion gewürzt sind für ein unvergessliches Esserlebnis.
  • Europeo

Ausstattung

  • Wifi
  • Piscina
  • Mastercard
  • Carta Visa

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"Hard to find a taste-free tasting menu, but here it is. On the plus side, amazing views over the bay, highly stylish designer-modern venue in a Medieval castle, genuinely iconic interior design and décor, with plates, dishes and bowls that are genuine works of art. These are things Italians do brilliantly. It’s a feast for the eyes and for anyone interested in lighting, décor. style and ambiance. On minus side, staff who can’t remember who has ordered the pure fish tasting menu and who has ordered the mixed fish and meat tasting menu, the only two choices. Confusion precedes and colours every course. Staff, when asked, don’t seem to know what the dishes are either. Hard to know how to react when you don’t know what you’re eating. The tastes don’t add much so it’s all a puzzle. One of the ideas of the ‘tasting menu’, late of the 1990’s everywhere else, is to showcase ideas and skills in combining, sometimes contrasting, ingredients, tastes, style and so on. Each tiny mouthful, and we are talking tiny mouthfuls, should be a subtle explosion of multi-layered tastes and textures. First the primary taste, then a follow-on taste to amplify or contrast, then a hit of an exceptional taste, perhaps a special pepper or other flavour, to interests in a yet a different way. We have eight: salt, sweet, sour, bitter, umami, cold, hot, and hot peppery. Each course should be a colourful palette of flavours in each tiny dab of paint. It’s monochromatic here. A tiny fried mullet is overcooked to dryness, a piece of turbot is fibrous. No other flavours. A pat of something fishy tastes, well, fishy. Some pork and potato taste of pork and potato. Plates are swapped about as we realise the staff have no idea who’s eating which menu courses either. You’re on your own. It seems random. Some people get some things, others get something different. One or two are told what they’re eating, others are not. It’s stylish in a Monty Python way, but in terms of design it’s mostly form (the packaging) and least function (the food). One dish, sea urchin tubetti, stood out, but as the prickly little things are such a wonderful and distinct taste anyway, it’s hard to get wrong. It’s fun and an experience, and at €80 each really not that expensive considering the kitchen skill and work that’s gone into it. But it’s over-effortful and makes for an overly long dinner, perhaps why the tasting menu notion died out twenty years ago almost everywhere else. Each dish not only needs more work in terms of why it’s here, but also how and why it fits into the whole scheme of the menu order. The penultimate course is a strawberry sorbet, which precedes a pudding. The sorbet idea was invented in the great days of classic multi-course meals to cleanse the palate for more savoury dishes, rather than as a precursor to another sweet taste. Chef could move the sorbet up a notch so two sweet things don’t run together and invent something amazing. An olive oil sorbet flavoured with rosemany perhaps, sweetened with prickly pear – all local ingredients? An amuse bouche starter to showcase the kitchen’s skill with the tweezers and squirty bottles is so astonishingly tiny it could almost be ironic. Four minuscule pieces of no-food-food on a, by comparison, vast ceramic plate. A micro piece of anchovy has a crumb of preserved celery on it. The other bits are too tiny to taste of anything."