Carla Cipriani Brass |
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The daughter of Giuseppe Cipriani, Carla started following in her father's footsteps at a very young age by working at Harry's Bar and at Locanda Cipriani. She even opened her own small restaurant on the beach at the Venice Lido. After marrying the famous film director Tinto Brass, Carla decided not to keep her extraordinary culinary talents for the customers, but to get her husband and her children - Beatrice and Bonifacio - in on the act too. |
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However, after her father passed away in 1980, Carla returned full-time to her vocation as restaurateur, and took over as manager of Locanda Cipriani. |
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Paraphrasing Dante, I would say the following about Carla: Galeotto was lunch - but who cooked it! She oozed sensuality in each and every one of these actions - not just in the kitchen. This was a talent that her father Giuseppe was perfectly aware of and rightly proud of, so much so that he considered her to be his most precious partner and entrusted her with the trickiest tasks. Watching her prepare lunch or dinner instantly reminds me of how much her painstaking hunts through the food at the market stalls are like all the effort that goes into finding the right shots for a film and how the hours she spends over the stoves are like shooting a film in slow motion. She has a relationship with food that sometimes escapes the bounds of reality but this is how her creative flair submits to the tastes and demands of her sensuality. It is this sensuality that is the very secret behind her dishes, whether it's her famous 'Scampi alla Carlina' or the sumptuous 'Risotto alla Boni', the legendary 'Polpettone per Tinto' or her simple but unique 'Pasta e Fagioli'. They are all an invitation to sensual delights that promise to share her 'joie de vivre'. In the same way that it is impossible to refuse Dante's irresistible Galeotto, many producers have been unable to refuse financing one of my films when faced with a dish prepared by my wife. In fact, it is thanks to my 'delicious' wife that I found the inspiration to make my film 'Elogio della Carne' (Ode to the Flesh) which was featured in a retrospective of my work at a cinema in Paris! |
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