Ciao Oct/Nov 2017 CIAO_OctNov2017_Digital | Page 14

inthekitchen col lapsed in A rgentina in 2001, he relocated to Ein Gev, a kibbutz in Israel, where he ran a large kitchen. Then one day in 2008, he received a Facebook message from a school chum. “He said, I live in Winnipeg and you should come here.” The message turned out to be life changing. After paying a visit in 2009, the Maurys moved to Manitoba, at the very time Winnipeg was to see its fi rst major South American restaurant. Alfonso found a job at Hermanos. Maury’s reputation for running a tight ship and bringing unbridled enthusiasm and creativity to any task quickly had him taking up new opportunities. By 2012, he was overseeing Corrientes, under the same ownership group. His natural leadership resulted in being selected in 2014 to reopen the city’s signature revolving restaurant. Prairie 360, a passion project for FB Hospitality Group’s owner, Noel Bernier, was a perfect at Corrientes are fl avoured with Buenos Aires. Thanks to a massive wave of Italian immigrants to Argentina in the early part of the 20th century, the country’s cuisine is infl uenced by the Mediterranean. Today, more than 60 per cent of Argentineans have at least one Italian ancestor. Pesto, ricotta, sun-dried tomatoes, and other familiar toppings appear on the creative pies, but Maury’s heritage shows keenly in a selection of Argentinean-style pizzas. Each is named after the legendary Buenos Aires restaurant–all of which are located on iconic Avineda Corrientes–that made it famous. The recipe for Banchero, a high-walled creation made from a mozzarella-filled crust, a second crust layered inside, and a heap of white onions is featured here. Love for the classic foods of their home country prompted the launch of a second business venture. In February, they opened La Pampa, a take-away bakery and café serving up 22 varieties of the hand “It’s the best fi nger food in the world!” fi t for an exacting chef. That summer, the growing restaurant company a lso ser ved nearly 15,000 e mpa n ad a s at t wo of W i n n ip e g ’s largest summer festivals. Despite the enormit y of t he endeavor, Maur y’s empanada obsession was ignited with the enthusiastic response. The empanada is a chef’s dream: a blank canvas for creation. “It’s the best fi nger food in the world!” he enthuses. “It starts with great dough and from there, you can add anything you want.” A s he a nd Roxa na pondered t he possibility of opening a restaurant built around empanadas, the opportunity to purchase Corrientes arose. The couple jumped at it, and by the spring of 2015 they were its sole owners. T h e s p e c i a lt ie s c om bi ne S out h American classics: pizza and empanadas. While pizza may be a familiar item on Winnipeg restaurant menus, the offerings 12 ciao! / oct/nov / two thousand seventeen held treats. Among the most popular is the namesake, featuring charcoal grilled beef, cheese curds, chimichurri and hot sauce. For Winnipeg diners in search of a South A merican experience, Maur y delivers the real deal. “When I was around nine years old, I went to my fi rst Argentinean barbeque,” Maury recalls. “It was out in the country and the fi re was tended by a real gaucho– he had a sombrero, knife, belt and boots– just like out of a movie. He was cooking a suckling pig over the glowing orange stones. He took out the kidneys, a delicacy, and shared them with me. It was a special moment, and I knew I wanted to cook and make people happy right there and then.” Inside the warm heritage space on Bannatyne Avenue, over a plate of pizza or steaming empanadas, with his family surrounding him, it’s easy to see the resemblance: a proud chef reaching out and sharing a de