Something many have been asking themselves, not only in Turin and the surrounding area in Piedmont: where has Davide Scabin gone? Not that we didn't know, after the closure of Combal.zero next to Castello di Rivoli and, after that, last September, of QB, alias Quanto Basta, a unit of measurement that the chef detests for its vagueness, at Mercato Centrale in Porta Palazzo. Except he was wasted there.

The first menu signed by Davide Scabin at Carignano, Sitea's gourmet restaurant in Turin, is called Ral 6001 classic. 88 copies have been printed and when they’ll replace them with a more spring-like offer, they will send them to those who have booked them during one of the dinners. In pantone, Ral 6001 classic is emerald green
The chef, born in 1965, reminds one of
Emilio Salgari. Just as the writer recounted the adventures of Sandokan in Malaysia and the corsairs of the West Indies without ever leaving Verona and Turin,
Davide has always unleashed creativity in practice as a self-taught chef, on a par with a
Ferran Adrià to be precise, in places not far from Turin. A couple of months ago, with the first service on the evening of the 15th November,
Scabin took up residence at the
Grand Hotel Sitea, in Via Carlo Alberto 35, telephone +39.011.5170171, where they have never abdicated from fine dining, having received a star with
Fabrizio Tesse – since October at
Pista on the rooftop of the Lingotto.

Davide Scabin: Tongue braised in Barolo Marasco 2016 by Franco M. Martinetti
With
Carignano only open in the evening, for some time there will be only a tasting menu with thirteen moments, following the same up & down movement introduced by
Davide when he was still at
Combal.zero. Basically, you start at full throttle, when the taste buds are fresh and the desire for an important experience intact, and then decelerate only to speed up in the finale. ‘If I were to put the
Tongue braised in Barolo and mashed potatoes after the first course and the fish, would everyone eat it, or would some tell me they are already full?". A legitimate doubt and a foregone conclusion: some would have given up and the restaurant has just five tables and about twenty seats. As grandmothers used to say: if you don't eat everything, you don't get up from the table.

Un Piemontese a Tokyo: venison plin in cuttlefish consommé, chef Davide Scabin
At
Sitea, on the other hand, you have to eat everything, but you also have to move around because first you are seated at the bar for an aperitif, then at the table, then on the sofas at the entrance for petit fours, coffee, a possible meditation, amari and other alcoholic delights. All for 220 euros. This is because the first to realise that a single tasting menu may appear limiting are the owners and the chef themselves. But they’re asking for time because you cannot improvise and besides they know well that the concept of luxury as a synonym of exclusivity is now in crisis. And so here they reward conviviality.

Un catanese in Piemonte: violet cauliflower, anchovy sauce, chef Davide Scabin
Let’s be patient. In the meantime, let's delight ourselves with the aforementioned tongue; the pigeon served raw and lukewarm, glazed and stewed; a superb venison plin in cuttlefish consommé aka
Un Piemontese a Tokyo;
Risotto with cucumber, oyster and Guinness ristretto, exemplary and repelling only in its name; violet cauliflower and anchovy sauce called
Un catanese in Piemonte and
Beetroot, buttermilk and lemon balm soufflé and other delicacies.
The Turinese chef opened his first restaurant,
Combal, in 1994 in the hills of Almese. I dined there for the very first time invited by the brilliant
Bob Noto, a figure I miss and miss terribly because he was all-round irreverent, not like those who only reserve irony and criticism for those who think differently. The article I dedicated to him, in
Il Giornale, in the
Cibi Divini column, began like this: 'First,
Davide Scabin is a genius. Everything else comes second'. Twenty-eight years later, the surprise effect is inevitably missing, but among the many who are now interested in cooking and catering, many were born in the 1990s and certainly never met the first
Scabin. Good for them and good for the person concerned who has a golden opportunity to fly high again.
Translated into English by Slawka G. Scarso