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	<title>Chazz &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Chazz &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>That&#8217;s A Sergio</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/thats-a-sergio/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Aug 2012 09:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Aldo’s]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chazz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sergio Vitale]]></category>
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			<p>Like its creator, the veal meatball at Chazz: A Bronx Original is<br />
Italian at its core, yet brilliantly unique in its construction. Its<br />
presence, similar to Sergio Vitale’s, looms large over the Harbor East<br />
restaurant from which this local chef appears poised to become the next<br />
big thing on the national food scene. Restaurateur and appetizer share<br />
other traits. Both are burly, sweet, and, in Baltimore, beloved. “We<br />
knew we wanted to do a meatball,” the 6-foot-3 Vitale says. “I also knew<br />
 that I didn’t want to do it on top of pasta. It’s not the way it’s<br />
served in Italy. It’s a bastardization and a line I wasn’t willing to<br />
cross. I thought we’d do veal, pork, and beef. The first chefs we worked<br />
 with prepped the meatball according to my recipe, but there was some<br />
miscommunication and they used 100 percent veal. I tasted it, and I<br />
went, ‘That’s pretty good.’</p>
<p>“To give it a little extra oomph, I created that sausage gravy that<br />
it sits in so it would have more texture and flavor. There’s a little<br />
soy sauce in [the meatball]. Within a month or two, people were<br />
talking.”</p>
<p>With their mouths full. Vitale, 35, has been feeding Baltimore diners<br />
 virtually his entire life. At his father Aldo’s original namesake<br />
restaurant in Fallston, he stood on a milk crate to work the register<br />
while his older brother, Alessandro, made pizzas under papa’s watchful<br />
eye. Later, they’d come to understand their strengths and passions and<br />
would reverse roles.</p>
<p>The family’s Little Italy restaurant, Aldo’s Ristorante Italiano,<br />
grandiose in its flavor and ambition, opened in 1998, and wowed critics.<br />
 It also elevated the neighborhood’s culinary landscape—which is exactly<br />
 what Sergio is doing to the pizza world at Chazz.</p>
<p>“You talk to Sergio and everything has to be perfect,” says Chazz<br />
Palminteri, who partnered with the Vitale brothers on the Bronx-style<br />
pizza place. “He’s just so smart. Every time we go to another restaurant<br />
 and I say, ‘Hey, Serge, this is pretty good,’ we both order it, and he<br />
says, ‘I know how they did this. I’m gonna try it.’ He makes it for me,<br />
and he makes it better than we had.</p>
<p>“It’s like being a great actor or a great writer,” says Palminteri,<br />
who’s undeniably both. “There are certain people that are just gifted,<br />
you know?”</p>
<p>Behind the pizza bar at Chazz, Vitale’s making a red clam pie. The<br />
truffle slicer, which he favors to ensure his staff cuts the garlic<br />
paper-thin, has just broken, so he grabs a knife and chops it with the<br />
speed and precision of a race-car driver taking a turn. He slides the<br />
pizza into Chazz’s 900-degree coal-fired oven, and, 90 seconds later,<br />
it’s ready.</p>
<p>He offers it to a guest, who takes a slice.</p>
<p>“Just one? Obviously, you’re not Italian,” he says, breaking into a deep laugh that bellows throughout the dining room.</p>
<p>Spend even a few minutes with him and part of you will wish you were<br />
because Sergio Vitale makes it seem so damn fun to be Italiano.</p>
<p>The Vitale family table in Glen Arm, where Sergio grew up, was always crowded with food and wine, people and personalities.</p>
<p>“It’s something that’s part and parcel in an Italian household,”<br />
Sergio says. “Whether you’re rich or poor, in good times or bad,<br />
Italians always eat well. It’s so much a part of the culture.”</p>
<p>Aldo immigrated to the U.S. from Italy in 1961. Sergio was born in<br />
Baltimore and learned to speak Italian at home, where the family had<br />
what he describes as a “European relationship” with animals.</p>
<p>“Around Easter, we’d have lamb or goat that my father picked up from a<br />
 local farmer,” he says. “He’s grazing out back, we’re feeding him. I<br />
remember the weekend before Easter, my mom would take us shopping, and<br />
my uncle would come over, who was a butcher. When I left, it was alive;<br />
when we got back, there were fillets.”</p>
<p>Young Sergio once got pet rabbits, but the relationship eventually soured. After one of them scratched him, his uncle showed up.</p>
<p>“We had delicious pappardelle alla lepre,” he says, chuckling. “We<br />
got the biggest kick from having animals around, but invariably these<br />
animals were eventually eaten.”</p>
<p>Sergio’s initial interest in the kitchen tended toward sweets, although his first batch of cookies left something to be desired.<br />“He<br />
 was so proud to make these cookies for my dad,” Alessandro recalls.<br />
“But he used salt instead of sugar. We all ate them like they were the<br />
greatest thing, even though they tasted like crap.”</p>
<p>A later effort at tiramisu yielded decidedly different results.</p>
<p>“The owner of Sabatino’s used to come in on his night off,” Sergio<br />
says. “I made tiramisu one night, and he tried it and loved it. He goes,<br />
 ‘I’d love for us to have this at the restaurant.’ I’m 14 at the time,<br />
and I said, ‘I’m trying to do a business with this.’ I remember him<br />
taking out a $100 bill and handing it to me and saying, ‘Buy the<br />
ingredients you need, I want some of this made for my restaurant.’”</p>
<p>From that beginning grew La Pasticceria Aldo, the family’s wholesale<br />
bakery that prepared and distributed desserts to customers along the<br />
East Coast.</p>
<p>Still, when Sergio entered Loyola College, he majored in political<br />
science. In 1995, Peter Lorenzi was appointed dean of its business<br />
school.</p>
<p>“The first note I got, before I even got on campus, was from Sergio,<br />
on the letterhead of the Italian Student Association, welcoming me,” he<br />
says.</p>
<p>Though Lorenzi never taught Sergio, the two struck up a friendship that remains intact today.</p>
<p>“I have him come speak to my honors class about entrepreneurship to<br />
inspire business students,” Lorenzi says. “He’s very bright, very<br />
articulate. He’s not just some sort of a slap-you-on-the-back<br />
good-old-boy. He’s got a good grasp of politics, medicine, all sorts of<br />
different things.”<br />Sergio was younger than some of the students he<br />
now talks to when he and Alessandro teamed up with their parents to open<br />
 Aldo’s in Little Italy. (The family sold the Fallston restaurant in<br />
1992.)</p>
<p>“I was a senior in college, president of the student government, and<br />
opening a restaurant at the same time,” he says. “I slept once every<br />
three days.”</p>
<p>The restaurant’s Roman-style décor and ambiance are due in large part<br />
 to Sergio. He dedicated himself to learning every aspect of the<br />
business to the point where, a year after Aldo’s opened, he was writing<br />
columns for the American Institute of Wine and Food.<br />He also was busy nudging his father out the door.</p>
<p>“My father came in with the school of thought that he had to do<br />
everything himself,” Sergio says. “My brother and I were not in this<br />
[business] only to do one restaurant. We decided it was not sustainable<br />
if it depended on one person. So we quietly fired my father from the<br />
kitchen. We said, ‘You need to take a few days off every week so we can<br />
develop new talent.’”<br />Ah, the joys of a family business.</p>
<p>“It’s an odd family in the sense that, above all, we appreciate<br />
brutal honesty,” Sergio says. “We’re very Baltimore in that we disdain<br />
pretension. We don’t put up with bullshit, so we don’t sugarcoat things<br />
when we talk.”</p>
<p>Aldo, who’s semi-retired now, spends his days with a grandson and consulting with his sons on the restaurants.<br />“He<br />
 has a good palate and good mind for the food business,” Aldo says. “I’m<br />
 never satisfied until I get things perfect, and that’s exactly the way<br />
he is.”</p>
<p>Chazz Palminteri was lost in Little Italy’s maze of chicken parm- and<br />
 beef tortellini-filled menus when he was in town in 2009 performing his<br />
 one-man show, A Bronx Tale.</p>
<p>“I went into a couple of places and I wasn’t too pleased, and then<br />
someone said go to Aldo’s,” he says. “The food was exquisite. I started<br />
eating there every night.”</p>
<p>From those visits, a friendship and business partnership was born.</p>
<p>“[Sergio’s] an undiscovered talent,” says Palminteri, who was 41 when<br />
 the film A Bronx Tale catapulted him to stardom. “He’s like Bobby Flay,<br />
 Wolfgang Puck. He’s just not known yet.”</p>
<p>The Vitale brothers had been working on a more casual dining concept,<br />
 and the marriage of their expertise to Palminteri’s Bronx persona was<br />
ideal.<br />“Chazz had always wanted to be in the restaurant business,”<br />
Sergio says. “We talked about this deal in his penthouse hotel room in<br />
Atlantic City. We wrote down the basic structure of what the deal would<br />
look like on the back of a cocktail napkin.”</p>
<p>In mid-June, one year and 50,000 pizzas after Chazz opened, Sergio<br />
and Alessandro are mingling in the dining room with a group of<br />
monied-looking men. They’ve just finished a two-hour meeting exploring<br />
funding for expanding the Chazz brand. Las Vegas and New York are<br />
possibilities.<br />Sergio is the only one not wearing a suit. His black<br />
clogs, dark jeans, black chef’s coat, and black beard suit him much<br />
better. Alessandro runs the financial side, while Sergio is in charge of<br />
 staffing, training, the menu, food, and presentation.</p>
<p>In many ways, he’s consumed by the job. He lives above Aldo’s and<br />
bounces between the restaurants five or six times a day. There’s not<br />
much time for a social life.</p>
<p>“I have three girlfriends,” he jokes. “Aldo’s, Chazz, and my mother.”</p>
<p>Sergio claims to be a bit of a misanthrope, yet his manner with<br />
everyone he encounters—from his dishwashers to famous<br />
customers—demonstrates an instinctive understanding of human nature.</p>
<p>“I talk to the staff about always keeping in mind that the word<br />
restaurant shares the same root as restorative,” he says. “After people<br />
have spent time with us, they ought to leave happier, a little restored<br />
in spirit. We’re nourishing more than just their stomachs.”</p>
<p>Right now, he’s feeding his own. He’s discussing shedding the 30<br />
pounds he gained leading up to the restaurant’s opening, when a waitress<br />
 delivers an order of clams casino.</p>
<p>“I had some last week, and I thought they were too soggy on top,” he<br />
says. “We have an oven that uses three types of heat. I thought two were<br />
 out of balance with the third, so I made a little adjustment.</p>
<p>“These are crisper,” he says, his smile disappearing just long enough to chew. “The perils of the job.”</p>
<p>Not even the vaunted meatball escapes examination. Last week, he tweaked it to reduce its sweetness.</p>
<p>Minutes before the dinner rush begins, he makes his way to the<br />
kitchen, where he grabs a fistful of spoons to sample four sauces and a<br />
soup.<br />What’s he tasting for?</p>
<p>“Perfection,” he says, “and nothing less.”</p>

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