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Chef and restaurateur Cesare Casella breaks down Italian cuisine scenes from movies and TV based on realism.

Casella discusses the accuracy of the meatballs from “The Godfather,” pasta sauce and thin garlic in “Goodfellas,” and capicola in “The Sopranos.” He also analyzes a dish from “Lady and the Tramp” (1955), timpano from “Big Night,” the tiramisu in “Superbad,” and carbonara from “Master of None.” He breaks down the pasta twirling technique from “Brooklyn,” cannoli from “The Bear,” and calzone from “Parks and Rec.” Casella reviews proper pizza throwing technique from “Seinfeld,” pizza-eating form in “Eat Pray Love,” lasagna-making in “Garfield: A Tale of Two Kitties,” mozzarella sandwiches from “Bicycle Thieves,” take-out salads from “Family Guy,” Italian kitchen-table dining in “Amarcord,” and trenette al pesto from “Luca.”

Casella has been cooking for more than 50 years and served as the head chef at the Michelin-starred restaurant Vipore in Italy. He then moved to the United States and worked at several fine-dining Italian restaurants in New York City such as Beppe and Salumeria Rosi. Today, Casella is head of the Department of Nourishment Arts at the Center for Discovery, a residential facility in upstate New York for the medically fragile. He oversees a team of chefs, nutritionists, therapists, farmers, and educators.

You can follow Cesare on Instagram here:
https://www.instagram.com/chefcasella/

00:00 – Intro
00:28 – Master of None
02:32 – Seinfeld
04:02 – The Sopranos
09:22 – Luca
11:37 – Goodfellas
14:02 – Big Night
17:23 – The Bear
19:23 – Parks and Recreation
20:47 – The Godfather
22:21 – Brooklyn
24:39 – Superbad
26:40 – Amarcord
29:17 – Family Guy
30:24 – Bicycle Thieves
31:55 – Garfield
34:31 – Master of None (Season 2)
36:58 – Lady and the Tramp
38:17 – Favorite films
39:19 – Credits

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#italianfood #italianchef #italiandish #howrealisit

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Michelin-Star Chef Rates 22 Italian Dishes From Movies And TV For Realism | How Real Is It?

46 Comments

  1. Kudos for the work you do upstate chef. Teaching those with special needs is a blessing you can be proud of.

  2. 1:40 that doesn’t look at all like guanciale, that looks like thick cut bacon. The cheeks of a pig aren’t long like that, and the fat isn’t that consistently layered like bacon/pork belly

  3. Favorite part is him openly admitting "I do not make tortellini myself, it's too hard" XD

  4. As an Italian, I suffered a lot in every scene. At the same time, Cesare said one of the most Italian things possible about cooking in Italy: there's no single recipe for a dish; everyone has their own version and is extremely jealous of it.

  5. This is a great chef to be judging cooking. Cooking is easy, its whats your preference instead of whats traditional and i love that he acknowledges it.

  6. What a lovely person. He utterly shatters all the stereotypes about Italians, and his happiness is infectious!

  7. I'm surprised he didn't mention this about the Goodfellas scene, garlic will not melt or dissolve in the pan, no matter how thin you slice it. I cringe every time I see that scene

  8. love him. seems like a great guy, but u guys needed subtitles cuz his accent is pretty thick

  9. litterally the strongest italian accent they could ever find… even i have issues following – love the spirit too, mostly 10s out of passion for food

  10. I love that they got an Italian chef who isn't an utter snob about Italian food. Sure, he sometimes goes "eh, if you're not using the right ingredient it's hard to call it X" but I really appreciate how he looks at the things in their context and rates based on things like "yeah, for a home cook."

  11. 6:10 it’s kind of “Italian American” because the butter isn’t French in influence but moreso that they’re from Jersey so butter is probably even more common than olive oil, sinful as that is. Especially for a dirty pig like ralphy

  12. probably one of the best of these videos, he wasn't super anal about the points to the point where arbitrary/subjective things would dock points

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