Gino D’Acampo on cancel culture – and why women should rule the world
By Katie Wright, PA G rowing up in the town of Torre del Greco just outside Naples, Gino D’Acampo wasn’t like other children.“All my other cousins, the boys, they were playing football, they were going on their bikes – I was never that kind of kid,” the celebrity chef and restauranteur says on phone from the home in Sardinia where he spends six months of each year.
“I was always kind of sit down in the kitchen, help [the adults] out, peeling potatoes, understand about the pasta,” he continues, his accent instantly recognisable.“I was always the only boy amongst a group of women.”
While his late mother Alba began working as a nurse aged 18, her eight sisters stayed at home, meaning the young D’Acampo was schooled in the art of cucina povera (‘poor kitchen’ – traditional recipes passed down in frugal households) by his many aunts. Not that they were a close-knit bunch, however.“It was the opposite,” says the 46-year-old, who shares sons Luciano, 20, Rocco, 16, and daughter Mia, 10, with wife Jessica.“We were about 68 or 69 cousins in total, so you can imagine there is nothing close about my family.” Now, with his latest cookbook – Gino’s Italy: Like Mamma Used to Make – and accompanying TV series, the Neapolitan native is paying tribute to his beloved relatives.“The idea of the book is to celebrate and say thank you to all the women in my life, especially my family.They’ve been a big part of the reason why I am the person I am today,” he says. That’s why you’ll find recipes such as Aunty Lina’s pasta Genovese (thick tubes of pasta smothered with a rich, meaty sauce) and Aunty Rita’s baby octopus with mussels and cherry tomatoes, alongside dishes D’Acampo discovered while cooking with families across Italy.
Crisscrossing the country from Naples to Tuscany, he was invited into the kitchens of mammas and nonnas who generously shared the perfectly honed recipes passed down through the generations. While his female-centric early years made a huge impression on D’Acampo, it was actually his grandfather, a professional chef, who inspired him to enrol in catering college at the age of 15. “I remember one day he made gnocchi with a simple tomato sauce, fresh basil and extra virgin olive oil,” he recalls of his earliest food memory.“[He started with] some potatoes, a bit of flour, eggs, and all of a sudden he made this magnificent dish.That was the moment I considered my grandfather a proper artist and hero.” Moving to the UK five years later, the fledgling chef worked in a number of London restaurants before being convicted of burgling the home of pop star Paul Young, and being sentenced to two years in prison. Determined to succeed in the culinary world following his jail stint, D’Acampo started making TV appearances in the early Noughties, eventually becoming a household name thanks to regular slots on This Morning, fronting his own
PA Photo/Haarala Hamilton
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