The day: 29th February 2008, Dinner.
The place: Maso Franch 2, 38030 Giovo (
The venue: Ristorante Maso Franch
Closest airports:
The food: Modern/eclectic fine regional dining
The drinks: Good list, strong on local offerings
ADDED FEBRUARY 2010: Chef Baumgartner has now been sacked by the owners of Maso Franch.
Lavis is a rather unmemorable village 10KM out of Trento, but gastronomically it occupies a strategic position: near many vineyards along a ‘strada
We first quickly peered into this elegant structure from outside after one of our monstrous mountain walks, still in mountain gear and showing obvious signs of out recent contact with nature. While a horrified member of staff observed us from inside fearful of our trespassing… we inspected the menu and were very enticed. Yes, we needed to go back.
So here we are, now (just) properly attired, inside the dining room, which is decorated in a modern style with stark lines (compared to more rustic settings such as, say Malga Panna or El Molin), but still with enough wood to be quite warm. Man qualifies it as Scandinavian while Woman is reminded of the 70’s style of Locanda Locatelli in
On the menu (written in precise Italian and German and approximate English), which changes weekly, the set offerings come in a four course version at €56 or in a 5 course version at €66. They are extremely appetising, with items such as Pigeon and goose liver variations with artichokes and Port wine reduction; or Small cannelloni with spinach mousse cooked in phylo pastry served on cheese and black truffle fondue; or, as a dessert, Pear charlotte with dark chocolate mousse and raspberry sauce served on wafer.
The a la carte section is rather long and varied for this type of restaurant: starters range from humble Sardine fillet and grilled vegetables with saffron scallion, salad and black olive pate (€14) to luxurious Scallop carpaccio with celeriac puree and black truffle with
While we navigate, the bread arrives:
Most fascinating and varied, featuring walnuts and fennel bread, olive roll, tomato roll, olive focaccia, spinach roll, white roll, a crispy twisted tongue, a baguette, and a fascinating ‘puffed ravioli. All home made.
And here’s our amuse bouche:
It’s veal ‘animelle’ (sweetbreads) with eggs on toasted bread (left) and veal tail with ‘tapa’ of puff pastry (right). Well. The ‘crostini’ (toasted bread) are airy and delicate, yet offer intense flavour. There is an excellent contrast with the darker flavour and thicker consistency of the tail, very very pleasant and also playful. The chef meant to impress and he succeeded.
We go a la carte, and for primi we opt for:
- Buckwheat pappardelle with hare ragout and thyme mousse €14
- Granny Smith apple and celery risotto, gratinated fresh goat cheese with pistachio and mint €13
In the papaprdelle the taste is intense but balanced, complementing well the buckwheat pasta. Woman is perplexed, though, by the consistency of the pasta (no gluten?). The thyme flavour is not detectable, yet another one of the countless examples of disappearing herb flavours. Man ponders on the fact that this flavourless (or flavour-overwhelmed) thyme mousse is a foam, that he rarely understand foams in general, and that in this dish he sees its use as particularly needless; but this is just an opinion. However, unlike Woman, he does not dislike the rough bite of the pasta as a match to the rustic ragout. They both agree that this ‘chunky’ ragout is one of the best they had, and that this is what really makes this dish. Why complicate things, they wonder?
The risotto, on the other hand, is thoroughly excellent, and, Man remarks, ravishingly elegant in its look. Beautiful interplay of textures between the goat cheese, the apple, the celery and the rice (very al dente). Neither of us can detect the taste of the pistachio crust: where has it gone? The balance between the many flavours is excellent, with the fresh and multifaceted acidities in evidence. Great dish.
Our secondi are:
- Guinea fowl breast stuffed with artichokes and smoked scamorza cheese, mustard and chive sauce, rampion with julienne of ‘Speck’, roasted Kiplfer potatoes. (€20)
- Venison loin in Port crust, glace Belgian endive, buckwheat ‘gnocchetti’, celeriac puree’, mini-pear stuffed with blueberry (€22)
The venison is thoroughly successful and it has all going for it, at the core of it a rewarding, chewable ‘chunk’, nicely cooked, with the terrific Port crust (in fact soft) yielding a deep sweet flavour. More sweetness comes from the blueberries (note the revisited classic pairing) and pear, but it is perfectly balanced by the endive. The goodness seems endless: what to say of the great, light celeriac puree, of the herb perfume (rosemary) of the great variety of textures (remember the gnocchi. This is a remarkable dish, which with a venison meat that matched the supreme cooking level, would be truly unforgettable. But even with this ‘merely’ very good venison, we will not forget it for a while…
For desserts (numerous and tempting choices in this department too), we opt for:
- Fried ricotta ‘pockets’ (fagottini) with marinated apricots and vanilla icecream (€10)
- Semolina pudding (budino) with black and white sponge (pan di spagna), morellu cherries and tonka-bean ice cream (€10)
Man finds the Budino offering a seductive consistency, enveloped as it is in Pan di Spagna, and he does not care greatly what colour it is…But Woman is more stern on trade descriptions…
The fagottini are simply good, for once nothing spectacular but just ‘what it says on the tin’, and one might say: thank God.
Despite the fact that we take no coffee, as usual, the petit four generously arrive, and the little we sample is impressive:
With a bottle of Pinot Noir Val di Cembra at €28 (interesting local wine), a 0.75 litre (the ubiquitous stinginess) bottle of water at €3 (at least here at a fair charge), a cover charge of €5 (the old fashioned way), the total is a very reasonable €125, which, even with a tip, leaves us below our £100 threshold. Another very reasonably priced Michelin star level restaurant.
The service was provided partly by a Baumgartner junior (we think) and mostly by a nice waiter from a region very far away from Trentino: both were relaxed, smooth and professional.
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2 comments:
HI there folks,
Well thanks for the review! we were thinking of going to Maso Franch, Googled "Maso Franch" and read your review.
We went there for my mum's 60th birthday and... it was delicious!
We're now searching through your extensive list of other Trentini restaurants (me and my wife both live and work here in Trento.)
Thanks again for all the hard work, keep up the reviewing and..
"Buon Appetito!"
Many Thanks Seth, we are always happy when we learn our comments have been of some use.
Lucky you, to work and live in Trento!
m&w
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