logo
Former Vatican chef trades crosses for crosswalks with first NYC restaurant: ‘It doesn't matter if I'm cooking for a pope, president or ordinary person'

Former Vatican chef trades crosses for crosswalks with first NYC restaurant: ‘It doesn't matter if I'm cooking for a pope, president or ordinary person'

New York Post2 hours ago
Holy cannoli!
In his storied career in the kitchen, chef Salvo Lo Castro has been a star around the world and at the Vatican, plating pasta for popes, world leaders and movie stars alike.
These days, he's traded a life of crosses in Rome for the crosswalks of New York City.
Advertisement
'The secret is I prepare everything with my heart, OK?' Lo Castro told The Post of an acclaimed career that has seen him reach the heights of culinary fame.
'The restaurant is my home, and the people who dine with me aren't clients — they're guests who come to my home,' Lo Castro said of his delicious philosophy, alluding to his restaurant's eponymous moniker.
14 Lo Castro's new eatery is located on Spring Street.
Tamara Beckwith
Advertisement
While Lo Castro has been behind an eponymous chain of busy espresso bars that dot Manhattan since 2022, his sleek, new Soho restaurant, CASASALVO — which opened July 20 on Spring Street — marks the first time the public at large can feast on his most famous dishes, all with a spiritual pedigree.
For 10 years, he cooked at the Vatican, cultivating special relationships with both Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI, serving up his mother's meatballs and his namesake Fettuccine CASASALVO, both of which are now available to the masses.
'Every pope is a normal person,' Lo Castro is quick to note of his sacred tenure. 'Though while John Paul was very charismatic, for me the best was Benedict,' he said of the latter leader, who served at the head of the Holy Roman Catholic Church from 2005 to 2013.
14 Lo Castro was a Vatican chef for a decade and developed a relationship with Pope John Paul II.
Getty Images
Advertisement
14 Lo Castro also worked for Pope Benedict XVI during his stint there.
Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
'He was a very incredible man,' said Lo Castro, who worked for the Pontifex, born as Joseph Ratzinger, for six years.
'His eyes were magnetic, and his voice to me was God in the world.'
Celebs, politicians don't fluster him: 'Just concentrate on the food'
14 A view inside his lush Italian spot.
Tamara Beckwith
Advertisement
Lo Castro has also cooked for everyone from Muammar Gaddafi and the Saudi royal family to Tom Cruise and Robert De Niro.
'For important events, if I'm ever nervous to cook, I prepare everything badly,' Lo Castro confessed.
'I prepare everything fantastically when I'm calm and zen. When I arrive in the kitchen, I don't use the telephone; I only speak with the fish, with the beef, with the lamb. It's very important you just concentrate on the food.'
14 Lo Castro also cooked for Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.
Getty Images
Not that his A-List connections phase him, even at a dinner next month he's currently prepping for Rolex, where expected guests include the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio and Roger Federer.
'Normally, for other people, it is not normal, but for me, it doesn't matter if I'm cooking for a pope, president or ordinary person,' Lo Castro is quick to point out.
'Every man I cook for is a king, and every woman I cook for is a queen.'
Advertisement
While Popes and cardinals regularly devoured his pastas and cannolis, he said he had the least amount of menu leeway during the church's holiest holidays.
'Every religious period for the Catholic Church, like Christmas, is very strict when it comes to what food to serve,' he said. 'On Easter, for example, I'd prepare lamb and it's all very traditional.'
The chef also served up his own inventive dishes.
His aforementioned fettuccine sauce is made through an hours-long process where he slow-cooks beef, tomatoes and vegetables (including carrots and celery) separately, before combining them alongside a knob of fine, fresh Italian butter and a hunk of special, 48-month-aged Parmesan cheese.
Advertisement
Aside from his divine clients, Lo Castro has also prepared feasts for the world stage's other major figures as well.
'Every man I cook for is a king, and every woman I cook for is a queen.'
14 The esteemed chef waves to folks outside of his new Soho restaurant.
Tamara Beckwith
14 Lo Castro prepares a creamy Cacio e pepe pasta in a wheel of cheese.
Tamara Beckwith
Advertisement
For example, he was in the kitchen in 2008 during a summit on the Italian island of Sardinia between Russian leader Vladimir Putin and then-Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.
'When it came to security before the dinner, there were an incredible amount of restrictions,' he remembers. 'But after you serve the meal, they come into the kitchen to compliment you, and it turns into a very kind situation.'
'I'm cooking for the world'
14 'Every man I cook for is a king, and every woman I cook for is a queen,' he boasted of his everyday clientele.
Tamara Beckwith
Born in the blue-collar Sicilian city of Catania, Lo Castro grew up in Linguaglossa, due north of the city atop Mount Etna, and counting just 5,000 residents.
Advertisement
From the very beginning, a culinary life was in his blood.
His grandfather, Nino, sold hazelnuts, even earning the regional nutty moniker King of Hazelnuts. Orazio, his grandfather on the other side, who ran a local rotisserie, was also a mentor in the kitchen.
He first began cooking at age 12 when he befriended the chef at a local restaurant, Gatto Blue.
'It was very small, but I'd stay all day in the kitchen.'
After attending chef school, he got his starry start in the luxury resorts of the Italian island, including Taromina's swank San Domenico Palace, the setting for the second season of 'The White Lotus' and the recent Honeymoon spot for Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez.
'My biggest satisfaction is that I came from a small town, and now I'm cooking for the world,' said Lo Castro, who has also lived and cooked in the Italian cities of Milan and Florence, as well as in Montpellier, France, and Brazil.
'But at the same time, I'm still a very normal man,' says Lo Castro.
Long days mark his culinary quests
14 Early in the morning, he starts his workday with a trip to his espresso bars via his Vespa.
Tamara Beckwith
He doesn't rest on his laurels, either, despite his stacked resume.
Waking up at 5 a.m., the passionate chef starts his exhaustive 18-hour workday zipping around Manhattan on his Vespa, checking in on each of his three espresso bars located in Midtown, the Upper East Side and the Upper West Side.
The latter, located on Amsterdam Avenue, serves 1,500 customers per day; according to his calculations, they gulped down 150,000 steaming cups of espresso and 225,000 rich cappuccinos the past year alone.
His caffeinated fans go crazy for libations like his pistachio cream cappuccino, plus sweets like fresh-baked Italian donuts known as bombolonis.
14 His coffee shops serve thousands of beverages daily.
14 The chef's coffee shops serve numerous pastries, including these pistachio croissants.
By noon, he heads downtown to his restaurant, where he attends to the numerous ingredients made in-house, like three different breads, including Focaccia al pomodoro, a soft, round Sicilian loaf dotted with red roasted tomatoes.
The eatery's creamy mozzarella, light and airy pastas, and flavorful desserts like apple pie — an homage to his new home — are all made in-house with meticulous attention to detail.
'I don't buy average ingredients; I want to control the quality,' he told The Post, sourcing beef from both Tuscany and Montana, lamb from Colorado, and fish from the sparkling, blue Mediterranean Sea.
'I prepare the pasta myself, and if I don't have good flour and good eggs, the pasta won't be good. Everything you use is very important.'
A baller for meatballs
14 Lo Castro's vaunted meatballs have a Sicilian heritage.
Tamara Beckwith
Dinner is an experience on its own, soundtracked by Andrea Bocelli, Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin.
Olive oil for dipping is sprinkled with fresh leaves of oregano, which dutiful waiters scissor-snipped tableside from a planter.
Meanwhile, fresh Dover sole is deboned tableside as well.
Out of all of the dishes on his menu, however, he's especially passionate about his meatballs; the recipe comes from his Sicilian childhood.
'When I go back home and stay for a week, I eat the meatballs of my mom every day: breakfast, lunch and dinner,' Lo Castro coos.
14 The new restaurant opened last month.
Tamara Beckwith
14 Lo Castro is meticulous about his dishes. 'I don't buy average ingredients; I want to control the quality,' he told The Post.
Tamara Beckwith
He says he's honored to bring them to New York City, which he was enchanted by in movies before making his way overseas to America.
'New York is the capital of the world,' he says. 'It makes me want to work every day seriously for my guests, company and city.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Big Brother 27' star Zach Cornell reacts to being smacked in the head by Julie Chen Moonves
‘Big Brother 27' star Zach Cornell reacts to being smacked in the head by Julie Chen Moonves

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

‘Big Brother 27' star Zach Cornell reacts to being smacked in the head by Julie Chen Moonves

Marcellas would be proud. After Zach Cornell was voted off 'Big Brother 27' with an unused secret power, he was greeted by Julie Chen Moonves — who smacked him upside the head with her notecards. The host did just the same to Marcellas Reynolds after he didn't use the Power of Veto on 'Big Brother 3' in 2002. 'It's iconic, right?' Cornell exclusively told The Post about his exchange with Chen Moonves, 55. 7 Zach Cornell on 'Big Brother 27.' CBS 7 Julie Chen Moonves smacks Zach Cornell after his eviction. CBS 7 Zach Cornell and Julie Chen Moonves on 'Big Brother 27.' CBS 'I can be the first 'Big Brother' player to ever say that I saved Julie on day one, but then also got smacked upside the head by her in my final day leaving,' the marketing manager continued. 'I love Julie. My family loves Julie. She's a fantastic person. I did a podcast with her and I really respected her because we prayed into the podcast and we left with prayer as well.' 'I know her faith is something that means so much to her, and I really think that's an incredible thing because I really try and do the same,' Cornell shared. 'So I love her as a person.' 7 Zach Cornell during his interview with The Post. NY Post Cornell had a secret power where he could take himself off the block by giving the $10K he won to the current Head of Household. But fearing his ally Morgan Pope would be the replacement nominee, Cornell didn't use his power and was subsequently evicted. 'At the end of the day, everything happens for a reason, right?' he told The Post. 'If I had a little bit of a different perspective when I was in the house, I would have used the power. But in that moment, in that time, I really did believe that I was in a decent spot. I felt really good in my position.' 7 Zach Cornell and Vince Panaro on 'Big Brother 27.' CBS 'It was a waste to use that power since all three of us, Vince, Morgan and myself, were so close because I was really trying to move as a unit with those other two,' Cornell explained. 'So, I would have rolled the dice to basically get us all to the following week.' The baseball player also pointed out that he could've used the power this week since Rachel Reilly won HOH and likely would've nominated him. 7 Zach Cornell evicted on 'Big Brother 27.' CBS 'That's a perfect reason to use the power. Take myself off and then we're still fighting, right?' he said. 'So it is what it is. Hindsight's always 20/20.' Cornell also opened up about his relationship with Pope, 33, and said she had his back 'in every single step of the house.' 7 Zach Cornell in his interview with The Post. NY Post 'She was fighting tooth and nail for me that final week. I give her her flowers for that,' he said. 'She was one of the first people to actually have deep conversations with me. So I do respect her as a person. I think she is trying to fight for her life in there to stay in the game. But she really did have my back in there and I respect her for that.' 'Big Brother 27' airs Sundays, Wednesdays and Thursdays on CBS and streams on Paramount+.

From 'White Lotus' to 'Sirens': Why everyone on TV is rich
From 'White Lotus' to 'Sirens': Why everyone on TV is rich

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

From 'White Lotus' to 'Sirens': Why everyone on TV is rich

They're a dime a dozen. These days, it seems like nearly everyone onscreen is rich. The aesthetics of luxury lifestyles is all over TV – whether you're watching a murder mystery, a satire, or a drama. Jessica Kender, production designer for the Prime Video series 'We Were Liars,' exclusively told The Post that she wanted the show to look like, 'Everything that we have been bred to believe will be there, if you follow the money.' Advertisement 13 Joseph Zada, Emily Alyn Lind, and Esther McGregor in 'We Were Liars.' Jessie Redmond 13 Sam Nivola, Sarah Catherine Hook and Patrick Schwarzenegger in 'The White Lotus.' Fabio Lovino/HBO 'We Were Liars' is one of the many recent shows with moneyed characters in glam settings. Now streaming, it's a twisty thriller about Cadence (Emily Alyn Lind), a teen girl from a wealthy family with their own private island. Advertisement New Jersey native Kender grew up observing people who vacationed in Martha's Vineyard, 'where the elite go.' 'We tried to hit those notes,' she explained. 'It's everything you're shown when you open a magazine, like Architectural Digest.' She added that when a show is aiming to show off wealthy characters, 'Everyone knows what that looks like, because it's what the media shows us. The media tells us, 'you want this.' So, that's what we're trying to re-iterate onscreen.' 13 Emily Alyn Lind and Joseph Zada in 'We Were Liars.' Jessie Redmond Advertisement 13 Walton Goggins and Aimee Lou Wood in 'The White Lotus.' Fabio Lovino/HBO HBO's hit 'The White Lotus,' is about murder and vacations, and the characters aren't staying in hostels or bargain Holiday Inns – a real-life stay at one of Season 3's Thailand villas costs thousands of dollars per night. Even if a TV show's plot doesn't directly involve wealth, chances are, the characters live in homes that would realistically cost millions. The Netflix show 'Sirens' starring Julianne Moore and Meghann Fahy was about the complicated relationship between sisters, but it also came with a large helping of 'house porn.' Advertisement 13 Nicole Kidman and Liev Schreiber in 'The Perfect Couple.' ©Netflix/Courtesy Everett Collection The 'Sex and the City' spinoff 'And Just Like That,' meanwhile, was ostensibly about friendship and romance — but it's full of designer clothes and impossibly large NYC apartments. In fact, Carrie's (Sarah Jessica Parker) Gramercy apartment was listed for $4,495,000 in 2019. 'Succession' followed a toxic family with a media empire, 'Yellowstone' was about a dysfunctional family with a ranching empire, 'The Righteous Gemstones' focused on a televangelist family – and they all have their own versions of mansions and armies of staffers to do their bidding. Nicole Kidman's entire recent catalogue shows are chock-full of house porn and millionaire characters, including 'Big Little Lies' and 'The Perfect Couple.' 13 Meghann Fahy in 'Sirens.' MACALL POLAY/NETFLIX 13 The home in 'Sirens.' Macall Polay/Netflix Bob Thompson, the founding director of Syracuse University's Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture and a Trustee Professor of Television and Popular Culture, told The Post that part of the appeal of these shows is, 'just the fun of seeing this stuff we don't have.' 'A lot of people used to go in the back of the New York Times Magazine and look at these ridiculously huge houses that were for sale,' he observed. Advertisement 'I find it much more interesting to watch a series about an organized crime family, 'The Sopranos' or 'The Godfather,' than I would watching a series about somebody who lived the life I live on a daily basis.' 13 Sarah Jessica Parker in 'And Just Like That.' Craig Blankenhorn/HBO Max 13 Milly Alcock and Julianne Moore in 'Sirens.' COURTESY OF NETFLIX He quipped that he enjoys his own life, 'but I certainly wouldn't want to watch somebody doing it. And I think there is a sense that TV brings us this stuff that we can't otherwise see.' Advertisement Thompson said that it's also 'easier' to have shows 'in settings of the very rich and the very privileged, because it's kind of an easy source of drama and spectacle.' The professor and TV expert pointed out that one big reason for the explosion of wealth on TV is that, 'in the last 25 years, since around the turn of the century, we've become comfortable with our principal characters being bad people.' He explained that the trend is 'relatively new,' because in the history of American TV, shows were usually, 'about heroes, good guys. There were antagonists, but the [show] was about the protagonists getting the best of them.' 13 James Gandolfini in 'The Sopranos.' Getty Images Advertisement This trend began to change with the 'golden age of TV' in the 2000s' with shows such as 'The Sopranos,' 'Breaking Bad,' 'Mad Men' and 'The Shield.' 'Oftentimes rich folks in at least a supposedly democratic culture, can be hard to portray sympathetically – because they've got all this stuff, they're so privileged,' he said. Shows that premiered during the antihero boom, 'opened the door for a lot more wealthy folks,' he told The Post. 'It would have been hard to do a show like 'Succession' in 1965, and have it be about a noble media magnate.' 13 Jeremy Strong in 'Succession.' HBO/IMDB Advertisement To convey the right aesthetics of luxury, Kender explained that the 'We Were Liars' production 'tried to be on the same wavelength as a Ralph Lauren polo ad, that makes you feel very aspirational.' 'That's the aesthetic we were aiming to give the audience – this idea of this perfect wealth. And food porn,' she noted. 'Not only did you want to live in their house, but eat in their house.' Aside from high-end clothes, a home that could be featured in a magazine, and 'food porn' like 'towers of seafood,' Kender had another key marker to signify moneyed characters. 'I was talking with someone who was telling me that they had been an assistant for a very wealthy family. And one of the things the wealthy family did every other day was have their fresh flowers refreshed.' So, when Kender worked on 'We Were Liars,' she said, 'I was like 'these are the type of people who have their flowers refreshed in their home every other day…Not by the people who live there – it's almost like elves come in and refresh them.' 13 Emily Alyn Lind, Esther McGregor, Joseph Zada and Shubham Maheshwari in 'We Were Liars.' Jessie Redmond/Prime There are still some shows featuring characters who have modest homes and jobs, however — such as 'Abbott Elementary.' But shows about blue-collar lives such as 'Roseanne' and its spinoff 'The Conners' are increasingly dwindling. 'Especially when things are so tenuous right now with our economy, with our world – for the TV viewer [part of the appeal] is seeing the rich being flawed,' Kender said. 13 Reese Witherspoon in 'Big Little Lies.' HBO 'You're sold this American dream. We're showing you on TV what you want to be.' But, on many of these shows, including 'We Were Liars' and 'The White Lotus,' when the show dives into the dark parts of characters' lives, 'you realize how tragic that life can be, as well,' she said. She explained, 'In the time we live in, it's almost refreshing to know, 'even if I hit that point, this is not what's going to make me happy. I'm going to be able to find happiness with where I am now.''

Amanda Knox and Monica Lewinsky team up for new series, say their stories are similar

time2 hours ago

Amanda Knox and Monica Lewinsky team up for new series, say their stories are similar

Amanda Knox is opening up about teaming up with Monica Lewinsky to reclaim her story in the upcoming limited series based on her life, "The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox." The two executive producers of the series sat down with "Good Morning America" Monday and said working on the new show together felt like a natural fit. "I had a first-look television deal at the time, and I thought, aha! Another young woman who had suffered in the media, had been feasted on on the world stage, and luckily, like a savvy executive, she got all the yeses, and we were off to the races," Lewinsky said. Lewinsky, now 52, was catapulted to international infamy in the mid-1990s, after news of her affair with then-President Bill Clinton, while she was a young White House intern, made global headlines. Knox, now 38, captured headlines in 2007, when her roommate, British exchange student Meredith Kercher, was murdered while the two young women were studying abroad in Italy. Knox was convicted of the murder by an Italian court in 2009, along with Raffaele Sollecito, another student she was dating at the time, but both convictions were overturned on appeal in 2011. In 2008, Rudy Guede was convicted of Kercher's murder. He was released in December 2020 after serving 16 years in prison. Italy's highest court subsequently ordered a new trial in 2013, and Knox and Sollecito were reconvicted of murder in 2014, before the high court overturned the murder convictions again in 2015. Knox served four years in prison in Italy before she was released in 2011 and acquitted in 2015. Knox said that although her experience differed from Lewinsky's, they still shared multiple similarities. "We were both interrogated. We've both been, you know, viciously turned into characters of ourselves in the media," Knox said. "And I think that the thing that we actually were both most interested in was making sure that this show had a wider lens." She added, "It's not just a courtroom drama, it's not your typical true crime biopic. It's a more personal journey and one that really begins with the story of what happens before -- and then, of course, what happens after the worst experience of your life." In the series, Knox is portrayed by actress Grace Van Patten, known for her roles in Hulu's "Nine Perfect Strangers" and "Tell Me Lies." Both Knox and Lewinsky serve as executive producers on the series. Knox said making this new series forced her to relive a chapter of her life that she said included some of the "worst moments." Despite this, she said the experience was still cathartic. "It felt like I was allowed to grieve for the first time, because it was outside of myself, and I got to watch myself and these people portray this journey, and it was as if I was there … and I was grieving in a big way for the first time in ways that I wasn't able to," Knox said. Both Knox and Lewinsky said while making "The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox," they made sure to honor Kercher, who was never able to return from Italy to her home in south London. "Everyone on this project understood that this is a story about two young women who went to go study abroad in Perugia, Italy, and only one of them survived," Knox said. "And I think that the way that I was turned into a caricature, in a big way, she was as well … and we really ground in this series that this is a real person, and it was very important for us to do that." "I didn't know her very long but, like, she was there, and she plays a huge role in my life even today. And so, I hope the audience feels that," Knox added. "The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox," an eight-part limited series, premieres on Hulu and Hulu on Disney+ with the first two episodes on Wednesday. New subsequent episodes will be available to stream every Wednesday, with the finale out Oct. 1.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store