AUCKLAND | Gabriele Marangoni has introduced his Italian culinary skills to Auckland’s latest hotel kitchen.

3 July 2024

Much-admired Italian chef, Gabriele Marangoni, has taken on the role of Executive Chef at Alla Prossima, a new restaurant specialising in Emiliano-Romagnola cuisine.

The restaurant sits inside Nigel McKenna’s Abstract Hotel on Upper Queen Street, and will serve hotel guests as well as those who enjoy fresh and authentic hand-crafted Italian pasta and other dishes from the region surrounding Bologna.

Known as the beating heart of Italian cuisine, the Emilia-Romagna region is the home of Parmigiano Reggiano, sparkling Lambrusco wine, Modena balsamic vinegar and Prosciutto di Parma. It’s also where Gabriele was born and raised and where, working from a young age in his family’s restaurant in Bologna, he acquired a deep passion for the best and most authentic Italian cuisine. 

He refined his culinary skills in Italian restaurants across Europe – in Vienna, Rotterdam and Strasbourg – then returned to Bologna to work in traditional Italian restaurants like Ciacco and Antica Trattoria dell Gigina before moving to New Zealand in 2016.

Marangoni is well known to Auckland’s diners as the culinary force behind Mt Eden’s Pasta & Cuore, where, over eight years, he developed a reputation for delivering simple, authentic Italian cuisine made with quality ingredients, passion and great artisanal skill. Now, he’s bringing his passion and expertise to Upper Queen Street.

“Simplicity is a choice, but authenticity and integrity aren’t negotiable: discerning customers love to know the story behind what they are eating and where it comes from. Most of our products – the Prosciutto di Parma, Mortadella, Parmigiano-Reggiano, and balsamic vinegar, as well as the pasta we serve – are sourced from the Emilia-Romagna region, known as the land of slow-food and fast cars because the products have a very long aging time, thanks to a perfect microclimate which is difficult to reproduce anywhere else in the world,” said Marangoni.