| DINING >
Kogo Slovanský dům: The real Italian?
Written by: John Letzing
Photo by: Dorothea Bylica
The original Kogo was hailed as one
of the first local Italian eateries to properly present bella cucina.
But when a second Kogo opened - in a shopping mall, no less - some
observers were skeptical.
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Two years after Kogo Slovanský dům's opening, most fears have
been assuaged. This has something to do with the fact that Slovanský
dům is a more subdued, successfully urbanized version of a shopping
mall. But also, quite simply, the restaurant employs a triumphant
use of space, somehow managing to cleanly sever the dining room
from both the mall and the attached café, which serves a full menu
but is allotted for diners only popping in briefly before visiting
the adjacent cinema. Some die-hards, however, claim eternal fealty
to the old Kogo location on Havelská street. Alas, in a city fast
succumbing to worst-of-western culture shopping mall drudgery,
a certain reluctance is entirely understandable.
Jovo Savič, Kogo's co-owner/ operator, is a big, garrulous native
of Sarajevo, with slightly graying hair, a youthful gait and beaming
brown eyes. Savič opened the first Kogo some eight years ago and,
when it came time to consider expansion six years later, much of
his vision hinged upon finding that rarest of treasures: centrally
located, wide-open green space. Now, glancing out across Kogo Slovanský
dům's sweeping outdoor patio on a particularly sunny day, he cannot
resist grinning; "Fantastic," he says. True enough, the
patio here defies the limitations that would seem to have been
imposed by being anchored between the National Bank, a mall and
an office complex; it is leafy, sunny and, even late-morning on
a Tuesday, very quiet. Says Savič: "no cars, no trams, nothing."
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This spirited restaurateur has another reason to grin: Kogo's Slovanský
dům location is now doing a much brisker business than the original.
A greater capacity - some 700 seats - may help explain, as does
the more accessible location (yes, part of the charm of old Kogo
was being virtually buried under a gloomy church, but it was nonetheless
hidden from potential walk-ins). In fact, Kogo as a whole is doing
so well that another installment is on the way. A new location
is due to open any day now in Charles Square Center, the glass-and-steel
monolith adjacent to Karlovo náměstí in Prague.
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At all Kogo locations, one will find the same menu. It is big,
and as given to simple pleasures such as a wonderful caprese salad
with properly bulky mounds of mozzarella, as it is to things slightly
more involved; a plate of grilled swordfish or dover sole, for
example, or a pizza topped with mussels, calamari and shrimp. The
menu veers generously toward both carnivore and leaf-eater predilections,
with anything from a risotto with porcini mushrooms to roasted
veal. Also, and this is the key to much of Kogo's success to date,
the pasta is made fresh here daily, and served al dente (Savič
admits, when pressed, that he personally can't live without the
spaghetti frutti di mare).
There is no executive chef here. Rather, Savič helms the kitchen. "I
run the waiters, the kitchen, everything," he boasts, adding
that up until a couple of years ago he was also doing a lot of
the cooking. In fact, his energy seems boundless; he even talks
about expanding across the ocean and opening a restaurant in San
Francisco. It's difficult to discern if this merely playful bluster
- he is, however, going to San Francisco in July to scout locations.
Perhaps there, as here, his Balkan hospitality and culinary skills
will serve as more than fair stand-in for the Italian variety.
Who needs real Italians anyway, when we have a Mr. Savič around.
.
Kogo Slovanský dům,
Na Příkopě 22,
Praha 1 · Tel: 221
451 260
Open daily 11:00- 24:00
CC: Visa, MC, AmEx
| LIMELIGHT
- Shaken and stirred
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| Photo
by: Dorothea Bylica |
A RECENTLY opened café-cum-cocktail bar, this
venue reflects the slick charm of its namesake.
Marek Hospodářský's interior design features aquariums,
luminescent tabletops, funky furniture and fixtures
- and, of course, visual allusions to 007. Just
a few blocks from the Jiřího z Poděbrad metro station,
patrons can either fuel up with a capuccino and
breakfast before work, or enjoy a snack and cocktail
after. With more spots like this, Vinohrady could
soon become the favorite haunt for locals looking
to avoid the flood of summer tourists.
James Bond Café, Polská 7, Praha 2 |
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FARTHER AFIELD: Hraniční zámeček
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Photo by: Archiv
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If your summer travels bring you to southern Moravia, make a bee-line
for the Hraniční zámeček hotel and restaurant complex in the Lednice-Valtice
area. The castle was originally the summer seat of the Lichtenstein
family, which built it at the beginning of the 19th century. It
was so named because a little stream passed through it, and still
does, and this stream in earlier times created the border between
Moravia and Austria. However, today a stylish restaurant and café
are located here. Under the vaulted ceilings and murals you can
enjoy specialties of both Czech and global cuisine. But on a hot
summer day, most people will appreciate the large terrace, which
seats twice as many as does the restaurant itself (120). On Friday
and Saturday evenings, guests can dance to live music, which is
rather unusual to find in eateries these days. Thanks to the lovely
countryside and many historical landmarks in the area, Hraniční
zámeček is also a nice place to spend a summer weekend.
Hraniční zámeček
Hlohovec č. 70
Open: Sun-Thu 7:00-23:00, Fri-Sat 7:00-02:00
MC, Maestro, Visa
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| Photo by:
Archiv |
MY PLACE Vladimíra
Pavlíčková, Facility & Sales Manager, Honeywell
"I definitely prefer eating to cooking, and love Italian,
Thai, Japanese, and Korean cuisine. I like many places in Prague,
but Hanil has a special flair for me. I usually set up my personal
plate of sashimi and drink sake with it. Their Korean dishes are
genuine and wonderful...but you have to be patient with the personnel.
My other tip is a cosy Italian place - Da Emanuel, which offers
both fish and meat menus. Here I really feel spoiled for choice,
as all the dishes are as tasty as they sound. My favorites are
seabass in salt, grilled calamari and pasta. The restaurant is
run by an Italian, and the staff is very helpful and always smiling."
Hanil, Slavíkova 24, Praha 3, tel./fax:
222 715 867
Da Emanuel, Charlese de Gaulla 4, Praha 6, tel: 224 312 934
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