Alberto Farinelli is a lifelong patissier and chocolatier; he is also the maestro at Perugina® School of Chocolate in Umbria, Italy. Here he gives us the flavour of a day in his life lived through chocolate.
My alarm first goes off at 6.30am, but it’s the second one 10 minutes later that actually gets me up. Like everyone else, I’m already thinking about the 100 things I have to do that day, pick 10, and start mentally putting them in order of importance.
Breakfast is a white coffee and French toast with marmalade – I try to avoid chocolate for breakfast, but, because I’m so crazy for patisserie, I’ll bake Umbria’s chocolate-studded maritozzi for my family once or twice a week, which my wife doesn’t always appreciate as she can’t resist them and worries about her fitness.
I’m a pâtissier 24/7, even at home.
I’ve been in this profession for over 40 years, a passion born from watching and helping my mother make crema pasticceria as a child. When I was 17, I started working in a pastry shop, as well as taking lots of specialised courses. With some colleagues, I founded the 'Pastry Association of Umbria' about 30 years ago. We set up our own private laboratory and once a month or so we would experiment with recipes and compare notes and invite chefs to learn and keep up to date with new and current techniques. We started to collaborate with EuroChocolate in Perugia where I met some Perugina executives. Over the years we went from small collaborations to working together, and the rest is history. I’ve been at Perugina for 20 years now.
I leave for Scuola del Cioccolato Perugina around 8am and spend the morning taking care of course administration with my colleagues at the school. The school is a bit like a small company, in that there are many elements to manage, from purchasing to paying bills.