Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Forkin' good times
Food Network's You Gotta Eat Here! stops for a bite and some laughs at Diana's Gourmet Pizza and Kawaii Crepe
The first question for John Catucci is the most obvious:
How does a guy spend 200 days on the road, eating in nearly 80 different restaurants while taping a season of Food Network's You Gotta Eat Here!, and not come home twice the size he was when he started?
"It's definitely a risk," laughs Catucci, who actually remained rather trim while shooting the series' second season, which premièred Feb. 15 and airs Fridays at 8 p.m on Food Network. "Fortunately, I have a very lovely director and field producer who, after I've had a couple of bites, start yelling at me from off camera to put the fork down.
"Sometimes I'll still steal an extra bit, but I do listen. I put the fork down."
In the first of this week's (Feb. 22) back-to-back instalments of You Gotta Eat Here!, Catucci and crew pay a visit to Diana's Gourmet Pizza in Winnipeg. The St. Vital eatery's owner, Diana Coutu, has earned international acclaim (including several awards for Canada's best pizza, and a spot on the judging panel of the World Pizza Championships) for her simple but innovative approach to making a dine-in and takeout staple.
"She really knows her pizza," says Catucci. "She's been all over the world making pizza -- it's really traditional, old-school and delicious; the crust is amazing, and the sauce is great. Some pizza restaurants try too hard; hers really stands on its own.
"She was a lot of fun to work with."
And "fun" is the magic word when it comes to shooting episodes of You Gotta Eat Here! -- the series has no ambitions to present itself as a how-to guide or a showcase of culinary craft; instead, it offers Catucci as a regular guy who has the very cool job of travelling across Canada in search of great, fun food prepared by interesting people.
"I'm not necessarily a foodie; I'm an 'eatie,'" says Catucci, a former Second City performer whose background is in musical and sketch comedy. "I like to stand around and watch people cook. I'll hold a knife, if necessary, but I'm definitely not a chef. I don't pretend to be one on the show; I'm there learning about food and recipes, just like the viewers are."
Obvious comparisons have been drawn between his show and the U.S. Food Network's Guy Fieri-hosted Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives -- after all, each features a road-weary host sampling the fare of a trio of restaurants in each episode -- but Catucci says You Gotta Eat Here! has its own distinct personality.
"When it comes down to it, food shows are about food, so in essence, they're all similar," he explains. "What it comes down to is the personality of the host, so I think the big difference between our show and (Fieri's) is that I'm not a chef, so I'm not going into kitchens with any preconceived notions of what foods and ingredients are going to be.
"And, of course, our show is all Canadian. We're celebrating great Canadian comfort food."
The host adds that shooting the second season was much easier than the first, largely because people across the country were familiar with the series and eager to show off their local dining destinations.
"When we did the first season, people were unaware of who we were, so we'd always have to explain ourselves," says Catucci. "But after the first season aired, people started to realize what we were doing, and for the second season people started recommending restaurants. We asked people to write in about their favourite places, and we ended up doing some fan-favourite episodes. That was pretty cool.
"I think there's still a little bit of 'I want to tell you about this restaurant, but if I tell you, it'll get busy and I won't be able to get a table,' but for the most part, people have responded really positively to the show and are excited to be able to share their restaurants with Canada."
You Gotta Eat Here! has another Winnipeg favourite on its second-season menu -- Kawaii Crepe, which is featured in the April 12 episode.
"That's a really cool place," says Catucci of the Osborne Village restaurant. "I always thought of crepes as strictly a dessert thing, really sweet, but they do a lot of savoury crepes and Japanese-style things. I think I had a bacon, cheese and ranch crepe, which was really great."
brad.oswald@freepress.mb.ca Twitter: @BradOswald
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition February 21, 2013 C9
History
Updated on Thursday, February 21, 2013 at 10:07 AM CST: replaces photo, adds fact box
Fact Check
Have you found an error, or know of something we’ve missed in one of our stories? Please use the form below and let us know.
More TV
- Back to Top
- Return to TV
More TV
(1 of 47 articles for this week)
On TV
1:00 AM 0The Listener
After a fire at a storage facility, a body is found stuffed in a freezer in a unit that ...
Poll
Most Popular TV
- Hiccups, mixups, cussing liven up Daytime Emmys
- Lawsuit filed over Colorado woman's death during production of reality TV show pilot in 2012
- Netflix to run 300 hours of original TV series from DreamWorks Animation in multi-year deal
- Miss Utah latest beauty queen to botch answer, elicit cringes across web
- The dark side of da Vinci
- Handyman Challenge auditions coming to Winnipeg
- Game of Thrones: the blog buzz
- 'Monsters University' reunites Dave Foley with 'Will & Grace' castmate Sean Hayes
- TV Listings
- Psy, Swift, Lavigne, Drake, Bieber all take home MMVAs at outdoor bash
- Psy, Swift, Lavigne, Drake, Bieber all take home MMVAs at outdoor bash
- Daytime Emmys make delightful deal with Monty Hall
- 'The Young and the Restless,' 'General Hospital' top Daytime Emmy nominees
- Here be dragons
- The dark side of da Vinci
- Game of Thrones: the blog buzz
- TV Listings
- Hiccups, mixups, cussing liven up Daytime Emmys
- CBS News says someone tampered with reporter Sharyl Attkisson's computer
- 'Days of Our Lives' wins drama series honours; envelope mix-up at Daytime Emmy Awards
- Traditional TV season becoming outdated before your eyes
- Pew study on female breadwinners ignites heated Fox News exchange
- More exits at 'American Idol': Producers Lythgoe, Warwick leave after low-rated season
- Nicki Minaj follows Mariah Carey, Randy Jackson off 'American Idol'
- 'Less Than Kind' bids farewell
- Ferguson to play Pantages
- Olympic gold medallist Jon Montgomery to host 'Amazing Race Canada'
- Psy, Swift, Lavigne, Drake, Bieber all take home MMVAs at outdoor bash
- TV Listings
- 'Edith Bunker' brought warmth to radical sitcom
- CBC documentary lights up possible pot, schizophrenia link
- Handyman Challenge auditions coming to Winnipeg
- Daytime Emmys make delightful deal with Monty Hall
- Show about nothing: 'Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee' Seinfeld's latest spin
- Ferguson to play Pantages
- Pinsent joining party for CBC's Forest Rangers
- 'Less Than Kind' bids farewell
- Eva Longoria says Latina-focused 'Devious Maids' has 'nothing to do with race'
- CBC documentary lights up possible pot, schizophrenia link
- 'Entourage' star Jeremy Piven plays famed London retailer Harry Selfridge in new PBS series
- Champion Man United earns Premier League-record $93M from broadcasters for season
- Fans' patience is rewarded at last: 'Arrested Development' will be reborn Sunday on Netflix
- Handyman Challenge auditions coming to Winnipeg
- Biopic reveals tarnish underneath gilded life
Ads by Google










You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is be a Winnipeg Free Press print or e-edition subscriber to join the conversation and give your feedback.
You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is be a Winnipeg Free Press print or e-edition subscriber to join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
Have Your Say
Comments are open to Winnipeg Free Press print or e-edition subscribers only. why?
Login SubscribeHave Your Say
Comments are open to Winnipeg Free Press Subscribers only. why?
SubscribeThe Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.