Victoria Vallenilla: “Never be afraid of wanting perfection”

As head chef of Coya, Victoria Vallenilla has made history in Monaco. But it is not just her gender that is breaking new ground, it is her revolutionary approach to running a kitchen team.

When news broke on Instagram of Coya’s reopening in Monaco, the phone started to ring off the hook within 10 minutes.

“Funnily enough, our base in London made a mistake and sent out the wrong opening date with that post,” General Manager Eric Gorjux laughs as we sit at one of the colourful dining tables overlooking the Mediterranean. “Monaco is so small and Coya is so popular, all you need is one message on Instagram.”

Coya’s annual reopening normally marks the start of “the season” in Monaco, coinciding with the first of a long line of prestigious events – like the Monte-Carlo Rolex Tennis Masters – and signals the return of fine weather and fun times.

But with no audience to speak of at this year’s tennis tournament due to Covid, Coya’s highly anticipated reopening was timed instead for the watered-down Historic Grand Prix of Monaco in late April.

Photo by Monaco Life

Since then, the restaurant has uniquely offered lunch service to make up for a shortened dinner service (due to curfew) and reservations just keep rolling in.

“We turned down 230 people last Saturday,” says the general manager.

Situated on the coast in the Sporting Monte-Carlo, Coya embraces the deep blues of the Mediterranean Sea and is bravely bold with the colours of Latin America.

Photo by Monaco Life

Authenticity is most evident in the kitchen, where an army of chefs work around a roaring red-hot pit of coals, delivering the deliciously smoky flavours of Peruvian barbecue. At the helm is Venezuelan-born Victoria Vallenilla.

“Coya is not a fully Peruvian restaurant, it is what we call Nikkei fusion,” the passionate chef tells Monaco Life. “Peru is made up of many cultures, so we focus on Nikkei cuisine and a bit of South America, because those are the flavours that you find in every country there.”

Nikkei food, I came to learn, is Peruvian ingredients — tropical fish, quinoa, aji amarillo peppers — molded by Japanese techniques. Ceviche is particularly indicative of the Nikkei style and here it is made with fresh striped seabass seeped in onion, chilli, lime, sweet potato, and rounded out with coconut milk.
As Peruvian cuisine carries characters of Asia, a spicy beef fillet with crispy shallots and star anise also makes it on to the menu, as does salmon with sesame, wasabi and kaffir lime.

This cross-cultural mingling is present on many plates: burrata with roasted pineapple, kale salad smothered in manchego cheese, patatas bravas, and Mediterranean octopus all mimicking the influences of Europe.

Meanwhile, the South American classics are elevated to meet the expectations of Monegasque diners: chargrilled shitake tacos, Chilean seabass with rice and lime, Wagyu rib eye with adobo and chimichurri.

Photo of shiitake mushroom tacos and popcorn chicken by Monaco Life

Like most South Americans, Victoria says she is obsessed with fast food – well, their version of it, anyway. Therefore, spicy popcorn chicken also makes it to our table. It pairs perfectly with my Coya-emblazened Pisco Sour.

“My dream is to one day open a burger restaurant,” laughs the charismatic chef.

It is a surprising statement from a young chef who has trained under Monaco’s starred masters, including Joël Garault and Benoit Witz, then at Alain Ducasse’s Trattoria.

But Victoria says she fell in the love with the Coya concept, the opportunity to cook the dishes that she grew up with, and the team spirit of everyone at the restaurant.

“There is not the same unhealthy pressure that you have in a starred kitchen, where everyone wants to do better than someone else, to take their place. That’s what I realised when I left the Michelin star kitchens,” reveals Victoria.

Yet it is also at Coya, second to Chef Fabrizio Fossati, where the 28-year-old says she was compelled to grow as a leader.

“When you rise up through the ranks, you can either scream and be crazy like the others to scare your chefs into doing what you want, or you can think smart,” says Victoria. “Coya taught me to change the way I get results from people. I figure I have two hands, and I have 400 covers a night, so I cannot do it alone.

“The most important thing is to make them understand what I am looking for, and to treat them how I would like to be treated; I let them know when things are not right, but I also praise and reward them when they do good. This is not a Michelin star restaurant, people don’t work here to look for glory, it is a lot of work. So, I need to keep people motivated.”

Photo of Head Chef Victoria Vallenilla in the kitchen of Coya by Monaco Life

It is an innovative approach that this year helped to elevate Victoria Vallenilla to head chef, with Fabrizio Fossati moving on to executive chef of the global Coya brand. She is now the first female head chef of an SBM establishment and all Coya restaurants. But it is not what Victoria necessarily considers an “achievement”.

“People ask me what it feels like to be the first female head chef of SBM, and I say, ‘It is not normal that I am the first one’,” she says confidently. “In the past, it was difficult for me being a girl because a lot of men don’t like being told what to do by a woman, especially if she is younger than them. But I am not a woman in here, I am a chef.”

Victoria now heads a 35-strong team in the kitchen, and the pastry section is 60% female. “Not because we want to have girls but because we want to make the job accessible for them.”

It is a position that Victoria would like to see more restaurants take.

“The problem is always the same for women – they don’t stay because it is difficult to have a family if you work in this kind of restaurant. I have chefs who only work during the day because they have a family, and I make that possible for them.”

Photo of Coya desserts by Monaco Life

As someone who has risen through the ranks with flair and determination, Chef Victoria Vallenilla has this advice: “Never be ashamed to be straightforward, of looking for the best, of wanting to find perfection and complete accomplishment,” she reveals. “When you start to do that, the pressure is gone. I stopped being scared about what people think. We each have a voice and if people around us don’t like what we are saying, bad luck.”

And there’s no doubt that this feisty, passionate and confident South American attitude translates perfectly on to the plate.

“She makes the job look easy,” concludes General Manager Eric Gorjux. “She runs the kitchens with an iron fist in a velvet glove.”

TV Festival announces competition line-up

Productions about the storming of the US Capitol, Turkey’s gender-based violence, and the 1980s AIDS epidemic in London are among this year’s contenders for the Monte-Carlo Television Festival Awards. 
For the 60th time, the television industry and its fans from around the world will gather in Monaco in June for the annual Monte-Carlo Television Festival. The in-person festival is back from 18th to 22nd following a pause in 2020 due to the coronavirus, however the event will also take on a virtual aspect for those still impacted by travel restrictions.
27 programs from 14 countries have been officially selected to compete, across the Prince Rainier III Special Prize, the News and Fiction categories.
They include It’s a Sin from the United Kingdom, the latest masterpiece from the creator of Queer as Folkwhich chronicles young friends navigating the joys, heartbreak, and outlandish parties that await them amidst the AIDS epidemic in 1980s London.
There’s also HBO’s Made for Love in the fiction category, an adaptation of the novel of the same name by Alissa Nutting. The series follows Hazel Green, a thirtysomething woman on the run after 10 years in a suffocating marriage to a tech billionaire who has implanted a revolutionary monitoring device in her brain.
https://youtu.be/lvWgNSLIULw
 
Those competing in the news category include France’s The Mysterious Origins of Covid-19, Germany’s Donald Trump’s First Attack on America and Sweden’s I am Greta.
Also up for contention in the news category is Dying to Divorce. Filmed over five years, the film takes viewers into the heart of Turkey’s gender-based violence crisis and the recent political events that have severely eroded democratic freedoms.

In the Prince Rainier III Special Prize, which recognises excellence in sustainability-focussed productions, the contenders are A World Without Meat, Amazonia: The Front Line, and Now, a film about youth and climate action.
The laureates will be revealed at a red-carpet event on the final evening of the Monte-Carlo Television Festival, the Golden Nymph Awards Ceremony, on Tuesday 22nd June at the Grimaldi Forum Monaco, in the presence of the Festival’s Honorary President, H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco.
The Official Selection of Golden Nymph Awards can be found here.
Meanwhile, this year’s Festival also includes a new international expanded business track called Pass Pro for industry executives, with in-depth panel discussions on timely topics, and keynote conversations with both in person and virtual global television leaders.
Topics include ‘Migration from Movie Theatre to Streaming’, ‘The Explosive Growth of Unscripted Content in a Streaming World’ and ‘Producing a Worldwide Phenomenon’.
“The Monte-Carlo Television Festival attracts many of the most influential executives and inspirational creatives in global entertainment today,” said Monte-Carlo Television Festival CEO Laurent Puons. “It is our intention, through the unparalleled access offered by the Pass Pro, to enable those in the industry seeking insight and guidance to learn from these exceptional leaders and propel their companies and careers up to the next level.”
 
 

New contemporary art exhibit at Le Meridien

Espinasse 31 Contemporary Art Gallery has brought the works of Tomoko Nagao and Robi Walters to the Principality for the first time with an exhibition at the Meridien Hotel.
The exhibition, titled High Chroma / High Vigour, features Milanese-based Japanese artist Tomoko Nagao and London born and bred artist Robi Walters.
The works have been curated by Antonio and Thomas Castiglioni, and bring together the two artists, highlighting their unique styles and expressive vitality.
“The exhibition is an exploration of fundamental properties of art—colour, material, dimensionality, symbolism—and how they make us feel. High Chroma / High Vigour creates a space in which Tomoko and Robi’s creations coexist and balance each other, focusing on their common expression of energy through colourful displays,” explains the gallery.
Art is meant to evoke emotion, say the organisers, and to this end the exhibition hopes that visitors view the works through their relationship with the artist rather than as objects to be simply looked at.
Tomoko Nagao is known as one of the leading figures in the international Micropop art movement. She started studies in her home country of Japan before moving on to London where she attended the Chelsea College of Art. This is where her personal style was developed, and her popularity has been on the rise ever since, boasting shows at the Victoria and Albert Museum as well as various events in Italy and Japan.
She takes aim at consumerism by referencing high-end luxury brands and corporations, reminding audiences of “the energetic brightness in symbols of capitalism, such as advertisements.”
Robi Walters is a contemporary artist based in Soho, London. His colourful collages have attracted the attention of celebrity collectors such as Thandie Newton, Usain Bolt and Jillionaire, to name a few.
In 2018, Michelin-Star Chef Tom Kerridge commissioned Walters to create bespoke works for his restaurant Kerridge’s Bar & Grill at London’s Corinthia Hotel. In 2020, he was invited by Aston Martin to become their artist in residence. Walters has been named by The Telegraph as one of the top creatives in the UK, going on to win the ‘Arts and Culture’ category in the newspaper’s ‘Amazing 15’.
Walters’ work has encapsulated the spirit of transformation. By constructing mixed-media pieces with unusual materials, such as packaging from household items and broken vinyl LPs, he focuses on the practice of taking discarded objects and making them beautiful to revivify their intrinsic worth—with a creative process and product that is reminiscent of both pop art and arte povera movements.
Both artists works are hopeful and vibrant, mirroring the new hope of a return to normalcy in daily life after more than a year of pandemic conditions.
The exhibit will be on display at the Meridien Hotel until 7th June.
 
Photo by Espinasse 31 Contemporary Art Gallery

General public to be welcomed at Monaco GP

The Monaco Grand Prix will open its grandstands to 7,500 spectators a day, regardless of their origin. However, there will be restrictions.
The government made the highly anticipated announcement on Tuesday, revealing that the Formula One Grand Prix would be open to the general public, however grandstand capacity will be limited to 40%.
Mandatory PCR tests for racing fans
People entering Monaco from the Alpes-Maritimes and the Var, including cross border workers, will not need to produce a PCR test until they enter the F1 circuit. Anyone from outside of this department will need to present a negative test upon entering the Principality and the racing circuit.
Grandstands will be open but capacity will be limited to 7,500 spectators per day, with normal seat pricing. On Friday 21st May, only the K and T stands will be open to accommodate a maximum of 3,000 people. Tickets for Friday’s races will be free.
Monaco residents and students will not need to produce a negative PCR test to access the F1 grandstands or circuit throughout the GP weekend.
No decision has been made yet regarding parties on terraces and yachts, or the opening of restaurants and bars, however an announcement on this is expected with the next change in health measures on 16th May.
Standing zones and the fan zone are not authorised this year.
Monaco E-Prix
In making the announcement on Tuesday, Minister of State Pierre Dartout said his government was happy with the running of the recent Historic Grand Prix and the same conditions will be applied to this weekend’s E-Prix, in particular a capacity limit of 6,500 people in the stands reserved for residents, employees, students and people staying in a hotel in Monaco. Access is also limited for guests on terraces to one person per square metre, and a maximum of 12 people on yachts. The sale and consumption of alcohol in public is banned.
Prepare to be stopped
The government warns that there will be strict controls by authorities and members of the Automobile Club of Monaco checking for PCR tests.
Monaco’s unprecedented move
Monaco’s decision follows an announcement by the organisers of this weekend’s Spanish Grand Prix to allow up to 1,000 circuit members to attend the race on Sunday.
There were no spectators allowed at either of the first two European events of the F1 season, in Portugal last weekend and Imola in Italy two weeks before.
Bahrain allowed 4,500 spectators to attend the season-opening race at the end of March, but it was open only to those who had been vaccinated against or recovered from Covid-19.
 
Photo by Reuben Rohard on Unsplash
 
 

The stars are aligning in Monaco

The first ever Festival of Stars is launching this May, featuring exclusive dinners by Monaco’s Michelin-starred chefs who are partnering up with other award-winning masters.
With seven Michelin star establishments to its credit, Monte-Carlo Société des Bains de Mer (SBM) is no stranger to fine dining experiences. Now, they are taking things one step further by launching the Monte-Carlo Festival of Stars, in parallel with the arrival of three Michelin starred Chef Yannick Alléno at the Hôtel Hermitage Monte-Carlo.
Over the next several months Michelin chefs from SBM’s resorts are inviting Michelin starred guest chefs to come and collaborate with them at the hotels, giving diners a truly unique night out.
Guests staying at the hotels for the occasions will also have the opportunity to meet the chefs before the events, adding icing to the cake.
The line-up starts on 29th May when Michelin starred Chef Marcel Ravin hosts two-Michelin starred Chef Michel Sarran at the Blue Bay restaurant in the Monte-Carlo Bay Hotel and Resort. Toulouse-based Sarran, whose restaurant bears his name, is also one of the jury members on the popular Top Chef television series on France M6.
On 12th June, Michelin-starred Chef Franck Cerutti will welcome Lido 84 Chef Riccarado Caminini into his kitchen to create a special lunch and dinner at the Grill in the Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo. Camanini’s Lake Garda establishment, which opened in 2014, was awarded Michelin star status a mere six months after opening, making him one of the cooking world’s brightest stars. His dish of spaghettoni with butter and brewer’s yeast was once described by Alain Ducasse as the best dish he’s ever tasted.
Further details are to be announced regarding a dinner at Elsa, Monte-Carlo Beach in September.
On 15th October, Chef Dominique Lory of the exclusive three Michelin-starred Louis XV-Alain Ducasse will open his doors at the Hôtel de Paris to Chef Michel Guérard, whose restaurant Les Prés d’Eugénie in Eugénie-les-Bains has held three stars in the Michelin Guide since 1977.
Finally, on 5th November, Chef Marcel Ravin will welcome three Michelin-starred sensation Chef Mauro Colagreco for a dinner at the Blue Bay, Monte-Carlo Bay Hotel & Resort. Chef Colagreco has achieved monumental success with his Menton restaurant, Mirazur, which has now risen to three Michelin stars.
The piece de resistance comes in November with the grand finale of the festival. The Monte-Carlo Casino will be the setting for an incredible dinner created by all of SBM’s Michelin-starred chefs on one night.

More than a festival, this culinary event is a true celebration of gastronomy orchestrated by those who make it shine.

 
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Interview: Leader of ‘Modern Cuisine’ Yannick Alléno

Interview: Combining the arts with Chef Philippe Mille

 
Photo of Chef Marcel Ravin by Monaco Life
 
 

‘Made in Monaco’ fashion show on GP weekend

Organisers of the Amber Lounge Monaco Charity Fashion Show have announced a partnership with Monte-Carlo Fashion Week and the Monaco Fashion Council, making this year’s event truly homegrown.

The 2021 Amber Lounge Monaco Charity Fashion Show will be held during the Grand Prix weekend, on Friday 21st May at the Grimaldi Forum. The event will showcase both local Monaco brands as well as international brands who pay tribute to Monaco with environmentally sustainable collections.

“We are delighted and proud to be working with Monte-Carlo Fashion Week and the Monaco Chamber of Commerce,” said Amber Lounge CEO and Founder, Sonia Irvine. “We are excited to work with their charismatic teams as well as designers both local to Monaco but also those who strive to design sustainable collections, a first for Amber Lounge. The show will truly be a dynamic show of fashion and motorsport combined.”

Designers include local favourites such as Inessa Creations Monaco, Beach and Cashmere Monaco, Laura Spreti and JFC Style Authority Menswear. International designers include Ymaginaria and Pasquini Roma.  

The Fashion Show will also feature a charity auction that will benefit Caudwell Children who support physically and mentally disabled children and their families. Lots up for grabs include the chance to stay at the Hatt et SöNER where a personal champagne vintage will be created just for the winner, a stay at a magnificent Whistler Canada ski chalet for 12, a specially commissioned painting by artist Arunas Rutkus, an African Safari in Kenya, a Michael Schumacher 2021 one-kilo gold coin, and a regenerative health experience on a private island in Thailand, to name but a few.  

Amber Lounge is a staple of the Grand Prix circuit, being widely regarded by many as a pioneer in F1 nightlife experiences.