Bottega Mediterranea

Exterior | Bottega Medditerreana | Food For Thought

As you walk along the hilly road of Jalan Ceylon, you will come to notice a small shop on the corner, those that you typically find on the streets of Rome. The walls of this shop is filled with hand written chalk menus on the daily offerings, ranging from a variety of different cured meats, aged cheese, artisanal pasta, sauces and truffles from all around Italy. This little shop is known as Bottega Meditterranea, one of the high quality suppliers of some of the best cured meats in Kuala Lumpur.

Preserves | Bottega Medditerreana | Food For Thought

The shop is a humble hole in the wall, with murals and 3 boards of different speciality selections, namely a cured ham and salami menu, a cheese menu and a wine menu. There is also a selection of vegetable antipasti such as pickles, olives and tomatoes to choose from. The shop is rather small, with only a table or two at the front where the patrons can have a taste of their sandwiches served.

Riccardo Ferroti Cold Cuts | Bottega Medditerreana | Food For Thought

Bottega Meditterranea is the brainchild of maestro Riccardo Ferrarotti, Italian purveyor of fine foods. A seasoned chef himself having spent time in kitchens in Italy, Miami, Dubai, China and Kuala Lumpur, Riccardo’s wealth of product knowledge made it easy for him to transition into finding the right supplies from the right suppliers, a feat common with chefs, but not to this degree of understanding. When asked how his journey into the culinary world began, he stated: –

“My father is a chef, I learned cooking from him. He inspired me when I had to choose what to do, and so I chose culinary art. School teaches you only until a certain level, being a chef is a job that you have to learn by experience, where you “steal” from other chefs. I started to cook at home with my grandmother, preparing fresh pasta, gnocchi, helping to prepare the tomato “passata” during the end of summer season (It is a tomato passata feast in Italy). My father taught me quite a lot, from technique on chopping onions to how to debone a parma ham; my first was when I was 15 years old with his help, guiding me step by step by holding my hands. I must say that I’m pretty lucky, with his trick now, I’m still able to de-bone a ham blindfolded at 30 plus. As for how I ended up here, for this simple reason – I could not find the produces that I was looking for at the time when I was working with Nerovivo, as the local Malaysian suppliers could not match my request, therefore I decided to import it by myself, as simple as that.”  — Riccardo Ferrarotti, Owner of Bottega Mediterranea.

Deli Counter | Bottega Medditerreana | Food For Thought

The Dining

Bottega Meditterranea isn’t so much of a dining experience as they mainly serve as a delicatessen. They do offer a very generous platter of cured meats at a very affordable price of only about RM50.00 (±£10.00) for a nice selection of 5 to 6 different types of cold cuts, an assortment of cheese and some pickles and olives on the side. Bottega Mediterranea’s philosophy is simple when it comes to food, or as Riccardo puts it: –

“Simple, neat and tasty. You need to be able to let the customer identify what is on their plate using their 3 senses: smell, taste, and sight. If it’s too complicated, it can spoil the whole experience.”

Antipasti Platter | Bottega Medditerreana | Food For Thought

The Antipasti Platter comes with a selection of cuts, which were the Alsenese Salame Milano, Salame Contadino, Casa Modena Mortadella, Rigamonti Bresaola, Chorizo, and Valdo Ngina Parma Ham. This selection also came with 3 types of cheese, a Tomme, a Parmigiana Reggiano and Provolone. To put these items into context, they all contain vastly different flavour profiles.

Cold Cuts | Bottega Medditerreana | Food For Thought

Cured Meats

Different meats are cured differently according to region.

Salame Milano

Salami Milano is a dry cured pork, cured with sea salt and red wine, originating from the countryside of Milan, Italy.

Salame Contadino

Salami Contadino is a lean and dry cured pork, cured with sea salt originating from the countryside of Italy.

Mortadella

Mortadella is a ground heat cured pork, usually quite large made from ground pork with cubes of pork fat, originating from Bologna, Italy.

Bresaola

Bresaola is an air dried cured beef, sated and ages for 3 months until the meat turns a deep red, made from a lean cut, originating from Lombardy, the Italian Alps region of Northern Italy.

Chorizo

Chorizo is a spicy pork sausage, smoky in flavour and heavily seasoned with paprika, originating from Spain.

Parma Ham / Prosciutto

Parma Ham, also known as prosciutto, is a dry cured ham, salted, then dried for 2 months, made from the hind leg, originating from Parma, Italy.

Deli | Bottega Medditerreana | Food For Thought

Cheeses

There are different types of cheese, some softer while others harder. Some cured, while others smoked.

Tomme

Tomme is a hard cheese made from cows or goats milk, produced form unpasteurised skim milk resulting in a lower fat cheese, originating from the French Alps region in Switzerland.

Parmigiano Reggiano

Parmigiano Reggiano, also known as Parmesan cheese, is a hard cheese made from cow’s milk, produced from unpasteurised milk, aged for at least 12 months, originating from Parma and Reggio, with some coming from Emilia, Mantua, Bologna and Modena, all in Italy. This cheese has protected DOC (Denominazione di origine controllata) status.

Provolone

Provolone is a semi-hard cheese made from cow’s milk, produces from sometimes pasteurised and sometimes unpasteurised milk, ages for at least 4 months, originating from Casilli, Italy.

Olives and Pickles | Bottega Medditerreana | Food For Thought

Olives and Pickles

They also have a nice selection of olives and pickles, one of the widest in Kuala Lumpur. The zucchini here were some of the better ones we’ve tried, not being exceedingly salty as it was pickled in olive oil.

Francescan Sandwich | Bottega Medditerreana | Food For Thought

The Francescano Sandwich is a simple sandwich for meat lovers, with its generous helping of parma ham, scamorza cheese and zucchini. The zucchini cuts the strong flavours of the meat quite well and is great for those looking for a heartier meal.

Italiano Sandwich | Bottega Medditerreana | Food For Thought

The Italiano Sandwich is one of the most popular sandwiches on the menu, made with Salame Milano, Asiago cheese, sun dried tomatoes and pesto. This sandwich packs quite the flavour with the savouriness of the cured meat, the sweetness of the sun dried tomato and nutty flavour of the pesto. Definitely a must try.

Halal Cold Cuts

Although most of the meat here is directly imported from Italy, there are also meats which are made available for the halal customers. These such cuts include the turkey ham, pepperoni beef salame, Spanish beef and cecina beef, just to name a few.

Board | Bottega Medditerreana | Food For Thought

The Bottega Mediterranea Experience

This is a good place to find different type of cuts that you would like to sample, ranging from different regions of Italy. Even if you’re not here to dine, its a great place to procure your meat selection for home functions or just when you’re in the mood for some quality cuts that you can have at home. Malaysians also generally have quite a limited understanding of Italian food. As Riccardo puts it: –

The diversity of dishes that we have in our 22 regions are from north to south. People are only aware of 10% of our food, such as pizza and spaghetti to name a few. I don’t have a favourite, but if I have to choose for you I would choose Olive Ascolana, stuffed green olives with capsicum, breaded and deep fried to gold colour. I like Burrata as well, it’s fresh, simple, silky and delicate. I don’t like complicated taste, even if my palate it’s pretty advanced and can define and criticize well. The word antipasti is pretty much very vague, I believe that what you can find around is too expensive for the real value. Eggplant grilled and put under oil with herb and garlic above RM80 per kg? It’s ridiculous, it misleads people to buy it. I must say that the local provider could do a better job, chefs too. At Bottega Mediterranea we carry quite a few unique items such as Extra virgin olive oil (EVOO) from north to south, Garda, Trentino, Liguria, Veneto, Tuscany, Lazio, Apulia, and Sicily. No one (and I say no one) has a vast selection of EVOO like us; Reason is that you can start and end a dinner with olive oil, and has over 1000 facets and hidden flavours. And our massive selection of cold cuts and cheeses.

To get better acquainted with the different cured meats and cheeses that are available in Kuala Lumpur, head on over to Bottega Mediterranea today.


Bottega Mediterranea
1A, Jalan Ceylon,
50200 Kuala Lumpur.
+603 2070 4222
Opening Hours:
Monday to Friday, 8.00 am to 10.00 pm
Saturdays, 10.00 am to 6.00 pm

| PHOTOGRAPHY BY: NICHOLAS NG & BOTTEGA MEDITERRANEA | WEBSITE: BOTTEGA MEDITERRANEA |


Nicholas Ng

Nicholas Ng is a restaurant critic and drinks writer and is the editor of independent publication Food For Thought. He has been a freelance journalist for the 15 years and has previously worked as a lawyer and in digital marketing. He currently is the Principal Consultant of A Thought Full Consultancy, a food and beverage marketing consultancy.

29 Comments

    • Hey Giancarlo! It’s been a while since I’ve heard from you. Yes, finally a piece on Italian food in Kuala Lumpur. 🙂 Hope you’re well.

  1. What a nice write up Nicholas. At least these are food I know about compared to your Asian coverage.

  2. Is this only non-halal? I know some places have halal versions. If not cannot makan. 🙁

    • They do have a halal versions as well. They carry turkey ham, pepperoni beef salame, spanish beef and cecina beef.

  3. Looks like a scrumptious selection Nicholas! Hope you enjoyed it. You seem to know your cold cuts.

  4. I’m a big fan of the mortadella but I’ve heard the bresaola is good. Which do you prefer, the mortadella or bresaola?

    • I actually like both. Mortadella is a little bit fatter, more like a sausage, whereas the bresaola is a little more refined.

  5. Very informative post about cold cuts. I always only eat ham. Don’t even know there difference very much.

  6. They have a wide range of olive oils? I find that high quality olive oils tend to burn faster, so I don’t use them for cooking. Only as salad dressing.

    • Hi Rachel,

      I find that to be true. High grade olive oils burn much quicker so definitely don’t use them to deep fry. 🙂

  7. Didn’t think there are halal cold cuts, not common in Hong Kong. Maybe cause Malaysia is muslim country?

    • Hi Liz! Yes, as a muslim country there is definitely a huge market for halal meats. Duck bacon is becoming more common too!

  8. What a great highlight of cold cuts. I’m just used to having ham. Haha. 😀

    • How is the quality at Jasons? The selection at Cold Storage is good, but could be better.

      • Not too bad actually, I used to get mine from Cold Storage or Jaya Grocers but I find that Jason is equally as good. Maybe a tad more expensive, but its near me.

  9. Hello Nicholas,

    We woud like to invite you to review our hotel. Is there a number we can contact you on?

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