Best Food News: A porchetta sandwich that takes you to Italy, and other carnivore cravings

We are more than familiar with heat waves in South Florida. But how do you know you’re in the middle of a meat wave? Your photo files have been commandeered by images of steaks, burgers and roasts. Your story notes are popping with references to prime rib, wagyu and barbecue. And you’ve got National Burger Month plans for May.

From prime rib to porchetta, this week’s food-news buffet is a carnivore’s fancy.

Let’s start with the porchetta.

Chef Tiziano Fioretti displays his Italian-style porchetta pork roll at the Saturday Swank Farmers' Market in Loxahatchee Groves. The Rome-born chef operates a catering enterprise called Pork-etta.
Chef Tiziano Fioretti displays his Italian-style porchetta pork roll at the Saturday Swank Farmers' Market in Loxahatchee Groves. The Rome-born chef operates a catering enterprise called Pork-etta.

Raves about the Roman-style porchetta sold at Swank Farm’s Saturday farmers market in Loxahatchee Groves led me to chef Tiziano Fioretti’s busy Pork-etta stand last weekend. The Rome native has sparked a following, thanks to the fragrant pork he cures with rosemary, fennel, garlic and Mediterranean sea salt, then rolls and wraps in pork belly before roasting.

The result is the most aromatic, juicy, herb-swirled roast pork. It’s street-food majestic. Fioretti cuts the roll in a way that’s ideal for onsite sandwiches (or for serving later however you’d like). He offers stacks of rosemary-scented focaccia, freshly baked by his wife Alejandra, for making sandwiches.

The porchetta alone costs $25 a pound. The rosemary focaccia is $8 for a large wedge (makes at least two hefty sandwiches), and $4 for a smaller wedge. If you are taking your porchetta to go, here’s a market tip: For a peppery contrast to the rich pork, grab some upland cress from Swank Farm’s own market stand, which offers a nice range of fresh-picked produce.

Chef Tiziano Fioretti, who hails from Rome, makes Italian-style porchetta for the Saturday Swank Farmers' Market in Loxahatchee Groves during harvest season. His catering business is called Pork-etta.
Chef Tiziano Fioretti, who hails from Rome, makes Italian-style porchetta for the Saturday Swank Farmers' Market in Loxahatchee Groves during harvest season. His catering business is called Pork-etta.

Fioretti’s culinary career includes prominent positions at various Los Angeles and Santa Barbara-area restaurants, the Eataly marketplace in L.A. and Dallas and, most recently, Deerfield Beach’s Royal Blues luxury hotel. He went to work for a food distribution company after food allergies forced him to give up a full-time chef's life. But Fioretti says he found a way to stay connected to his passion for cooking and to his roots by making porchetta.

"It reminds me of my family. It reminds me of Italy," says Fioretti, whose mother is from one of the Castelli Romani villages, the area that claims porchetta as its own.

Fioretti brought his Pork-etta stand to the Swank Farmers’ Market last October, selling out in an hour and 15 minutes on the first day. It has been a hit ever since.

If you’d like to try it at Swank’s Saturday market, you have until May 27, when the market closes for the off-season. Fioretti also sells the pork roast for delivery in Palm Beach and Broward counties. It costs $25 a pound with a three-pound minimum order, or $20 a pound for the entire pork log (about 11 to 15 pounds each). There's no delivery fee.

You can follow Fioretti’s porchetta enterprise or contact him via Instagram @PorkettaRomana.

Swank Farmers’ Market: Saturdays through May from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 14311 North Road, Loxahatchee Groves, 561-202-5648, SwankSpecialtyProduce.com

Craving a prime rib special?

At La Goulue restaurant in Palm Beach, prime rib is carved, plated and served tableside on Wednesdays and Sundays.
At La Goulue restaurant in Palm Beach, prime rib is carved, plated and served tableside on Wednesdays and Sundays.

It’s a recurring question I’ve heard from readers through the years: Where do I find a good prime rib special? I thought of this recently during an interview with Eric Anderson, who co-owns The Butcher and The Bar in Boynton Beach (where they make a stellar porchetta sandwich, by the way). He mentioned his restaurant/butcher shop had launched a Sunday night prime rib special earlier this year.

A few rabbit holes later, I put together a mini-guide to prime rib specials in Palm Beach County. They range from the ceremonial (carved table-side in Palm Beach) to the casual and affordable ($29 with a side of live music).

Here’s the guide: six restaurants serving prime rib specials.

Burgers on the brain?

Tropical Smokehouse's Miami-inspired frita burger is offered as a Burger Month special at the West Palm Beach restaurant through the end of May.
Tropical Smokehouse's Miami-inspired frita burger is offered as a Burger Month special at the West Palm Beach restaurant through the end of May.

Maybe that’s because Burger Month starts Monday. We’ll have some favorite burgers coming your way soon (in story form). Meantime, here’s a tempting Burger Month special to know about:

Throughout May, West Palm Beach’s Tropical Smokehouse will offer a Miami-inspired tribute to the Cuban frita, the beloved smoky burger that’s topped with crispy potato sticks. At Tropical, chef Rick Mace uses smoked beef and chorizo in his frita patties, which he tops with hand-cut shoestring fries and kicky sauce and serves on a Martin’s potato roll.

The frita special ($15) is offered for dine-in, carry-out and delivery.

Tropical Smokehouse: 3815 S. Dixie Hwy, West Palm Beach, 561-323-2573  

New modern steakhouse coming up

The chef/restaurateur behind downtown West Palm Beach’s popular Avocado Grill wants to open a different kind of steakhouse in the city. Julien Gremaud told me about his plans to bring a retro-chic, Miami-inspired spot called Pink Steak to the city.

The location is a place my colleagues and I know well — the space where The Palm Beach Post’s printing presses once stood. Gremaud wants to shatter a few steakhouse clichés, particularly the expected “manly” trappings and ultra-rich side dishes.

Read all about the upcoming Pink Steak here.

Farewell, Grilled Cheese Month.

Before National Grilled Cheese Month dissolves into National Burger Month, I thought you might enjoy a nice cheese melt. So here ya go:

Aioli bakery and café in West Palm Beach serves a grand grilled cheese sandwich.
Aioli bakery and café in West Palm Beach serves a grand grilled cheese sandwich.

This one is a variation of Aioli bakery and café’s popular Grilled Three Cheese sandwich, which combines cheddar, mozzarella and Parmesan on grilled buttered bread ($11.50).

The cranberry aioli spread you see on the bread was a request from Palm Beach Post collaborator J. Miller, who wrote about her long-standing love for a great grilled cheese sandwich in this 2021 story.

Speaking of melting cheeses, Aioli’s owners Michael and Melanie Hackman recently opened a long-awaited pizzeria called Pizzaioli just steps away from their bakery. Here’s that story!  

Food events to know about

The MB Supper Club at The Boca Raton resort will host a whiskey dinner during the 2023 Boca Bacchanal.
The MB Supper Club at The Boca Raton resort will host a whiskey dinner during the 2023 Boca Bacchanal.

Boca Bacchanal time.

Boca Raton’s big culinary weekend has arrived. The three-day Boca Bacchanal (April 28-30) includes a grand-tasting event, three intimate wine dinners and a Macallan whiskey dinner. The 20-year-old Bacchanal benefits the Boca Raton Historical Society. The weekend at a glance:

? Friday night — Tickets remain for the Macallan dinner at The Boca Raton resort’s glam MB Supper Club ($350 per person), and they are sold online. Saturday night’s wine dinners are sold out.

? Sunday — The Bacchanal’s Grand Tasting goes from 1 to 4 p.m. at the historic Addison events venue. Participating restaurants include chef/restaurateur Eric Baker’s AlleyCat and Big in Japan, The Seagate Hotel’s Atlantic Grille, Max’s Grille, Lemongrass Asian Bistro, Ramen Lab, The Capital Grille as well as The Addison’s culinary team. They will be joined by winemakers and distributors, who will offer samplings. Tickets, which cost $125 per person or $160 including a wine or whiskey seminar before the event, are sold online.

Culinary night for nature school.

If a walk-around, food-and-drink event with a charitable component sounds like a Saturday night plan, you may want to check out this weekend’s culinary tasting at the Arts Warehouse in Delray Beach.

The tasting event features bites from local restaurants such as Dada, Kapow Noodle Bar, Amar Bakery, Prezzo and others, an open bar and deejay-spun music. It benefits Delray Beach’s Cocoplum Nature School, which promotes nature-based learning for early childhood and elementary school children.

The tasting, which costs $125 per person, goes from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday. Tickets are sold at this link. The Arts Warehouse is at 313 NE 3rd St. in Delray Beach.

Have a delicious weekend!

Liz Balmaseda


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Liz Balmaseda is The Palm Beach Post's food critic.
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Liz Balmaseda is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist for The Palm Beach Post, part of the USA Today Network. She covers the local food and dining beat. Follow her on Instagram and Post on Food Facebook. She can be reached by email at [email protected]

This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: West Palm restaurants: Best Italian sandwich, prime rib, new steakhouse