Or an afternoon foraging in the Murge plateau of Puglia with a pair of chef brothers, and cooking with them outdoors, followed by the best coffee gelato of my life made by fourth-generation artisans in a little wood-panelled shop.
Or venturing out of Naples to see Franco Pepe, considered by many to be Italy’s best pizzaiolo, stopping first to meet his cheese maker and tasting fresh, warm mozzarella straight from the salt-water bath, then having pizza after pizza made by the master himself, all while he’s explaining his process and telling his personal story.
These are delicious, memorable moments not everyone can have, and I’m as excited to share them with our guests as I am to experience them myself.
What do you enjoy most about your role?
I love that we get to work with the best authorities wherever we go, from authors and entrepreneurs such as the Salmon Sisters in Alaska to the writer and expert on all things Italian, Laura Lazzaroni, and restaurateur and author Luke Nguyen in Vietnam, among many, many others.
I’m lucky to work with amazing teams of people, onboard and off, from the behind-the-scenes geniuses of procurement who help us source regional ingredients and the creative chefs who put them to great use, to the chef-instructors who lead our cooking classes and the very detail-focused shore-experience specialists who work with culinary experts to create compelling adventures in the ports we visit.
How did you curate the SALT program for Nova’s visit here?
I’ve eaten really well around Australia over the years and am always happy for any excuses to come back and explore more. Sydney, Melbourne and Perth are all compellingly great eating cities.
I’d say Tasmania has a special hold on me. I spent a week on a sheep station there 20 or so years ago for a story, and have been back often, driving all around the island, doing the Cradle Mountain and Bay of Fires walks, eating around Hobart and taking cooking lessons with Rodney Dunn at the Agrarian Kitchen.
I first encountered Analiese Gregory when she had Franklin restaurant in Hobart, and I was immediately a fan and really love her cookbook How Wild Things Are. So when we were coming to Australia with Silver Nova, I knew we had to do something with Analiese. I’m especially excited about the special foraging, live-fire cooking experience we’ve put together with her at The Bowmont on the banks of the Huon River.
Adam’s top five NYC restaurants
New York, like any great city, is too messy, too multitudinous to be tamed by any one list. But here are a few spots I’d take you to if you were visiting the city this week, in no particular order.
Sailor: Gabe Stulman and chef April Bloomfield’s ideal neighbourhood bistro happens to be in my neighbourhood. www.sailor.nyc
Borgo: Low-key king of Brooklyn restaurants Andrew Tarlow’s first Manhattan opening. Italian from a wood-fired hearth. borgonyc.com
Le Veau d’Or: Tiny, fancy, perfect classic Midtown bistro miraculously reincarnated by the city’s leading non-French Francophiles, Lee Hanson and Riad Nasr. lvdnyc.com
Hamburger America: Come to America, eat a hamburger, specifically the double classic smashburger at “burger scholar” George Motz’s loving and intentionally kitschy tribute to the American diner. hamburgeramerica.com
Atomix: Modern Korean chef’s counter experience that’s both serene and thrilling from JP and Ellia Park. atomixnyc.com/counter
THE DETAILS
Silversea’s SALT program is about immersing guests in local culinary cultures. In the SALT kitchen, the menu changes daily to reflect the specialty dishes of the destination, while the SALT bar serves bespoke cocktails crafted with local botanicals. In the SALT lab kitchen, travellers prepare regional dishes under the guidance of a culinary expert. By night, the SALT lab transforms into the chef’s table, an intimate, interactive dining experience for 18 guests.
Silver Nova will return to the Asia-Pacific in September 2025, completing voyages in Asia before undertaking a 47-day circumnavigation of Australia, departing from Melbourne. Subsequently, Silversea’s first Nova-class ship will operate Sydney-to-Auckland voyages, from 12 to 15 days.
See silversea.com