Chef Joshua Hedquist reached his hand up, and with it, pulled one end of a pliant white rope. It stretched like chewing gum, getting longer and stringier as his hand stretched farther up toward the soaring coffered ceiling in the drop-dead-gorgeous former bank lobby that's now the northern Italian restaurant Giulia.
When his left arm had gone as high as it could, Hedquist drew the right one out in the other direction, so that the rope lengthened across his body to a wingspan of 6 feet.
That would be 6 feet of cheese.
At Giulia (215 S. 4th St., Mpls., 612-215-5450, dinegiulia.com), Hedquist is bringing tableside service to new lengths — er, heights. The Minneapolis restaurant's "Mozzarella a Mano" is the latest over-the-top food to be featured in the Star Tribune's Outta Control video series. (Watch past videos about Juicy Lucy pizza and a deep-fried burger.)
Hedquist's scratch-made mozzarella, stretched in front of diners' eyes, is a modern update on the steakhouse Caesar salad and New Orleans' bananas Foster carts of another time.
The Minnesotan spent years working at Italian restaurants in South Florida that were all about opulence and excess. While a chef at Todd English's Da Campo Osteria, he borrowed a flambé cart and tried out his idea, making cheese fresh from curd that's been soaked in boiling water. Paula Deen once tried it at a Miami food festival and "the cheese was so good, she pinched me in the butt," Hedquist said.
Upon opening Giulia last month, he knew the shareable $16 appetizer would be a mainstay on the menu. He was right; it's by far the most popular item, with about 30 orders a night.
It helps that it's an attention-grabber.