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Home / Rotorua Daily Post

Tokoroa legend Alberico d’Andrea, of Alberico’s Italian Restaurant, dies

Danielle Zollickhofer
By Danielle Zollickhofer
Multimedia journalist, Waikato Herald·Waikato Herald·
9 Aug, 2024 05:30 PM8 mins to read

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Lisa Carrington and Alicia Hoskin take gold in the K2 women’s final as NZ tourism takes on new challenges and banks begin to lower their interest rates. Video / NZ Herald

South Waikato is mourning the death of local legend Alberico D’Andrea, 73, who brought a slice of la dolce vita to Tokoroa.

D’Andrea opened Alberico’s Italian Restaurant with his wife Rachel in 1984.

He passed away, at the restaurant, on July 22, after a heart attack.

The family announced his death on social media on Wednesday last week, saying Alberico had loved the people of Tokoroa and being a part of its community.

“A mighty tree has fallen. We are deeply saddened to have to announce that our dearest, big-hearted, generous soul Alberico, who laughed, sang, served and cooked beautiful food for the community for 40 years passed away [on] Monday afternoon.”

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The post has attracted a flood of comments from locals sharing their memories and extending their condolences in English, Italian and te reo Māori.

Former South Waikato mayor Jenni Shattock commented: “Our sincere condolences ... RIP Alberico. You were a true Tokoroa icon.”

Former South Waikato District councillor Peter Schulte echoed Shattock’s sentiment.

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“A Tokoroa Icon has gone. RIP Alberico. Our sincere condolences.”

D’Andrea was born in Pieve di Soligo, a small rural town in the north of Italy, on December 28, 1950, as the eldest of four children.

He leaves behind his wife Rachel and son Leandro in New Zealand, as well as his siblings Eliana, Emanuela and Edi in Italy.

Leandro told the Waikato Herald, his father had been a hard worker all of his life and had only recently found “more of a balance”.

“He worked as a joiner at 10 years old ... in northern Italy. It was quite common for working-class families.”

In his youth, Alberico also helped out his uncle who was a mechanic and he gained knowledge in other trades such as building, carpentry, welding and as a blacksmith.

At the same time, he learned how to cook from his mother and aunt. The latter ran a traditional Italian taverna, a working men’s lunch and dinner bar, where Alberico would also help out.

“That’s the kind of person he was. Always looking out for everybody.

“He was 18 when he came to New Zealand ... That’s when the compulsory military training starts in Italy,” Leandro said.

The training was unpaid, but Alberico’s family needed multiple incomes to survive.

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As his father was already in New Zealand, working as a geometer on a tunnelling project, Alberico followed in 1969.

However, despite Alberico’s skills in the trades, the only job he found upon arrival was as a kitchen hand in the canteen which fed the workers setting up the Tongariro Power Scheme.

A short while later, he transitioned from the kitchen to the construction site.

“[The Tongariro Power Scheme] was a big part of his life.

“He often worked 14 hours a day. It was in the middle of Tongariro National Park, so basically the middle of nowhere,” Leandro said.

Alberico D'Andrea "always had a glint in his eyes and created levity, showed people how to have a good time".
Alberico D'Andrea "always had a glint in his eyes and created levity, showed people how to have a good time".

“He often talked about how he heard [fellow immigrant workers] crying themselves to sleep and how they all missed their families – and the [Italian] food.

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“One of the first meals they had after arriving in New Zealand was at the Tokoroa Hotel. All of them cried over the food – well-done steak with eggs and chips.”

The work on the power scheme was hard, physical labour. There were not a lot of machines, so the heavy lifting was done by the workers.

This meant they would frequently get injured.

“Alberico jumped through the ranks because he was really good at coming up with systems to make people’s lives easier,” Leandro said.

“One night, he decided to build a coaster [lifting] system instead of going to sleep. In the morning, his superior blew Dad apart like, ‘Who gave you permission to do this? You took materials without asking’ that sort of thing.

“But Dad was unphased. He just said, ‘You wait and see how productive we are going to be’.”

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Initially, the project leaders were not a fan of Alberico’s way of working. Leandro said his father even got fired a couple of times and at one point he was sent home to Italy.

“He was very accurate and anti-authoritarian. He had no patience for anyone who didn’t know what they were talking about.”

But due to his skills, Alberico wasn’t out of work for long.

“He was asked to come back [to the power scheme]. The clever-clogs that he was, he’d say, ‘Sure, I come back, but I want a first-class ticket’.”

When the South Waikato underwent a rebranding in 2022, the council asked members of the community to feature on town entry signs. Two of those featured were Alberico and Rachel d'Andrea. Image / South Waikato District Council
When the South Waikato underwent a rebranding in 2022, the council asked members of the community to feature on town entry signs. Two of those featured were Alberico and Rachel d'Andrea. Image / South Waikato District Council

In 1971, at the University of Waikato dorm rooms in Hamilton, Alberico met Rachel, a teaching student.

“He was chaperoning his friend who was seeing a friend of Mum’s. On the way through the hallway of the dorms, [Alberico] saw [Rachel] sitting in her room because the door was open,” Leandro said.

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“So, he asked his friend’s friend, ‘Who was that, could you get me an introduction?’”

They were set up on a blind date and the rest is history. Well, almost. Rachel did not immediately take to Alberico, but he was “very persistent”.

Rachel said: “I don’t really know what it was that convinced me. But I always said he was sent to me.”

Leandro added: “He took her out to all these lobster and champagne dinners – he earned pretty good money, because of all the long hours and overtime.”

Alberico and Rachel got married in 1972 in Edgecumbe, Bay of Plenty.

“After I graduated, I always wanted to go travelling for three years. But this gentleman convinced me to spend the rest of my life with him instead,” Rachel said.

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Their only son, Leandro, was born in 1980.

Shortly after their wedding, Rachel and Alberico moved to Moawhango, near Waiōuru, and later Tūrangi, where Alberico worked at El Burcio as a bartender in the evenings, in addition to his work at the Tongariro Power Scheme.

After his contract with the scheme ended in 1983, Alberico thought about opening his own restaurant.

“He was very close with the owner of El Burcio and together they took a trip to Tokoroa. It was a bustling town, very industrial,” Leandro said.

So, Alberico opened the only Italian restaurant in town, first leasing a premise, formerly known as the Sportsman’s Arms, on Mannering St, before buying a building on Logan St in 1997, where it is located now.

“He was so happy [when he was] cooking. For big functions and events, he would make spiedo, a traditional Italian dish from his hometown. It’s a bit like a spit roast. He brought down the machine for it from Italy.”

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The only dish Alberico wasn’t too fond of was Hawaiian pizza.

“He would have loved to take [it] off the menu,” Leandro said.

Rachel added: “When we increased our prices a while ago, we increased the Hawaiian pizza more than any other pizza.”

Alberico and Rachel D'Andrea, of Alberico's Italian Restaurant in Tokoroa, celebrated 40 years in business in April 2024. Photo / John van de Ven
Alberico and Rachel D'Andrea, of Alberico's Italian Restaurant in Tokoroa, celebrated 40 years in business in April 2024. Photo / John van de Ven

Aside from cooking, Alberico was a keen golfer, an “avid gardener”, and he liked tinkering in his shed at home, curing meat and distilling his own grappa.

“He was a big talker and so knowledgeable. Him and Mum loved The Chase,” Leandro said.

“He loved teasing people and had a big belly laugh. He always had a glint in his eyes and created levity, showed people how to have a good time.

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“And he loved to sing. Visitors to the restaurant will probably remember him singing opera, mostly O sole mio, but I will remember him singing [songs of] Adriano Celentano and Fabrizio de Andre,” Leandro said.

In recent years, Alberico’s health declined, but that didn’t stop him from cooking. In April, Alberico’s Italian Restaurant celebrated 40 years in business.

When he suffered the heart attack, Rachel and Alberico were just about to embark on a holiday to see family and friends.

In alignment with his wishes, Alberico was cremated. While the restaurant is currently closed for business, Rachel and Leandro are there most days.

“We set up a little tribute table for him with pictures and his ashes. People are welcome to come down and say their goodbyes,” Leandro said.

There will be a private memorial this week.

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Leandro said they would decide whether to continue running the restaurant after the memorial.

Danielle Zollickhofer is a multimedia journalist and assistant news director at the Waikato Herald. She joined NZME in 2021 and is based in Hamilton.

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