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Showing posts with label pasta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pasta. Show all posts
Monday, 10 June 2013
Thursday, 21 March 2013
Door To Door In Tuscany
It is no secret that the world
economy is in a rather bad shape. Every day brings new headlines of companies
or countries in deep financial trouble and talks of the time frame needed to
recover are enough to concern the most optimistic amongst us. In such a depressing
environment you have the choice to either wait for the storm to pass or to try
and take your fate into your own hands. The second option is exactly what some
young Italian citizens have elected to do.
Take the agricultural sector in Tuscany as an example. Not easy to make a living out of tending your own fields nowadays but it does offer a number of opportunities asking to be explored. If you are prepared to work hard and to be inventive it could very well pay off in the end. This reasoning has now started an interesting trend: If the customers do not or cannot come to you then go to the customers. Packing their vans to the hilt with top quality goods, these visionary men and women travel the Tuscan roads up and down the picturesque hills, bringing their products to their expanding clientele. Who do they visit? Mostly families too busy to complement their weekly shopping with fresh produce in between or inhabitants of remote villages, many of them older and without the necessary car that would take them to the nearest town. The majority of village shops have disappeared over the years, enabling this new breed of entrepreneurs to find their niche in the market.
Take the agricultural sector in Tuscany as an example. Not easy to make a living out of tending your own fields nowadays but it does offer a number of opportunities asking to be explored. If you are prepared to work hard and to be inventive it could very well pay off in the end. This reasoning has now started an interesting trend: If the customers do not or cannot come to you then go to the customers. Packing their vans to the hilt with top quality goods, these visionary men and women travel the Tuscan roads up and down the picturesque hills, bringing their products to their expanding clientele. Who do they visit? Mostly families too busy to complement their weekly shopping with fresh produce in between or inhabitants of remote villages, many of them older and without the necessary car that would take them to the nearest town. The majority of village shops have disappeared over the years, enabling this new breed of entrepreneurs to find their niche in the market.
Another idea is to bring a specific product to an area where it would not be easy to find it. Fish is the perfect illustration of that concept. If you live by the sea you will of course be spoiled for choice in the form of local fishermen or fish markets. But when you have made your home inland the sight of a refrigerated truck pulling up on the main square on market days will be very welcome.
Nicely ripe, sun-kissed fruit and extra fresh vegetables that have just been pulled out of the soil are also proving a hit. One entrepreneur selling baskets of home grown produce saw his customer base triple simply through word of mouth. Regional specialties are popular too: olive oil, sausages, pasta, biscuits or jams, to name but a few.
These initiatives have turned struggling and often unemployed women and men into business people. They may not have come up with anything new; they have however re-invented themselves, finding pleasure and enthusiasm in their working days again.
Author: K J S
Labels:
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entrepreneurship,
fish,
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slow food,
tuscany,
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villa tuscany
Monday, 4 February 2013
In The Kitchen With Gianna
Gianna is not a Michelin Star cook. She is not the proud chef of her
own restaurant. Gianna is simply an “ordinary” Italian Mamma, who loves
cooking and is extremely good at it. Everybody who has had the pleasure
of trying one of her dishes is raving about her skills: Her pizze, for
example, are a mouth-watering combination of a perfect base, genuine
mozzarella, homemade tomato sauce and fresh toppings, and reveal their
wonderful flavour after their passage in a wood fired oven.
This shy woman lives in Le Marche, a beautiful a beautiful region in the centre of Italy, perhaps less known as her Tuscany or Umbria neighbours but with a strong food culture. Gianna prefers to prepare dishes for guests in the comfort of her own home, surrounded by her beloved utensils, but will on occasions cook in the kitchen of another house should the menu require perfect timing. Other signature dishes of hers include the very simple but heavenly combination of melon and prosciutto (cured ham), pork or beef stews served with grilled vegetables or scrumptious fruit tarts to give the meal a final sweet note.
It goes without saying that she excels at preparing many pasta variations. Her ravioli
di ricotta are a must, but even more so is a specialty of the Marches:
Lasagna Vincisgrassi. Instead of being prepared with a Bolognese and
therefore beef mincemeat, veal is used for the fragrant, non-tomato
based sauce. Other ingredients include fresh vegetables in the form of
porcini mushrooms, celery, onions and carrots, as well as cream, Marsala
wine and a sprinkling of grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese. The recipe
originated from the pretty town of Macerata and the story surrounding
its name is interesting: Lasagna Vincesgrassi was allegedly invented by a
local chef for an Austrian general, Prince Windischgratz, who was
leading a branch of the Austrian army stationed in Le Marche at the end
of the eighteenth century. His name was given an Italian twist and has
remained ever since.
With the importance of the Slow Food movement, which incidentally was started in Italy by Carlo Petrini in the mid-eighties, authentic dishes prepared with local, preferably organic ingredients and traditional farming and cooking methods are getting more popular every day. People’s concern for what appears on their plates is growing, and easily found information is helping them with their food choices.
Given this prominent trend, Gianna’s cooking style and the succulent lasagna Vincisgrassi are here to stay for many, many more years.
Article Source: Articlesbase/Travel/Destinations
Author: K J S
This shy woman lives in Le Marche, a beautiful a beautiful region in the centre of Italy, perhaps less known as her Tuscany or Umbria neighbours but with a strong food culture. Gianna prefers to prepare dishes for guests in the comfort of her own home, surrounded by her beloved utensils, but will on occasions cook in the kitchen of another house should the menu require perfect timing. Other signature dishes of hers include the very simple but heavenly combination of melon and prosciutto (cured ham), pork or beef stews served with grilled vegetables or scrumptious fruit tarts to give the meal a final sweet note.
With the importance of the Slow Food movement, which incidentally was started in Italy by Carlo Petrini in the mid-eighties, authentic dishes prepared with local, preferably organic ingredients and traditional farming and cooking methods are getting more popular every day. People’s concern for what appears on their plates is growing, and easily found information is helping them with their food choices.
Given this prominent trend, Gianna’s cooking style and the succulent lasagna Vincisgrassi are here to stay for many, many more years.
Article Source: Articlesbase/Travel/Destinations
Author: K J S
Monday, 10 December 2012
A Traditional Italian Family Christmas
Article first published as A Traditional Italian Family Christmas on Technorati.
When I was
a child, Christmas was without a doubt the biggest event of the year. Even
though I come from Switzerland and spent a good part of my life in this
country, the influence of my Italian Grandmother, a Piedmont native, won over.
Our Christmas celebrations, year after year, had a definite Italian shine to
them.
First of
all, there was none of this splitting the family at Christmas or gathering in
different houses. The whole family met in my Grandmother's home for three days
in a row. Extra tables and chairs were brought from our neighbouring houses,
allowing everybody to sit and eat comfortably. The white table clothes and
napkins came out of their cupboard, and the three long tables were prettily
decorated. Numerous presents were carefully piled under the colourful Christmas
tree so that the crib would not be disturbed. Us children had real trouble
going to sleep the night before when our favourite day was so close.
On
Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and Boxing Day, serious action happened in the
kitchen under my Grandma's orders. New recipes were tried every year on
Christmas Eve, and I cannot recall one time when we thought one of the dishes
was only average. The food was always delicious. We would start the festivities
by some of the adults going to the early Christmas mass with the children, then
come home and unwrap the presents while enjoying the aperitif. There was many a
scream of delight as we discovered one of the toys we had so wished for. Once
the excitement had died down a bit, it was time to eat and enjoy the warm
family atmosphere. After the feast, the adults who had stayed home earlier
would then go to the midnight mass, while the children collapsed into bed,
exhausted.
Christmas
Day saw the slow roasting of a massive turkey. The bird would be stuffed with a
filling featuring chestnuts and the aroma made you feel hungry well before it
was time for lunch. Sometimes black truffles would also be used, and I have
this distinct image of incredibly thin mushroom slices being inserted in cuts
in the turkey. Once out of the oven, the delicate truffle taste had perfumed
the meat exquisitely.
Of course
there was always far too much food prepared over these two days, which is why
it became the tradition to all meet again on Boxing Day. Leftovers would then
be eaten in a convivial manner. When there was not that much turkey left, the
meat would be used to make a Bolognese sauce and homemade gnocchi then featured
on the menu.
It has been
a while since these childhood Christmases, but still today I cannot eat gnocchi
without thinking about the lovely times we had.
Labels:
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black truffle,
bolognese,
Christmas,
cooking,
dish,
gnocchi,
holiday in italy,
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meat,
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traditions,
truffle,
turkey,
villa in piedmont,
vino
Sunday, 20 May 2012
A Trip to Italy with Jamie
Article first published as A Trip To Italy With Jamie on Technorati.
Is it still
necessary to present Jamie Oliver? The talented chef, who started his
career at Neal’s Yard and The River Café before setting up on his own,
has become a star. Restaurants, TV shows, a foundation, campaigns to
promote healthy eating, kitchen accessories and food range, the list is
endless. Of course, there are the cookbooks. Almost twenty of them.
One of my favourites is “Jamie’s Italy”. It starts with the book cover. Jamie may be English, but it looks like his heart belongs to Italy. The chef is obviously very relaxed, sitting outside on a red stool against a wall whose paint has seen better days, his foot propped up against an old Fiat Cinquecento. He is eating spaghetti coated in a tomato sauce, and the expression on his face says it all. It gives you the urge to open the book and start cooking straight away.
To gather the recipes, Jamie embarked on a tour of the country in a VW bus with a kitchen built in a trailer, allowing him to easily cook wherever he stopped. Tuscany, the Marches, Sicily, etc, Jamie clearly had a genuine and deep connection to the people he met during his peregrinations, as the photos attest. A lot of smiles and hand gestures going on, and touching moments such as Jamie observing an old man repairing his fishnet, pouring a glass of wine for a shepherd or making pasta with four generations of women. When I browse through this publication and take the time to look at the pictures, it makes me want to visit the night markets of Palermo to taste these chickpea fritters or to enter a pasta competition in Le Marche!
The book delivers more than 120 of classic and new recipes, classified under:
Antipasti (Starters)
Street Food and Pizze
First Dishes (featuring soups, pasta and risotto)
Salads
Second Dishes (featuring fish and meat)
Side Dishes
Desserts
“Jamie’s Italy” focuses on authentic, mouthwatering food, best eaten with family and friends. Italians “Mamas” revealed their pasta making secrets to Jamie and owners of “agroturismo” inns welcomed him into their way of life. The warmth of the exchanges Jamie had with locals also transpires in the writing and the way the recipes are introduced. Yes, this love of food and sharing makes its way into your home too. I have yet to try all the recipes, but the ones my family and I already prepared received high praise, from us as well as from our guests. Needless to say, only empty plates and dishes were returned to the kitchen.
One of my favourites is “Jamie’s Italy”. It starts with the book cover. Jamie may be English, but it looks like his heart belongs to Italy. The chef is obviously very relaxed, sitting outside on a red stool against a wall whose paint has seen better days, his foot propped up against an old Fiat Cinquecento. He is eating spaghetti coated in a tomato sauce, and the expression on his face says it all. It gives you the urge to open the book and start cooking straight away.
To gather the recipes, Jamie embarked on a tour of the country in a VW bus with a kitchen built in a trailer, allowing him to easily cook wherever he stopped. Tuscany, the Marches, Sicily, etc, Jamie clearly had a genuine and deep connection to the people he met during his peregrinations, as the photos attest. A lot of smiles and hand gestures going on, and touching moments such as Jamie observing an old man repairing his fishnet, pouring a glass of wine for a shepherd or making pasta with four generations of women. When I browse through this publication and take the time to look at the pictures, it makes me want to visit the night markets of Palermo to taste these chickpea fritters or to enter a pasta competition in Le Marche!
The book delivers more than 120 of classic and new recipes, classified under:
Antipasti (Starters)
Street Food and Pizze
First Dishes (featuring soups, pasta and risotto)
Salads
Second Dishes (featuring fish and meat)
Side Dishes
Desserts
“Jamie’s Italy” focuses on authentic, mouthwatering food, best eaten with family and friends. Italians “Mamas” revealed their pasta making secrets to Jamie and owners of “agroturismo” inns welcomed him into their way of life. The warmth of the exchanges Jamie had with locals also transpires in the writing and the way the recipes are introduced. Yes, this love of food and sharing makes its way into your home too. I have yet to try all the recipes, but the ones my family and I already prepared received high praise, from us as well as from our guests. Needless to say, only empty plates and dishes were returned to the kitchen.
Labels:
antipasti,
cookbook,
cookery book,
cooking,
dessert,
dish,
fish,
holiday in italy,
holidays,
Italy,
meat,
pasta,
pizza,
recipes,
risotto,
salad,
soup
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
Pasta, Pasta
One of the many aspects of Italian culture that is famous worldwide is its impressive food offering. Who has never tried a fragrant pizza coming out of a wood-fired oven, or a steaming pasta dish featuring a delicious, flavoursome sauce? Exactly, so here are a few pasta facts for you.
It is said that Marco Polo was the person who introduced pasta in Italy
when he came back from his adventures in China. The Venetian explorer
may well have brought back pasta with him, but the fact is that it was
present already in his home country. There are tales of the ancestor of
the pasta, called "lagane", also made out of wheat and reminiscent of
lasagne, as early as the Etruscans. Noodle certainly showed up again
during the invasion of Italy by the Arabs, a few centuries later. Since
then, the production of fresh and dried pasta has been thriving,
becoming more and more popular.
Dried pasta is ideal to store due to its
keeping for a long time, and it is simple and quick to prepare. The next
big step in the history of the pasta happened in the nineteenth century,
when it found its ideal match, the tomato.
Today, at least three hundred and fifty different shapes have been
accounted for in Italy. And if you add to this count the various
regional versions, who knows how big the number is going to be?
Conchiglie, linguine, farfalle, orecchiette, to name but a few, their
exotic-sounding names add to the enjoyment of eating them. There is also
a reason why pasta is shaped differently: it is to marvelously marry
with the sauce accompanying it. The long sort, spaghetti for instance,
is best eaten with light and airy sauces, using a tomato or olive oil
base. The flat sort, think tagliatelle, is perfect for thick, creamy
sauces. As for the tubular version such as penne, they will go best with
a chunky topping. And finally, there is also a wide variety of stuffed
pasta – spinach and ricotta filled ravioli, anyone? – and soup pasta,
beloved by children when alphabet- or star-shaped!
If you are feeling adventurous, why not try some unusual recipes? For vegetarian options, go for sun-dried tomatoes and tofu, pesto with a twist as you add avocado to that classic dish, or pumpkin, sage and walnuts. With fish, try scallops in an orange sauce or tuna, artichokes and peppers. And for meat lovers, hot chicken and tomato sauce or, as a winter dish, cabbage and spare ribs!
If you are feeling adventurous, why not try some unusual recipes? For vegetarian options, go for sun-dried tomatoes and tofu, pesto with a twist as you add avocado to that classic dish, or pumpkin, sage and walnuts. With fish, try scallops in an orange sauce or tuna, artichokes and peppers. And for meat lovers, hot chicken and tomato sauce or, as a winter dish, cabbage and spare ribs!
So, are you hungry yet? Then you might want to go and hunt in your
cupboards, it would be surprising if they do not hold at least one
packet of pasta…
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