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August 22, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

August heat and al fresco living

It was over 100 degrees in Siena today. The usual precautions of closing the shutters during the day against the hot sun, then opening them later in the evening to get a breeze, did nothing to keep the house cool.  At 8 p.m. it still registered 101 degrees.

When it gets this hot, Americans disappear into their air conditioned houses and cars, but Italians come out to live on the street, in their gardens, on their terraces, under their neighbors’ noses. All the windows are open to the warm night and the still air is filled with voices of the neighborhood chatting about the days’ events, silverware clinking on plates as the evening meal is shared al fresco. Normally private conversations are open to everyone. Nothing is concealed in the still heat. Clothes come off, people come out and the entire town becomes your living room.

The simplest of meals is served. Tomatoes tossed with fresh basil, olive oil and salt. Sliced salami and cheese. Cold tuna and white beans, maybe a slice of frittata from lunch. Glasses of chilled white wine. Nothing that requires turning on the stove or oven. It’s too hot for heat.

An ice cream is suggested and we walk to the crowded bar to see what might be left in the freezer case.

Filed Under: Blog Categories, seasonal & summer fruit

July 9, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Apricot Jam and my long day’s journey into night

apricot treefruit jamI passed the tree loaded with bright orange apricots for two weeks before I rang the bell to inquire. When I saw that the fruit was starting to drop to the ground, I could hold back no longer. In the wide open on a main street, just at the end of my road, I wasn’t going to be able to steal them, I was going to have to ask.

The young man who rents the house had no interest in the apricots and was more than happy to allow me to pick them. I promised him a jar of jam in exchange for the tons of apricots I was planning to take away. The fruit this year has been exceptional and this particular tree had more apricots than leaves. apricots

I borrowed a ladder and picked until my sack broke. Then I went home and got a sturdier sack. And a basket. By the end of an hour I had more than I could carry home. I was going to need more jars. In anticipation of all the beautiful orange jam I was going to give as gifts, I loaded up on jars and lids, sugar and lemons, got out the big jam pot and started halving the fruit.

Actually making that jam turned out to be more difficult than I imagined. With fruit jam I normally just weigh the fruit and mix it with half that amount of sugar, then add the juice of a lemon. Most fruit has at least a small amount of pectin, which helps it to gel, but usually I’ll add strips of lemon and wild apple peel, both of which are loaded with pectin.

I don’t like using industrial pectin that you buy in the store, I like the fruit to cook until the natural pectin in the fruit and sugar causes it to set up and the water in the fruit cooks off. This often entails cooking the jam for 30-60 minutes until the juices are thick enough to set.

But apricots have no natural pectin of their own and the lemon peel I added had no effect. Then the apricots stuck to the bottom of the pot and burned; the whole batch tasted scorched and had to be thrown out. I scrubbed the pot and started over, stirring the second batch more frequently. It seemed that no matter how long it cooked, it was still too watery to be called jam. The constant stirring seemed to keep the temperature down, which wasn’t good, but if I stopped stirring even for a minute it started to stick. It tasted good so I eventually put it in jars and labeled it “apricot sauce”.apricot jams

It was late when I finished, but I wasn’t satisfied and wanted to know what I’d done wrong. I got online and saw that other people had the same problem with scorching. I read Harold McGee’s Food and Cooking book to better understand the science of pectin. Then I turned to my Tuscan friends to get the real scoop on the best way to make jam from apricots. What I learned was astounding.

The secret is never to stir the mixture.

In the evening, clean and half the apricots. Weigh them, put them in a large pot with half their weight in sugar poured on top, cover them and put them aside. No stirring. The next morning put the pot on the stove on a medium heat, uncover them and let them cook until the juice gels when cool. You must walk away from it and allow it to do its thing, adding a little lemon juice towards the end. And never stir it.

That tree is still half covered with apricots. I think I see another duel with the jam pot, but this time I’m ready.

 

 

 

Filed Under: Blog Categories, seasonal & summer fruit Tagged With: apricot jam, apricots, jam

April 19, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Leading the crusade on authenticity

I’m a champion for authenticity. Food that means something, that has a history. How Tuscan cuisine differs from Roman, Sicilian, Ligurian cuisines and how they differ from each other and what makes each authentic. Where, why, what and how are all questions that have answers in seeking to determine and define authenticity.

They tell me the word “authenticity” doesn’t mean anything anymore, that it’s been co-opted by marketing, advertising and food professionals seeking to legitimize their products in a society with no cultural roots. The word “authentic” is overused and abused, much as the words organic and natural have been. Like those words, it has ceased to mean anything real.

It certainly means something real to the people of Italy producing their authentic regional dishes. They won’t be surprised to hear “authenticity” is dead in America. They never thought it existed there anyway.

I was cleaning up some old magazines one morning when I saw the ad, there on the back of an old issue of La Cucina Italiana in large type: “Proud to be Authentic”. An ad for cheap supermarket balsamic vinegar, one of the most INAUTHENTIC products available.

My nemisis is inauthenticity passed off as the real thing. Labeling a product “authentic” means nothing anymore, but does it make the real thing any less real?

I’m a champion for authenticity, I guess, and not yet ready to give up the ghost and declare authenticity dead. It’s alive and well. It’s our media-driven, instant-gratification culture that’s the problem.

There was an old cartoon I remember from my childhood called “Crusader Rabbit”, I think it used to play on Captain Kangeroo. It detailed the adventures of a little white rabbit in knight’s armor that went around championing causes.

One day when I was about 4 or 5 years old I was going on about something that bothered me, I don’t remember what, and my mom looked at me and said, “You aren’t Crusader Rabbit!”

But I think I might be.

PS here’s a link to the old Crusader Rabbit cartoons. Youtube is indeed an amazing thing.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Voiv8a1vP4w&feature=relmfu

 

Filed Under: Blog Categories Tagged With: authentic, authenticity

April 18, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Buzzing back to Italy!

I’m finally heading back to Italy this week, after a long, very productive and fun winter in the US. I miss my house, I miss my friends but most of all I just miss looking at Italy. The wheat fields are high and green now and it waves like the sea as the wind blows. The wisteria is in bloom, long purple trails on thick gnarled trunks. The roses are just starting to blossom and I’d be heartbroken to miss them.

Here’s what I’m going to do as soon as I get back:

Have a cappucino.

 

 

 

 

 

Look at the artichokes growing outside my bedroom window.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Go to the market and buy some spring veggies!

 

 

 

 

 

Drink some great wine.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Go to the hot springs and sit in the sulphur water.

 

 

 

 

 

Have friends over for dinner.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Start cooking…..

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

…..and making wonderful friends!!!

 

 

 

 

See you all in TUSCANY!!!

 

 

Filed Under: Blog Categories

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