attheitaliantable.com

  • attheitaliantable.com
  • Home
  • Recipes
  • Chef Gina Stipo
  • Join Gina & Mary in Italy!

November 18, 2023 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Italian Cuisine in the World!

Eight years ago, the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs started a week-long focus to promote fine Italian cuisine in the world.  The multi-faceted focus is on Italian agriculture and food products.  The topic of Italian cuisine in the world is so broad that it’s hard to know where to start.  From health benefits of the Mediterranean diet to the quality of Italian food products and ingredients, there’s a lot of ground to cover.  Let’s begin with the social and economic reasons that so many people migrated from Southern Italy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.  This mass arrival of immigrants changed nations.  We can focus later on how Italian cuisine in the world changed once the Italians settled on the distant shores of North America.

How the Unification of Italy changed the world

As many who have traveled with us recently have learned, the diaspora of southern Italians over a century ago is linked to the unification of Italy in 1861.  Northern patriots, with the goal of kicking out foreign rulers, began a civil war to unify the country under one government and monarchy.  The Austro-Hungarian empire ruled the northeast, the Vatican owned much of central Italy, the Savoy family ruled Piedmont and Sardinia, and the Spanish Bourbons ruled over Sicily and southern Italy.

Known as The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, this kingdom was wealthier than all the rest of Italy put together.  Its two major capitals in Naples and Palermo were filled with riches, art, huge palaces and a large aristocratic class.  When they eyed unification, their goal in the south was two-fold: kick out the Spanish rulers and steal the immense wealth for their new country. The Savoy king in Piedmont bankrolled the war and became the monarch of unified Italy.

The development of the new country profoundly changed the southern Italian economy.  It led to poverty and joblessness for the majority of people in the south. The nobility was heavily taxed, the coffers were looted, and the power of the ruling class left Naples and Palermo, transferring to the new capital in Rome.  In two generations, people who had had jobs and livelihoods were left with nothing but a dream of escape: the New World.

Taking with them what they could carry, as well as memories and recipes from their families, towns and homeland.

The influence of Southern Italians in the US

One hundred years ago, products imported from other countries weren’t readily available in the US.  When the southern Italians arrived in America, they didn’t find what they needed to recreate their dishes.  Olive oil was unavailable, tomatoes were more acidic than those grown on the volcanic soil of their homeland, red wine was generally french and hard to come by.  So the Italians set about making their home in America, planting vineyards in California, adding sugar to tomato sauce, and importing food staples from their homeland.

A ban on importing pork products from Italy opened the door for Italian butchers to produce sausages and salami.  Mozzarella cheese is a southern Italian staple that doesn’t travel well, so delis began making it fresh.  American soldiers stationed in southern Italy during WWII fell in love with pizza and pasta.  Their return aided the explosion of Italian restaurants and pizzerias outside of Italian enclaves.

The use of oregano by southern Italians, originally a Greek herb, became the one herb that made a dish “Italian”.  People from different Italian regions intermarried or settled next door and shared recipes.  Over generations, American-Italian cuisine developed, often bearing little resemblance to dishes you find today in Italy.

Differences between raw ingredients in Italy and the US

As easy as it is to find really high-quality ingredients in Italy, it’s almost impossible in America.  Italian food is simple, relying on the freshest ingredients.  Those ingredients must be of the highest quality to stand alone.  Two reasons make it difficult to reproduce authentic Italian food in the US: 1. our raw ingredients are grown with herbicides and pesticides and sprayed or gassed for a longer shelf life; and, 2. our processed foods have added fillers, sugars and chemicals.

A good example is ricotta cheese.  In Italy, ricotta is fresh and local, made with only milk, cream, vinegar and salt. It is widely available in every grocery store and deli and is a delicious staple in many dishes.  Ricotta cheese in America almost always contains additives such as locust bean gum and carraggenan.  It’s not delicious and, unlike in Italy, is never consumed by itself.

Glyphosate, widely used as Roundup in America to harvest wheat, is illegal in Europe.  Thus, Italian wheat products such as flour, pasta and bread don’t contain this harmful additive.  Grape seeds contain high amounts of antioxidants and most grapes eaten in Italy still contain them.  But in America, seedless grapes have widely propagated, leaving 80% of grapes sold in the US without seeds, more than any country in the world.  Because Italy is so much smaller than America, most fruits and vegetables are considered locally grown and don’t need to be gassed or treated to lengthen the shelf life.  Italians still eat with the seasons and so what they consume is fresher and more densely packed with nutrients.

There are so many DOP food products in Italy that have rules and regulations.  From the geographic region to ingredients and process, DOP products are a consumers guarantee of quality.  But that complex subject is for another article!

Mediterranean Diet

The Mediterranean Diet means eating locally, eating seasonally and eating foods that haven’t been hybridized or genetically modified.

To wrap it up

Italian cuisine in the world is developing.  Many Italians from every region now live and work in America.  Imported Italian products are widely available and Eataly stores are everywhere.  It’s easier now to learn and create authentic Italian dishes if you pay attention to your ingredients and seek out the highest quality.  Traveling to Italy is an easier and less expensive vacation than it was in the past.  We love sharing authentic recipes and helping foodies and food professionals grow in their appreciation for Italian cuisine in the world today!

www.eccolacucina.com

 

 

 

Filed Under: Abruzzo, Campania, Lazio, Piedmont, Sicily Tagged With: diaspora of Italians, Italian food in the World, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, Mediterranean diet, unification of Italy, Week of Italian Food in the World

August 25, 2016 by Gina Stipo 1 Comment

Amatrice and its gift to Italian culinary history: Amatriciana

IMG_0981Such sad news this week coming out of Italy.  As beautiful as the country is, it sits on several tectonic plates which are on the fault line between Europe and Africa.  This means that the earthquakes that routinely happen are usually shallow, which cause more damage to the surface than the really deep quakes that happen in Asia or California.  The one this week was only 6 miles below the surface and basically leveled several old towns in the mountainous regions of the Appenine mountains of Lazio and Umbria.

Especially noteworthy is the tiny town of Amatrice, high in the mountains and accessible only by a few old roads.  I made a pilgrimage there, years ago, in a quest to better understand the pasta sauce amatriciana, which is common on menus in central Italy and is said to have originated in Amatrice.  I found a sleepy little town and only one place open for lunch, but the proprietor was happy to discuss the history of amatriciana sauce.

IMG_0941It was developed hundreds of years ago by the shepherds who spent months in the pastures with the sheep, traveling to high mountain meadows in the summer to follow the grazing animals and cooking for themselves.  The original recipe was simple:  cured pork cheek (guanciale), onions and aged pecorino cheese.  These were staples that the shepherds could carry with them and quickly turn into a simple sauce for pasta.  As time went on, the tomato gained popularity and was added to the dish.

It is easy to complicate with the addition of sausage or white wine or parsley, but the original recipe is simple and requires only a few ingredients, provided the ingredients are of excellent quality:  pork cheek or pork belly (guanciale or pancetta) which has been cured with lots of black pepper; sliced or chopped onions;  aged pecorino cheese such as pecorino romano which is generously grated over the top.  Tomato sauce is optional but I like to use it.

Amatriciana is traditionally tossed with bucatini pasta, a thick spaghetti with a hole through the middle.  Made with semolina and water, it comes dried in a box and can be found in specialty stores and is a common pasta in the Rome area.  You can use another dried pasta such as spaghetti or spaghettini, but I like to use homemade spaghetti alla chitarra, made with semolina, water and olive oil, and cut by hand on a chitarra, or “guitar”.  It’s commonly used in the Abruzzo area just to the south, which sustained a major earthquake in 2009.

The 50th annual sagra of spaghetti all’Amatriciana was scheduled for this weekend.  Sadly, I doubt the town will ever recover to hold another one.  At the Italian Table will be making this pasta all weekend and raising a toast to the people who survived while saying a prayer for those who lost their lives.  God bless all those in central Italy who are affected and all those who are there helping and giving aid.

Pasta all’AmatricianaIMG_0874

1/4 cup olive oil

1 medium onion, chopped

2 garlic cloves, chopped

8 oz guanciale or pancetta, cubed

6 cups tomatoes, crushed with juices

1 cup grated pecorino cheese

sea salt

The pork cheek or belly should be well cured with black pepper and very fatty.  If you can’t find that, use the fattiest pancetta you can get and add black better while it’s sauteing.

Sauté the guanciale or pancetta in a medium sauce pan, using a small amount of the olive oil.  Remove to side and sauté onion and garlic in olive oil until soft, adding additional olive oil if necessary.  Return the meat to the pan,  add the tomatoes and salt and freshly ground pepper, simmer for 30 minutes. Toss with cooked spaghetti, or use the more traditional bucatini if you can find them.  At the restaurant, we use homemade spaghetti alla chitarra.  Serve with lots of grated pecorino romano cheese.

Filed Under: Abruzzo, Cured meats, Lazio, Sagre e Feste Tagged With: amatrice, amatriciana, central italy, pasta, spaghetti all'amatriciana

Recent Posts

  • Italian Cuisine in the World!
  • Warming Winter soups
  • Visit Emilia Romagna
  • Chestnuts for the Fall
  • Anchovies & colatura, ancient Italian umami

Categories

  • Abruzzo
  • aperitivo
  • Basilicata
  • Blog Categories
  • Campania
  • cheese
  • chianti classico
  • Cured meats
  • dessert
  • Emilia Romagna
  • festive Italian dishes
  • Frittura
  • Lazio
  • Louisville
  • meats
  • olives/olive oil
  • Pasta
  • Piedmont
  • Puglia
  • Sagre e Feste
  • Salt
  • seasonal & summer fruit
  • seasonal vegetables
  • Sicily
  • soups
  • Spices
  • supper club
  • Tuscany
  • Veneto
  • Wine
  • winter
Interested in seeing Italy with Chef Gina?
Then check out her schedule of immersion cooking classes and tours in Italy through Ecco La Cucina!

Handcrafted with on the Genesis Framework