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January 20, 2023 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Visit Emilia Romagna

Come with us to Emilia-Romagna in 2024! 

Beginning in the spring of 2024, we are excited to add a new region to our culinary tours: the beautiful area of Emilia-Romagna in north-central Italy!

A region that most tourists just pass through on the way from the hubs of Florence and Venice, Emilia-Romagna is one of our favorite places to visit.  The rich food culture, delicious wines and historic architecture found in these two regions are worth a deeper dive.  This is truly important if one is to understand Italy.  The area is elegant, wealthy, and urbane, filled with open and friendly people.

For a more complete history of the region, dating back to Roman times, check out this Britannica link! https://www.britannica.com/place/Emilia-Romagna

Originally separate regions, Emilia and Romagna became joined administratively in 1947.  The people of these two regions, recognizing their cultural diversity, still think of themselves as either Emiliano or Romagnolo. 

Emilia

The western part of the region, Emilia, is known for its amazing food culture.  These people are true gourmands, and it is in Emilia that many of Italy’s most iconic foods are born.  It is home to Italy’s most important DOP foods such as Prosciutto di Parma, Parmigiano Reggiano, Aceto Balsamico di Modena, and Mortadella di Bologna.  The pastas include tagliatelle or lasagna with Bolognese ragu, and garganelli.  Among the many stuffed pastas are tortelli, cappelletti and tortellini.  The wines of the Lambrusco grape are slightly frizzante and simple, yet perfect with the rich foods.  The capital city of Bologna has leaning towers, medieval architecture, miles of loggias covering the sidewalks and the oldest university in Europe.  The Basilica of San Petronio is incredible and opens onto the city’s largest public space, Piazza Maggiore.

Romagna

Romagna makes up the eastern half of the region and was originally part of the Byzantine Roman Empire, as evidenced by the amazing byzantine mosaics of Ravenna.  Due to the geographical barrier of the Appenines and a shared coastline on the Adriatic, Romagna aligned itself with the Marche to the south, rather than to Florence and Tuscany.  Rimini is famous for its beaches and nightlife.  The ancient etruscan salt flats of Cervia are still in use today.  The main grape is Sangiovese, not Lambrusco, and tradition says that the sangiovese grape may have originated here in Romagna.  Beautiful vineyards, ancient artisan products like ceramics and hand-stamped fabrics, and modern upscale car production tie the old together with the new in Romagna.

The Ecco La Cucina tour

Our week-long stay in this beautiful region will include 4 nights in the classic city of Bologna.  Our four days will be filled with visits to experience the production of prosciutto, parmigiano and aceto balsamico; a cooking class with a focus on fresh pasta, and walking tours of the cities of Bologna and Parma.  Included are lots of amazing meals and fabulous wines.  The last three nights will be on a lovely wine estate in the heart of Romagna with visits to Faenza for ceramics, Gambettola for fabrics, a winery tour and tasting, and a day exploring the ancient mosaics in Ravenna.

Spring is the perfect time to visit the area with flowers and vineyards in bloom, warm sunny days and pleasant nights.  Contact us for more information and to sign up!

Gina and Mary have been leading small group tours to Italy for over 22 years!  Check us out on our lovely website Ecco La Cucina!

Filed Under: Emilia Romagna, Pasta, Wine Tagged With: bologna, cervia salt flats, emilia-romagna, ravenna

May 19, 2017 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Nebbiolo grape and the wines of Piedmont

Wine has been made in Italy since before the Romans, who were responsible for spreading viticulture and wine-making throughout their empire.  Due to political and social isolation, many grape varieties that make excellent wines have remained isolated in their specific regions and are rarely found outside of it.  One excellent example is wine made in Piedmont and Lombardy from the Nebbiolo grape.  Long considered the king of Italian grapes, with a deep and rich history, nebbiolo is high in both acid and tannins and makes wines that are delicious when drunk young but also have immense potential for aging.  Barolo and Barbaresco, both made of 100% nebbiolo, are two well-known wines that carry a hefty price tag.  But nebbiolo is also in other wines of the region such as Nebbiolo d’Alba or d’Asti, Gattinara, Ghemme, Roero and Nebbiolo Langhe. Valtellina Superiore is an excellent 100% nebbiolo wine made around Lake Como in the neighboring region of Lombardy.  All these wines take their names from the towns or geographic area where the nebbiolo is grown, aged and bottled.

Nebbiolo is notoriously picky about where it grows, which is a big reason it’s not common in other wine regions around the world.  The main flavor components are described as “tar and roses” and the nose will have hints of cherries, violets, sometimes truffles in an aged wine.  Its color is purple ruby when young and tends to show orange tones as it ages.

Floral: rose, violet Terroir: coffee, earth, truffle
Fruity: blackberry, cherry Oak: oak, smoke, toast, tar, vanilla
Spicy: anise, cocoa, licorice, nutmeg, white pepper Bottle Age: leather, cedar, cigar box
Mouth feel / Texture: heavy, rich, tannic, chewy, alcoholic

  Nebbiolo wines pair well with the elegant cuisine of Piedmont and stand up to wild game and truffles, but also pair well with the pastas and meat dishes of the area, such as rabbit or meat filled ravioli in sage butter.  I hope you’ll try them and expand your Italian wine knowledge!

Filed Under: Blog Categories, Pasta, Piedmont, Wine Tagged With: barbaresco, barolo, nebbiolo, nebbiolo d'alba, piedmont, piemonte, ravioli del plin, wine

February 13, 2015 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Colatura – Italy’s Umami in a bottle

fish sauce of italyThe current issue of Saveur magazine has a short feature about the town of Cetara on the Amalfi coast and colatura, the special anchovy sauce they produce there.  An important ingredient in many of the dishes of the Amalfi coast and southern coastal towns of Italy, colatura is the juice drained off of anchovies that have been salted and aged in a wooden barrel for several months.  It is a concentrated fish sauce that both disgusts the nose and delights the palate and is undoubtably Italy’s best answer to the fifth taste, umami.barrel for colaturacolatura unfiltered

Based on an ancient Roman staple called garum, colatura has been made in this quaint fishing village for centuries.   Whenever we take groups to Naples and Campania, we always make a stop to see the women and men who labor at the task of cleaning the fish, salting them and then when they’ve been cured, removing the skin and bones and packing the anchovy filets in small jars. cleaning anchovy The process of cleaning, salting and packing in large plastic bins, or in the case of colatura, in small wooden barrels, takes place when the anchovies are running, generally from spring through early summer.  The process of cleaning and packing filets in jars is year-round.  Watching them work will make you grateful for whatever job you have!

anchovy productionIt’s difficult to get in to see the process anymore due to hygiene controls in place, as with any food production facility.  But it’s Italy and if you know the right people long enough, it’s possible to get a pass to see the work done.barrels of anchoviessalted anchoviescetara fishing boatsCetara is a beautiful coastal town, with a small quaint beach on the Amalfi coast.  It’s quiet because all the buses and cars are frantic to get to better known towns and destinations, like Positano, Amalfi and Ravello.  I love stopping in Cetara long enough to lay on the beach and listen to the waves on the sides of the little fishing boats.cetara bridge

Most of the anchovy production is done in non-descript buildings under the bridge just after the town of Vietri sul Mare.

Filed Under: Blog Categories, Campania, Pasta, Salt Tagged With: anchovy sauce, cetara, colatura, Italian umami

October 2, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Pasta of Campania

Quick! What are everyone’s two favorite Italian foods??!!pasta

I hear you, I hear you shouting “PIZZA AND PASTA!!!”

Well you can thank the Napolitani for that, because both pizza and pasta originate in Naples and weren’t widely known, eaten or cooked outside of the south until after World War II. American GI’s are credited for increasing the awareness of pizza, but pasta is a different story.

Dried pasta has long been a staple of southern Italy but is a fairly new addition to the northern Italian diet. Northern regions like Tuscany, Lombardy and the Veneto have always relied on bread, polenta and rice for their starches, with fresh egg pasta made on Sundays and holidays. As southern Italians moved north to find jobs in factories after WWII and brought their favorite food staple of dried semolina-based pasta with them, it began to be sold and eaten in the homes of northern Italians as well.

Where two generations ago few Italians north of Rome ate dried pasta, now Italians everywhere don’t feel complete unless they’ve had at least one plate of pasta a day. Large pasta companies like Barilla and DeCecco, among others, opened massive factories in the north to keep up with the demand.

But if you truly want to understand pasta, you must go south to the area around the Bay of Naples.

Gragnano, along with the neighboring town of Torre Annunziata, has been a pasta-making center since the late 1800’s and was designed with pasta in mind. Located on the eastern side of the Bay of Naples under the shadow of a volcano, the constant sea breezes and humidity were ideal for drying pasta. The fertile valley of Vesuvius, with its volcanic soil, was ideal for growing durum wheat, and the fresh water from the mountains combined to produce the perfect pasta. On the banks of a river lined with mills for grinding durum wheat into semolina flour, the streets lie perpendicular to the Sorrento coast to take advantage of the constant sea breezes that were used to dry the strands of pasta. There are many old photos from the early 20th century showing racks and racks of long spaghetti lining the streets and balconies, drying in the open air.

It’s a more hygienic operation these days with the pasta being made and dried indoors, but on an artisan scale. Using time honored methods for extruding and drying the pasta, the pasta of Gragnano differs dramatically from modern industrially produced pasta in two important ways: adherence of the sauce and chewiness.

Modern pasta factories use Teflon dies to extrude pasta shapes, which makes the pasta slick, allowing sauce to slide off rather than adhere. The artisan method utilizied in Gragnano uses original bronze dies which are inherently rough, catching the dough and texturing it, which makes the pasta hold onto its sauce better.

The other important difference is the drying time. In modern factories, where time is money, pasta is dried in large ovens for 2-4 hours, depending on the shape and thickness. In Gragnano they understand that long, slow drying results in denser, more elastic pasta, which when cooked has a satisfying chewiness. Drying times can be anywhere from 10 hours to 7 days. Here time isn’t money, it’s quality.

Gragnano has several artisan pasta factories that you can tour to experience first hand the hot and humid environment necessary for making excellent pasta. The valley of Vesuvius is no longer used to grow wheat, they turn to vast fields in Canada for that. But the local water and the pride in Campania’s pasta culture and history combine to offer a product which has no equal in the north.

Filed Under: Campania, Pasta Tagged With: gragnano, pasta

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Interested in seeing Italy with Chef Gina?
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