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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

September 12, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Taralli – the pretzel of southern Italy

fennel tarallifennel taralliWe called them “Grandma’s pretzels” and they were little rings of fennel flavor dough, alternately crunchy and chewy. But the official name is “taralli”, and if you go to southern Italy you see them everywhere. Flavored with fennel or pepper and occasionally almonds, they are great with a glass of wine and sliced salami. Often taralli are made with lard which makes them flakey, or olive oil which gives them more of a crunch, taralli are gaining popularity in Tuscany and regions up north.

Grandma’s pretzels were both chewy and crunchy, which you don’t get in store bought versions. Shaped into small rings or knots, she made bags of them and brought them out for cocktail hour, which was taken seriously in my grandfather’s home.southern italian pretzels

I recently decided to pull out her recipe when my niece, Nastasia, was visiting and we had a nice little salami we were going to slice for dinner. It gave me the chance to pass it on to the next generation. We had so much fun making them that she carefully wrote the recipe to replicate them at home.

They’re easy to make. You begin with a simple bread dough, give it minimal time to raise and then roll them out and shape them. Thirty seconds in boiling salted water and then 20 minutes in a hot oven and you have a lovely, homemade pretzel.

Taralli – southern Italian pretzels

6 cups flour

1 envelope yeast, dissolved in 1 cup water

2 teas salt

¼ cup fennel seed (or 2 tbsp black pepper)

¾ cup olive oil

Combine flour, salt and fennel seed, make a well and add the water and yeast and oil. Mix together until it forms a stiff dough, then knead until smooth and elastic, about 5 minutes. Cover and let it rest 15 minutes.

Bring a large pot of salted water to the boil.

Take a quarter of the dough and roll it flat with a rolling pin. Cut ropes and roll them thin, less than 1/4” and 3” long; form each piece into a ring and secure. When you have your work surface filled, pick them up and plunge them into the boiling water for 30-60 seconds. Pull them out with a spider or slotted spoon onto paper, then place them on parchment paper on a baking sheet and bake at 400’ until lightly browned.

Allow them to cool before putting them in plastic bags to save. Serve with any Italian cured pork product. Buon Appetito!

Filed Under: Campania, Cured meats, Puglia Tagged With: fennel taralli, italian pretzels, taralli

September 9, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Summer peaches in wine

peaches in market         The Italians have the loveliest way to eat fresh summer peaches: they pick a nice, ripe peach at the end of the meal and slice it into their last glass of wine.  Then after letting it marinate for a few minutes, they eat the peach slices.   Dinner is over when the last of the wine has been enjoyed.

I watched my grandfather do this many times while I was growing up and it’s one of my favorite summer treats.   The peach’s flavor is brightened and intensified in the wine, which becomes delicately scented and flavored with the fragrant peach juice.

You can also make marinated peaches ahead of time by slicing peaches into a bowl  and pouring a little white or red wine over them, maybe adding a sprinkling of sugar.  The peaches are marinated in the wine for several hours and then served for dessert.

But I prefer the simplicity of the ritual performed at the end of the meal, just you, the peach and the wine.

 

 

Filed Under: seasonal & summer fruit, Wine Tagged With: peaches, peaches in wine, wine

August 26, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Feeding Candy to Cows

I don’t even know where to begin with a response to this article on feeding candy to cows instead of corn.  http://weather.yahoo.com/candy-not-corn-cows-drought-140646818.html   It’s apparently chocolate that’s been recalled, unfit for human consumption, and there are still wrappers on at least some of it.

And I had a problem with them feeding corn to the cows instead of grass!

One of my favorite analogies has always been “your car wouldn’t run if you put sugar in the gas tank instead of gasoline and the human body is the same.”  What our bodies use as fuel is important, it is not just a matter of calories.  For cows as well as humans.

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