Archive for the ‘Food’ Category

Pompeii – via CN Traveler

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

The June issue of CN Traveler has a good article on Pompeii — here.   We’ve visited many times and can include a day trip to Pompeii with private guide from Rome or the Amalfi coast.   Having a guide is essential, not just for understanding the history behind the  jumble of ruins laid out before you but the insider knowledge of how to navigate through the massive site and keep the crowds in the distance.

From Blog Photos

Visiting Pompeii with the crowds in the distance

After last visit on a HOT August day, we ventured into the modern town of Pompeii for good seafood lunch with crisp white wine.  The dining room was elegant, the food good, the service friendly and most importantly it was a cool respite from the midday sun. 

From Food

Seafood Risotto

From Food

Grilled Fish dressed with olive oil and a squeeze of lemon

Asparagi Selvatici – Wild Asparagus

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Spring is the season when many Umbrians scavenge nature for wild edibles.  Of all the herbs, greens and plants to be eaten, none is more common than the pencil-thin asparagi selvatici.  Driving along the side roads of central Italy, you’re sure to find people bent over scouring the earth for a fresh harvest or upright selling their haul to passing motorists.

During a recent visit to a friend’s olive grove, we found wild asparagus in abundance among the trees.  To prepare them, start at the top snapping off small pieces of the stalk until it is no longer tender and doesn’t snap easily.  The pieces can then be boiled in broth or added directly to a pasta sauce.  This asparagus is milder in flavor and more tender than the cultivated, thicker stalks found in supermarkets. 

 

We had them prepared with tagliatelle in a simple tomato sauce, in an omlette, and in rigatoni with sausage, egg, cheese and black pepper — “alla carbonara”.

Asparagus isn’t all you can find in the olive grove — in addition to numerous edible herbs we found wild fennel (pictured above), onions, and garlic as well.

Photos by Aldo Messina

Buona Pasqua – Happy Easter

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

Happy Easter from Umbria.

From Food

Torta di Pasqua (cheese bread made with grated Pecorino cheese) is accompanied by salami on Easter Morning and is traditionally made by the oldest member of the family.

From Food

The traditional Easter breakfast.

On Saturday, a basket is loaded with savory cheese bread, sweet Easter bread, salami, eggs, and wine and is taken to church to be blessed.  On Sunday, unpack and enjoy your Easter breakfast!  Buona Pasqua!

Cooking Class

Monday, March 15th, 2010

On their second trip to Italy with Concierge in Umbria, Californians, MC Sungaila and her father Richard, asked us to arrange a couple of cooking classes for them.  MC asked if she could share her thoughts on the experiences on our blog. Here it is — un-edited — and with a fantastic photo they took of the outdoor kitchen at Casa Gola with homemade farfalle waiting for the pot — MC and Richard, butta la pasta!

From Food

My father and I visited Italy again in October, under Maria and Brian?s expert direction.  I am an admirer of the Slow Food movement and was in the midst of expanding my own cooking repertoire, so I wanted to take some short, one-day cooking classes while in Italy.  Maria arranged two classes for us ? one at the Antinori winery Badia di Passignano in Tuscany, and another at Casa Gola, the Umbrian home of Luciana, a gracious lawyer-turned-chefpreneur.  My father, who planned to come along only for the ride, turned out to be an integral member of both classes.

Osteria di Passignano

Badia di Passignano is a thousand-year-old abbey halfway between Florence and Siena in the Chianti country of Tuscany.  We traveled narrow dirt roads and even narrower bridges (one car at a time, please!) to get there.  The Osteria is a destination restaurant associated with the Antinori family winery operation at the abbey.

Matia, the young executive chef, greeted us and took us into the relatively small kitchen. Perhaps sensing my father?s trepidation, he started out by asking us to taste from among several small squares of the locally made Amedei chocolate. We were to choose the one we should use for the molten chocolate cake we were making for dessert. The chocolate was all delicious.  But Matia explained how, for the cake we were making, we did not want to choose too exotic or delicate a flavor (the taste would get lost).  We settled on a more traditional chocolate named- of all things- Tuscany.

The menu, which we made with professional kitchen tools (pasta roller and slicer, anyone?), included handmade “papa al pomodoro” ravioli and basil pesto, roast Cornish hen with thyme, lemon and green bean bundles, and, of course, the molten chocolate cake in strawberry soup.  Since this was a four-hour cooking course, I focused on learning fundamental cooking principles (rather than the details of the menu).

The three principles I learned from Matia were:

1. Cooking is about timing, temperature and technique. These are the things years of practical experience teach you, and explain why just getting a recipe from someone does not guarantee that your version will turn out the same as the original which prompted you to ask for the recipe in the first place.

2.  Food can be about nutrition, or it can be an emotional experience. Matia aims for the latter.   He can always tell, he said, when something has been made with passion.   As with most things, it seems, the passion shows through and creates excitement.

3. Focus on the harmony of the ingredients in a dish and in a meal.  Do not choose one standout ingredient, even if, for example, it is the main ingredient for the dish.

We later enjoyed the menu in the main Osteria dining room with wine pairings chosen by the winery?s manager Marcello (a man who, as my father said later, knew far too much about wine to give tours of the vineyard and cellar as he did with us).  Among the wines Marcello poured: Solaia, one of the most famous and expensive of Super Tuscans. When we stumbled out of the restaurant into the darkness, we had trouble spotting our car and driver: the driveway, which had been empty in the afternoon, was now filled with dinner guests? cars.

Casa Gola

Ten days later, we are in the hills above Bevagna in Umbria, on our way to pick olives and prepare lunch in an outdoor kitchen at Casa Gola, the lovely home of Luciana. It is raining, however, which means we cannot actually pick the olives; we learn how it is done, and admire the undulating hills of olive trees instead.  We also tour Luciana?s lovely home, which has been featured in Architectural Digest.  Luciana gives us some coffee and homemade bread made with grape must to fortify us for the cooking.

My father says he is just going to watch, but Luciana pops an apron over his head and puts him to work.  Luciana and her friend Aurora do all of the actual cooking.  My father and I are the sous-sous-chefs, chopping fresh herbs, rolling meat in pancetta and herbs, and rolling fresh pasta dough. We do not have the benefit of the professional machines Matia had, so this time we mix eggs and flour and roll it all out by hand with a wooden rolling pin.  The dampness of the day makes the pasta difficult.  My father saves the day by accidentally putting too much egg into his flour; on a wet day, this was the perfect proportion to make the pasta, it turns out.  We hand-cut the pasta into tagliatelle, rustic Umbrian shapes, and shape them into bow-tie farfalle.  The tagliatelle will be used for our lunch; the rest is for our hostess to use later.

This is home-cooking, albeit elegant, classy and refined.  Luciana and Aurora have changed the recipes, even though they put them together only a few days ago, because the herbs and tomatoes they expected to be able to use were not fresh this particular day.  This is one of the secrets to the flavors of their cooking: nothing is used unless it is fresh.  In most cases, many of the ingredients were also made on Luciana?s land, or her neighbors? land.

We return to the skylit home to eat our lunch.  The menu: Cannelloni bean salad with salt, pepper, red peppers, celery, capers, and sundried tomatoes served with lightly toasted unsalted Umbrian bread soaked in fresh-pressed olive oil from Luciana?s trees.  Tagliatelle with a tomato sauce that is more pure fresh tomato than sauce.  Pancetta-wrapped pork with ?mashed? potatoes served frittata style. For dessert, an Umbrian specialty made by Luciana?s mother, a baked dessert with raisins, apples, and cinnamon. We top it off with espresso and an anice liquor.

As we leave, Luciana gives us soap made from her olives and herbs to remind us of our visit. We sign her guest book, with only a few entries from folks all over the world.  Hers is a new venture and she can use some good testimonials.  My father and I oblige, happily.

Cortina d’Ampezzo

Monday, January 25th, 2010

The New York Times ran an article on skiing and most importantly eating in Cortina d’Ampezzo in the Dolomites.  http://travel.nytimes.com/2010/01/24/travel/24cortina.html 

It echoed many of our observations from a few years ago on our first visit.  We ate very well both on and off the mountain.

From Food

Pork shank with roast potatoes and spinach made for a hearty informal lunch

From Food

Homemade Farfalle with Wild Boar Ragout

Cortina is easily accessable from the US with flights to Venice followed by a 2 hour transfer to Cortina.  After skiing for a week, you can easily incorporate a few days in Venice with minimal crowds before your return to the US.

From Italia!

Monday, December 14th, 2009
From Food

Ravioli stuffed with ricotta and spinach and topped with a generous shaving of black truffles.

This plate comes from a great trattoria in the town of Pitigliano in southern Tuscany.  It was as good as it looks.

Pasta “Maltagliata” with spicy tomato sauce.

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

There is a small enoteca/restaurant on the main square in Montefalco.  We ate there for the first time in 2003, a couple of months after they opened, and it has become without a doubt one of our favorite places to eat — in the world.  The food is always unpretentious, full flavored and most important interesting.  The owners, who have since become friends, take a vacation each year in February.  This year they ended up on the Yucatan penninsula in Mexico.  The trip inspired this plate of maltagliata (literally poorly cut pasta) made with Roveja flour and dressed with a tomato sauce spiked with some dried ancho chiles they brought home.  Roveja flour is ground from a type of pea (”piselli selvatico” or wild pea) that is cultivated in the Valnerina region of Umbria.

From Great Plates

Maltagliata made from Roveja flour and spicy tomato sauce

Cooking at L’Andana

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Michelin 3* chef, Alain Ducasse, has, in recent years, created an empire of restaurants and hotels throughout the world.  His Tuscan “duchy” is located in the plains outside Grosseto near the fishing village turned beach resort of Castiglione della Pescaia.  The hotel is everything you would expect from a 5* country resort with immaculate grounds, spacious rooms, and a well appointed spa.  I, however, wasn’t there for the hotel, although I did find it extremely comfortable – the design and furnishings are for the most part new, styled to look old.  But I was there for the food and to learn something in the process.  

From Blog Photos

The entrance to L’Andana

In addition to our reservation at the hotel’s restaurant, Trattoria Toscana, they offer a two hour cooking demonstration/class for guests of the hotel. Maria signed me up and I went as both interested observer and foodie (I haven’t cooked professionally in 10 years but still know my way around a kitchen). The class was led by Annalisa Martini, a L’Andana veteran and native of one of the great food cities of Italy – Bologna. She told us that she started cooking at a very young age in her grandmother’s now closed restaurant in Bologna. This was perfect, who better to teach the fine points of roll out pasta dough than a Bolognese with a restaurant pedigree? 

The course consisted of making our pasta dish for the dinner and dessert – ravioli stuffed with swiss chard, fresh ricotta, and pecorino in butter and thyme and a simple chocolate soufflé to be served with vanilla ice cream.  We started with the pasta dough, working it with our hands to the right consistency and then letting it rest.  We then moved onto the filling for the ravioli and finally the mix for the soufflé.  All went smoothly and at an amiable pace, aided by the L’Andana’s own white and rosé wines offered as accompaniment to the learning experience.  Annalisa proved to be an excellent teacher as well as good source of information about the philosophy of the restaurant.  Ducasse is trying to create dishes that can be as faithful to the concept of 0 KM cooking as possible.  As a result, the L’Andana property produces most of the vegetables used in the kitchen and everything except the dried pasta from Naples and salted butter from France is sourced from within 20 KM of the resort.  This was especially evident the next morning when the “Nutella” appeared to be a homemade variety of the Italian classic.

At the end of the class we were called by the maître d’ and brought downstairs to our table where Maria and I enjoyed dinner, partially prepared by me, in Trattoria Toscana.  How was the food I didn’t cook?  To be continued . .

N.B. the class is not private and is only open to guests of the hotel.  I was joined by a family of 4, parents with two young boys and although everyone was well behaved and the hotel had informed me beforehand, it is still something to consider when booking.  Also, the best test of any class such as this is does it improve your skills at home?  Well, I got my ingredients together and grabbed the rolling pin and made pasta at home for the first time a few days later.  I still need some work but I’ve got the basic concept down and will soon be getting it right with a bit of practice.

Goat cheese from Cascia

Saturday, July 25th, 2009
From Food

This slightly aged goat cheese comes from the area around Cascia in the Valnerina.  It was a perfect slice of creamy, piquant heaven.  We ate it after dinner dressed with a little olive oil and few turns of the pepper mill.  Cascia is the hometown of Santa Rita and welcomes thousands of pilgrims each year to its basilica.  I’m going to make the trip on Tuesday just to buy some of this “heavenly” cheese. 

Figs

Thursday, July 16th, 2009
From Food

Figs are everywhere in Umbria this time of year and it seems they have been on our table for breakfast, lunch and dinner. The trees produce two types of fruit each year; branches overloaded with smaller figs that will ripen in August/September and a much smaller number of large figs growing alongside the small ones that mature in July. The figs available now are the large “fake” ones or “fallacciani” to the Umbrians (”fallacciano” can also used as an insult for a phony person and is also the name of a variety of black figs grown near Rome) . They are very sweet and juicy and are partner perfectly with prosciutto or other cured meats. A quick lunch favorite of the locals is a “sandwich” of fig, prosciutto and focaccia.

From Food

A short video on how to eat a fig umbrian style