Posts Tagged ‘italy’

Living La Dolce Vita: Experiencing Italian Desserts

January 9th, 2010

With its decadent flavors and rich traditions, Italian food ranks as one of the finest in the world. On a global scale, only a handful of dishes could par with the standards set by Italians. What could rival the ubiquitous pizza, the savory pasta, and its famous espresso and cappuccino? Fact is, it is almost impossible not to have an Italian restaurant or an Italian specialty store within your place of work or in proximity from where you live. But when desserts and pastries come into play, Italians stood out and excelled; thus providing the rest of us with a chance to savor the sweet life.
So with your sweet tooth intact and your diet thrown out of the window, let us take a bite and experience la dolce vita.
Gelato
Can one imagine Italy without gelato? Gelato is a frozen dessert akin to an ice cream. And like most other Italian culinary works of art, the secret to perfect gelato comes from the quality of its ingredients. Though richer than the typical American ice cream, this fact really does not stop individuals from taking a taste of the sinfully decadent frozen treat. When in Italy, you will find a plethora of flavors ranging from your typical chocolate and vanilla to the not so typical rose and basil flavored gelato. It may be awkward to the auditory nerves but not to the taste buds.
Tiramisu
If you have a sweet tooth, have a taste for coffee, and is not into dieting, then tiramisu is the ideal dessert for you. Tiramisu is a layered dessert alternating a coffee-soaked sponge cake and cream topped with chocolate shavings or (more) cream. Traditionally, Italians use lady-fingers (biscuits shaped like, well, fingers). These biscuits are soaked in coffee and layered with a mixture of mascarpone cheese, custard, and whipped cream. (Talk about rich dessert!)
Biscotti
This is probably the most famous Italian cookie, not just in its hometown but as well as into numerous kitchens around the world. This crunchy cookie is good for a midday snack or midnight nibble. There are a variety of elements that goes into one of these tasty treats, and this too evolved and changed; adding in new ingredients and making it soft and chewy—adjusting everything to suit one’s palate. Though the basic dough may include almonds, chocolate chips, candied fruits or flavored with lemon, cocoa, or even coffee.
Panettone
This is sweet bread traditionally eaten during the advent season. This particular bread originated in Milan most likely in the fifteenth century and has been a traditional treat ever since. The dough may contain raisins and other candied fruits, and finished by dusting confectioner sugar over the top. With its recognizable dome shape and delightful taste, munching on one would easily satisfy your sweet tooth during the Christmas season.
Torrone
Another advent staple is the torrone. Though you need not wait for Christmas to get a taste of its almond nougat goodness (it is available all year round). This candy may be made using variety nuts (usually almond) and candied fruits. Also, it can be flavored with chocolate, vanilla or pistachio. This is sweet, and that is still an understatement. You may want to schedule a trip to the dentist after filling yourself with this yummy treat.
These are a few of the sweet treats that Italy has presented to the world. Choosing just one will prove to be a tough decision. But with your sweet tooth, you simply need to let your senses guide you. If you follow your senses, it will surely lead you to la dolce vita.

A brief history of Italian Comedy

January 8th, 2010

The traditions of Commedia dell’Arte and Greek theatre are still continued in Italian comedy today.

Commedia dell’Arte (literally translated as ‘Artistic Comedy’), dates back to the 16th century. It can be described as a comical theatre presentation performed by professional actors who travelled around Italy. The travelling acting groups performed mostly in city streets, and sometimes in court venues. The more famous troupes such as the Fedeli and Confidenti, even performed in palaces and reached international acclaim. The Commedia dell’Arte’s style of comedy used types of music, dance and witty dialogue, and it’s style spread throughout Europe and still lives on today in present day theatre.

In the past, ongoing themes in Italian comedy films were that of sickness, poverty, hunger, and old age, the idea being to highlight the ironic absurdities in tragic situations. A classic example to illustrate this is Roberto Benigni’s Life is Beautiful (La vita e` bella). The film is set in the second world war in a nazi concentration camp, but somehow through the tragedy, Benigni still makes us laugh. Modern comedies today still laugh at the absurdities of modern life, although the themes of the past of sickness, old age etc aren’t that common.

Italians also appreciate jokes about life in general, and also enjoy jokes about politics e.g. there is a comic tradition of political cartoons called vignetta that can be found on the front page of Corriere della Sera, and in Naples there is a cartoon character of a chicken called ‘Gino’ who makes mini cartoon clips and songs about politics and pokes fun at political situations in the world today.

Juliana de Angelis is a travel writer about Italy…read more articles, travel guides and information about Italy, its people and culture at her website: http://www.madaboutitaly.com/Book flights, hotels and shop for Italian products at http://www.italianshopsonline.com/Copyright © 2006 Juliana de Angelis – please inform author if using any articles.
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How To Shop For Food On Holiday In Italy

January 7th, 2010

So you’ve booked a self-catering holiday in Italy on a farm in Tuscany or by a beach in Liguria? Enjoy exploring the flavours of Italy with this basic guide to help you enjoy food shopping as part of your holiday experience.
Traditionally Italians shop every day for what they want to eat that day, as freshness is a big concern to them. You won’t find huge fridges in most Italian kitchens, so decide every day as you shop, what you want to eat that day, according to what looks freshest and most appetising in the shops. The shop keepers are quite used to selling just two slices of perfectly sliced prosciutto, or a small piece of pecorino cheese. You can of course just head to a supermarket and fill your trolley for the week, but shopping the traditional way in all the little shops is an experience not to be missed and you will gain more cultural understanding this way, than any amount of museum visiting will provide.
Follow your nose first to the Forno, for crusty white bread, rolls and salty focaccia, a soft olive oil pizza bread cut into squares, that the school children often stop by for as a morning snack. Pane integrale is wholewheat bread and becoming more easily available. If you don’t acquire the taste for the traditional, unsalted bread you can ask for pane salata – salted bread, which is sometimes available as a speciality bread.
Next drop by the fruttaverdura – the greengrocers. Italy has a wonderful variety of fruits and vegetables and you will find whatever is in season and at its best. Italians are distrustful of imported food, the more locally grown the better, so most of what is on offer won’t have been subjected to cold storage and other indignities. May brings strawberries and cherries piled high and bright. Peaches and nectarines follow with melons of all varieties. By the time you reach autumn these have been succeeded by heaps of glistening grapes, luscious figs and juicy pears. Watch the local signoras carefully selecting their fruit and veg and you will get an idea of what is at its best and what should be left another week until it is truly in season, ripe and delicious.
The alimentari now- the general grocers store. You will probably be following the same group of signoras from shop to shop as they do their morning round. Everything is here, from tins piled high, to packets of pasta, with a counter of cheeses and salamis to be sliced to your requirements. You can ask for two slices of prosciutto crudo – cured ham, thinly sliced or buy sliced meats and cheeses by the etto – a generally used term for 100g (about 3oz). If you want to have a taste before you decide to purchase, just ask and a sliver of cheese will be passed over the counter for you to pronounce judgement on. There will also be containers of herby olives and sundried tomatoes to buy by weight. Bottles of mineral water and wine will rub shoulders in a corner.
For a treat stop by the pasticceria for a tray of delicious creamy pastries, which will be wrapped in paper and ribbon until they are worthy of the Christmas tree.
Now head off for a picnic lunch in an olive grove with your spoils, or treat yourself to a long lunch in a restaurant and keep your shopping for a delicious, no-cooking, light supper on the terrace of your apartment.
Copyright 2007 Kit Heathcock

Dreaming of an Italian Wedding

January 7th, 2010

More and more foreign people dream of a wedding “Italian style”.American and Australian couples choose to make their wishes come true in the most beautiful Italian locations. Japanese and English brides don’t stand still and plan to set their special day in ancient Tuscan villages, in seaside villas close to Amalfi, in Verona like Romeo and Juliet, among the Roman monuments to catch some drops of Dolce Vita.Why? Because Italy has long been rightly considered one of the most romantic countries in the world: medieval hill towns set in gorgeous landscapes, bringing you back in time, and making you feel part of an ideal Renaissance painting.The foreign couple that had got married in Italy were thrilled by what Italy did to their five senses: nostrils tickled by the sweet scents of lemon groves and Mediterranean herbs: eyes lulled by the sight of gently rolling hills, shades of green and blue in appealing sea water, and famous works of art; skin caressed by the gentle sea breeze and balmy summer nights; ears enticed by warm sea waves overlapping on soft sandy beaches; and the food, the delicious Italian food, the generous Italian wines, made them want to forget of ever having tasted any precooked food.Any advice for couples planning a wedding abroad: most importantly, make sure you find a reputable company to help you organise everything an be prepared to do a lot of planning via email. There are special agencies that provide weddings in Italy in the most exclusive venues and romantic places. They could also take care of honeymoon periods, suggesting a moonlight ride in Venice, relaxing days in Sardinia or a cruise to Aeolian Islands. If it’s time to tie your knot you could arrange your perfect day with the best wedding planners.If possible make a trip out to visit the people arranging the wedding and check that all your documentation is in order before you travel.Finally enjoy everything, especially the wedding day.

J.Sachs, born in the US, loves Italy and Italian culture. He is an expert wedding planner and he tries to make his best for the couples bring him in.
He is interested in cooking, traveling, reading, watching movies and, obviously, weddings.
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Buon Appetito! Dining Italian Style

January 3rd, 2010

Years before Italy developed into the nation we now perceive, such country was divided among warring states, which shared no common spoken language and little cultural or social traditions. It was only in 1861 that the Italy we now know came into being. Do you know that the Italian language that we hear today was virtually non-existent up until the cessation of the World War II?
Regionalism
Regionalism runs fiercely among the veins of the locals. The landscape and terrain of the boot-shaped land mass fortifies regional integrity. From the mountains to the waterways and every natural element in between, only strengthens the sense of regionalism. Now, add to the mix powerful conquerors, political alliances and intermarriages. What you will have is a melting pot of customs, including culinary flavours.
Regardless of regional differences, two distinct traits have often been used in an attempt to define Italian food: Flexible and Innovative. There is always a pattern on how to cook the base of certain cuisines that need be followed, after that you can add your own flavour and make the dish your own. With that said, no risotto or pasta dish would bear the same taste coming from any two kitchen.
Seasonal Ingredients
Each area proudly possesses its own specialities and delicacies, and these vary from season to season. It is a fact that Italians have a knack for freshness. When one goes to Italy in the last quarter of the year, do not expect to be served fried zucchini flowers. Why? Because it is not in season. In addition, regional or even provincial dishes have been developed due to the availability of the ingredients. The produce is at its best if it is in season. If artichokes are in season, why not use it as antipasti together with slices of sausages and marinated olives? Of course, if your trip takes you in a city near the sea, be prepared for a lot of fish-based dishes as well as other seafood delicacies.
North versus South
Many a diner has raised the north versus south cooking. Actually, there is no style of cooking that is strictly north or strictly south. Both regions use butter; however, the north folks tend to use more (they like their sauces creamy). On the other hand, their southern counterparts, almost always, use tomato in their dishes.
Dining In Italy
Now, when in Italy, one may be confused as what the locals eat and the time they eat. Normally, breakfast consists of cappuccino or espresso, or any coffee for that matter, with a croissant or a slice of toast. Breakfast is virtually irrelevant to locals. You will see no cereals, no pancakes, and no sunny-side ups either. The term ‘heavy breakfast’ is not included in the Italian vocabulary. Today, yogurts are becoming the breakfast substitute. Lunch is not eaten at twelve noon, it starts at one and it usually lasts for two hours, even three. Dinner is also served late, around eight in the evening (and that still is early).
The Menu
Generally, Italian menus have sections, each representing a part of a full meal. First out is the antipasti (appetizer), followed by the primo (first course) and the secondo (second course), which is usually accompanied by contorni (side dish). And last but not the least is the dolce, or the dessert. With this enumerated, one may wonder why Italians are so healthy with this amount of food at their disposal.
How Italians Eat
Well, their food intake is controlled and balanced. Plus shortly after their evening meal, locals would take a passeggiata (stroll). Another way that Italians burn off calories is through shopping. (Yes, shopping!) Fresh food connotes that you purchase the produce on the day or a couple of hours before the meal will be served. Running back and forth to the marketplace to get the freshest ingredient possible not only guarantees good food, it doubles as exercise as well.
Truly, chi mangia bene, mangia Italiano! (Who eats well, eats Italian!)

Italian London

January 3rd, 2010

Italians have been coming to live in London for hundreds of years, including Canaletto, the famous Renaissance Artist whose works can be seen in the National Gallery and Buckingham Palace. In the first half of the 19th century, there was an influx of political refugees into London. By 1854 London’s first Italian community of about 2000 was formed in Clerkenwell. Many opened businesses in the catering industry, or worked as artisans, street vendors or street musicians.There is still a large Italian community in Clerkenwell, and this area is also home to the Italian Church, St.Peters, which holds Italian events and youth clubs for the Italian community. It is also the area of London that has most of the original Italian businesses, shops and cafes.

When Italian immigrants formed the first Italian community in London over 150 years ago, they had no official church of their own, and used to attend prayer at the Royal Sardinian Chapel at Lincoln’s Inn Fields. The 1st Archbishop of westminster, Cardinal Wiseman, invited St.Vincent Pallotti to establish an Italian Church in London. Helping in the task, were Fr.Raffaele Melia, the Italian chaplin to the Sardinian Church, and Fr.Giuseppe Faa’ di Bruno, a priest from Turin.By 1853, enough funds had been raised to buy a site for the Italian Church of St.Peter’s in London’s ‘Little Italy’.St.Peter’s opened in 1863, and at that time, was the only church in Roman Basilican style.It remains an important focal point for the Italian community in London, and many regularly attend prayers and mass, as well as celebrating important events in the church’s calendar.

Other ‘Italian areas’ of London now include Islington,Battersea, and in particular Kensington and Chelsea.

Juliana de Angelis is a travel writer about Italy…read more articles, travel guides and information about Italy, its people and culture at her website: http://www.madaboutitaly.com/
Book flights, hotels and shop for Italian products at http://www.italianshopsonline.com/
Copyright © 2006 Juliana de Angelis – please inform author if using any articles.
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Food of Italy…Buon Appetito!

January 2nd, 2010

The pleasures and love of Italian cuisine are known the world over. Italian cookery and recipes vary from region to region, and on the whole it is very healthy and nutritious, using natural ingredients that are in season.Most traditonal and ’speciality’ dishes as we know today, are on the whole derived from simple peasant cookery, for example the Pizza, which could be found a couple of centuries ago on the streets of Naples being sold by street vendors to those that had no cooking facilities of their own at home.Although there are essential ingredients that every Italian kitchen should have, (including basil, garlic and olive oil!), the most important ingredients are passion and creativity.Italians take great pride and pleasure in their food, and cooking and eating habits can vary from region to region, even from village to village. Each place has their own unique dishes and ingredients, and even the traditional dishes that are so popular all over Italy are cooked in different ways depending which region you go to. For example, if you eat a lasagne from Naples, it doesn’t have the bechamel sauce as you would expect in the more traditional lasagne. It also has small meatballs (or polpette)as oppposed to mince, and also salami and eggs. The different regional cooking depends on a number of factors, not only as to what ingredients are most abundant each region, but also historical factors. Naples, for example, was founded by the Greeks, and this had some influence on the Neapolitan way of life. Not only in the language and music, but also in the cookery.

Some original and unique types of ingredients and cooking originated from the North; Balsamic vinegar (Modena), pesto (Liguria), and tortellini (Bologna) to name but a few! Other food characteristically eaten in the North is Polenta, that can be eaten in many different ways, e.g fried and even in a polenta cake. Dishes in the North tend to be a bit ‘heavier’ than that in the South, (think the ingredients used for Spaghetti Carbonara compared to the classic healthier and lighter tomato sauces of the South!)

Central Italy is very diverse, and such regions as Rome, Florence and have little in common. Some examples to be found all around central Italy are Porchetta (pig stuffed with rosemary and fennel), pork, lamb, black truffles and porcini mushrooms.

Cuisine in the South is characterized by the abundance use of fish, aubergines, peppers, olives, the spicy ingredient pepperoncino, and first and foremost the tomato, which has a huge industry in Naples. In the Naples and Campania regions, there is some Spanish and French influence to be found in the cookery. Pizza and pasta are especially popular and traditional, the Pizza Margherita having been born in Naples. In Apulia, they have a diet rich in fish (mussels and oysters being a speciality)and vegetables. The orecchiette (little ears)pasta is also from Apulia.

Although the cuisine varies greatly all over Italy, there is one thing you can be sure of, and that is enjoying your food! Buon Appetito!

Juliana de Angelis is a travel writer about Italy…read more articles, travel guides and information about Italy, its people and culture at her website: http://www.madaboutitaly.com/
Book flights, hotels and shop for Italian products at http://www.italianshopsonline.com/
Copyright © 2006 Juliana de Angelis – please inform author if using any articles.
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Italian Cuisine

January 1st, 2010

Italian cuisine is as varied as the regions of Italy. Although Italy was officially unified in 1861, the food reflects the cultural variety of the country’s regions with culinary influences from Greece, Roman, Gallic, Germany, Turkish, Hebrew, Slavic, Arab, Chinese and other civilizations. In this sense, there really is no one Italian cuisine because each area boasts of its own specialties. Not only is the food of Italy highly regionalized, but a high priority is also placed on the use of fresh available produce.

Although traditional Italian dishes vary by region, they also do not follow strictly to a North/South pattern either. The north tends to use more butter, creams, polenta, mascarpone, grana padano and Parmigiano cheeses, risotto, lasagna and fresh egg pasta, while the south is more tomato and olive oil based cooking, along with mozzarella, caciocavallo and peconrino cheeses, and dried pasta. Coastal and central regions often use tortellini, ravioli and prosciutto in their cooking. Even pizza varies across the country. In Rome the crusts are thin and cracker-like, while Neapolitan and Sicilian pizzas have a thicker crust.

For most Italians, pasta is the first course in a meal with the exception of the far north where risotto or polenta is the norm. Vegetables, grains and legumes play a regular part of many Italian diets with meat often not being a regular part of everyday meals, Olive oil is usually seen in its dark green state (from its first pressing) in the south, where in the north a more refined, golden oil is seen.

Basically, Italian cuisine consists of a combination of vegetables, grains, fruits, fish, cheeses and a some meats, with fowl and game usually seasoned or cooked with olive oil (with the exception of the far north). La cucina povera, the food of the poorer Italian people of the southern coastal area, has shaped a diet popular for centuries but now there is a resurgence of this “poor people’s food”, the Mediterranean diet, which is now being touted as the model around which we should restructure our eating habits.

Breakfast is considered a minor meal in Italy, often consisting of nothing more than a bread roll and milky coffee (café latte). Traditional lunches tend to be larger, have several courses and are eaten slowly. Italian children don’t go to school in the afternoon, and because of the heat, many small businesses close from midday until about 4pm which makes lunch the social meal of the day.

The traditional menu structure in Italy consists of basically eight courses, but the long traditional Italian menu is typically kept for special occasions such as weddings, with everyday fare including only the first and second courses, with the side dish being served with the second course. As an exception to this order, a unique course, Piatto unico, can replace the first or second course with, for example, pizza.

The traditional menu consists of:

1. ANTIPASTO – which are hot or cold appetizers, literally it means “before the pasta”; consists of a varied combination of colorful foods. The most popular ingredients are melon or tomatoes served with prosciutto cut into very thin slices. Lettuce, such as the slightly bitter endives or rocket, or other green leaves, such as the aniseed-tasting fennel, are typically used as a garnish, placed around the edges of the serving dish. Salami, mortadella, coppa and zampone, manufactured meat products, are common in antipasti. The artistry of the food is as important to Italians as the taste. For example the reddish colour of salami provides a good contrast to the green lettuce. Fish and other seafood may also be used in the antipasti course and, of course, olives and artichokes are also common servings, as are mushrooms (fungi) seasoned with salt, pepper and lemon juice.

2. PRIMO (first course) – which usually consists of a hot dish such as pasta, risotto, gnocchi, polenta or soup, with many vegetarian options. There are many types of pasta, each type usually named after its shape with common types including spirali (spirals), farfalle (butterflies; sometimes described as ‘bow-tie-shaped’). Penne (hollow tubes) and conchiglie (shells). Different shapes are supposed to be better with the different types of sauces. Spirals are two strips of pasta twirled around each other and are used with the heavier sauces, such as those containing minced meat and vegetables. Rigatoni is cylinders or tubes, with a wide diameter and grooves (or lines) on the outside. The grooves are supposed to hold the sauce onto the pasta, meaning that this pasta is good with runnier sauces. Then there is the group of pasta made up of long thin strands, which includes the most common type of pasta, spaghetti. Typically you eat this type of pasta by coiling its long thin strands around a fork. Other long thin pastas are tagliatelle, fettuccine and linguini, which are all varieties of flattened spaghetti. Extremely thin strands of pasta are called vermicelli (meaning ‘little worms’). Yet another group of pasta is made of flat sheets (lasagna) or tubes (cannelloni), which are either layered or stuffed with meat and cheese fillings. Some pastas have ‘pockets’ to hold the sauce inside them instead of outside like ravioli or tortellini, which are soft sheets of pasta rolled around meat or cheese. Italians cook pasta of all kinds, whether fresh or dried, in boiling water until al dente (’to the teeth’, meaning still a tiny bit hard in the centre. It is then served immediately in a bowl with sauce or cheese.

3. SECONDO (second course) – this is usually the main dish of fish or meat. Veal, pork and chicken are traditionally the most common and are often pan-fried or casseroled. Beef is used as steaks (bistecca), while lamb (agnello) is roasted on special occasions, such as Easter and Christmas. Fish and other seafood are often used as main courses.

4. CONTORNO (side dish) – this may be a salad or cooked vegetable. Salad is traditionally served with the main course. Common vegetables are beans (greens and pulses), potatoes (often sautéed), and carrots as well as salads.

5. FORMAGIIO AND FRUTTA (cheese and fruit) – this is the first dessert course and the fruit and cheese are usually served together. Grapes, peaches, apricots and citrus fruits are a major product of Italy’s agricultural industry and are common.

6. DOLCE (dessert) – the cakes and cookies course Italians produce many sweet desserts and ’sweet treats’, including Amaretti, almond-flavoured meringues, which Australians call macaroons, Panforte, a sweet semi-hard ’strong bread’ based on nuts and containing dried fruit (a classic Christmas treat from Siena), and. Pannettone, a very rich bread-cake (another Christmas treat).

7. CAFFÉ (coffee) – which is usually espresso coffee

8. DIGESTIVE (liqueurs) – which may be grappa, amaro, or Limon cello. The wine industry has been important to Italy for centuries and the most common drink associated with Italy is wine. Until recently, and even now in the countryside, most Italians would make their own red or white house wine after the grape harvest. This would be drunk at every lunch and dinner. Even children are given wine to drink, but it is usually watered down with mineral water. Before dinner many Italians drink an amaro (bitter) to stimulate the digestive system, while after dinner they may drink sweet wines, such as marsala (from Sicily). Children are also sometimes given Marsala, beaten with a raw egg and sugar into zabaglione, to strengthen them.

PIZZA

Modern pizza has evolved from pizzas made by peasants in Naples, Italy, but more than a few Mediterranean peoples can claim to have ‘invented’ the pizza. In ancient times many civilizations created dishes of flat bread with various herbs and toppings. As a staple for the poor, it was a matter of necessity that food could be eaten without utensils, and that the ‘plate’ it was served on could be eaten as well. They made a bread crust from flour, water and yeast, topped it with olive oil, herbs, cheeses, sometimes even leftovers, and baked the whole thing in a stone oven.

Given that most pizza connoisseurs today consider the tomato sauce to be the key ingredient, it may be surprising that pizza pre-dates the introduction of tomatoes to Europe. Tomatoes reached Italy by way of Spain in the early 1500s but were thought to be poisonous. It was several decades later that tomatoes topped a flatbread in the form of a pizza.

Italian cuisine is very popular in all its forms and is imitated all over the world. Look for a few Italian recipes on June’s Recipes page, and visit our Marketplace to find Italian cookbooks and herbs and spices to make your families Italian dishes more authentic.

A great resource for your family meals is the new e-cookbook, “Good Cooking Central Cookbook”. It offers easy-to-prepare, delicious family-tested recipies. Available at: http://www.goodcookingcentral.com/good_cooking_central_002.htm
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Delicious Food in Italy

December 27th, 2009

The most entitative elements for delicious food are nature and art. Delicious Food in Italy has both of the two features. The strong passion of Apennines peninsula gives the Italian food the nature style. The Italian civilization for centuries brings the art inspiration to the regale. Looking back delicious food can make you feel cheerful for a long time.

 

People believe that Italy is a precious island which is obliged by the God. It is next to Ligurian Sea and Tyrrhenian Sea in west, Adriatic Sea in east and the Mediterranean Sea in south. In the north area of the Alps is the Po plain. The Apennines run through the peninsula with the islands of Sicily and Sardinia in north. In Italy, people can see white snow, green waves with golden waves, and beautiful flowers with fresh fruit. In a word, you can see mountains, islands, the blue sea and volcanoes if you go to Italy.

 

Early in the tenth century, there are numerous city republics here. Maybe you do not need to look with reverence the paintings, buildings, sculptures, poetry and aria which are left by the great masters of art in the time of Revival of Learning. You can find that Italy is so different from other countries only by glancing at the gloves, the shoe leather, the clothes, the hairstyle and the furniture shown in windows. You can believe that every Italian is an artist. They sometimes can not help telling other people their achievements: only crazy people can achieve this. Italy comes in for the hot passion of Rome together with the hot climate. The area lies between the latitude of thirty and forty degrees of the world is a special area with astonishing things. It is hot and dry in summer and mild and rainy in winter. Plentiful products make the food here magnificent.

 

The food of ancient Rome has a longer history than that of Normandy. They absorb the element of the diet civilization of the orient and develop their own style by making some changes to the tradition of the cist. It is almost a duplicate of the dish which is liked deeply by the epicure in ancient Rome whenever you choose a dish at will. Take “polenta” for an example. It is a kind of oatmeal which is ate by the Roman when they want to conquer the whole world. The gastronomy of it still remains the same as before. For more information about traveling; please have a look at http://www.affordable-cruises-tours.com.

I like traveling and would like to share my experience with others.
http://www.affordable-cruises-tours.com.

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Emililia Romagna, The Food Capital Of Italy

December 20th, 2009

Italy is the culinary capital of Europe. I’m sure the French and Spanish would argue that point but they wouldn’t win. The British and Germans certainly wouldn’t argue. Within Italy there is roughly twenty individual regions and each one has a different outlook on food.
A pasta dish cooked in Sardinia will be slightly different to a pasta dish cooked in Lazio and Rome. This is what set Italy apart from other countries, the uniqueness with which they approach their food and cooking.
Emilia-Romagna is the Daddy of Italian food regions, incorporating such cities as Parma, Bologna and Modena it’s not difficult to see why.
But what sets Emilia-Romagna apart from other regions in Italy
The delicatessen stores and cuisine of Emilia-Romagna offer everything the palate could desire: splendid hams and fresh mortadella, tasty parmesan, an endless variety of homemade pasta served with irresistible sauces, sumptuous meat dishes, tangy game, sweet or savoury cakes and pastries, delicious desserts, light, sweet wines and, not least, the most splendid vinegar in the world, aceto bahamim tradizionale, which is only made by a handful of old-established producers.
One reason for the incredible variety of its cuisine is that the region is made up of two different areas: Emilia, the area between the Po valley and northern Tuscany, and Romagna, the mountainous country with the Adriatic coast to the east. The fertile Emilia contributes pasta, dairy produce, and fine meat, while the sometimes rough and inaccessible Romagna offers aromatic herbs, tangy game, and fish dishes from the coast.
The menu is completed by specialties from the cities. Parma is proud of its ham and culatello, Bologna offers the most exquisite mortadella, the best lasagne, and the most delicious tortellini in the world. Piacenza is the home of tortellini,
Reggio Emilia is famous for its braised meat and erbazzone, Ferrara is the sausage capital, and in Modena they serve the incomparably tasty zampone, or stuffed pig trotters. In Emilia-Romagna they live off good food in two senses.
Local specialties end up on their own plates but have also long been produced for export, thus contributing to the wealth of the region.
In the Middle Ages, the rest of the world already held Parma ham and parmesan cheese in high esteem, and no other corner of Italy is so densely packed with small, medium, and large food companies. Although specialties from Emilia-Romagna are now obtainable all over the world, it is best to get to know them on the spot.
Over a glass of Lambrusco and a piadina, a traditional dough cake cooked over an open fire, you can have a cosy chat with the Emilians and the Romagtloli about the only disputed subject in the region’s cuisine: which is the tastiest. pork crackling the rather dry version from Emilia or the fat, juicy one they prefer in Romagna?
Nothing else can be disputed regarding Emilia-Romagna’s gastronomic heritage, when ever holidaying in Italy beat a path to Emilia-Romagna and be prepared for a culinary treat and don’t worry about that diet. This is all good wholesome food.

Sardinia Holiday

You may not always agree with my writings but I hope to inform.

Harwood E Woodpecker
seo cumbria

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