Posts Tagged ‘traditions’

Vasanello: Did you know the lovely legend of the bottle?

June 2nd, 2011

Many years ago, in the small village of Vasanello (about 30 Km from Rome), there was a pretty tradition linked to the Feast of St. John (June, 24th ). The evening of June 24th, the girls of marriageable age used to put some water in a bottle and then to let fall an egg white into it. Before going to bed, they put the bottle on their windowsill.

Credits: Flickr

The next morning they just had to indentify their future husband’s profession according to the shape of the egg white. If it had become a hoe, the future husband was to be a farmer, and so on. In this way, the girls could associate the resulting tool with some guy running after them, and discover the identity of their future bridegroom…

Credits: Vasanellotv.it

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Ammazzacaffè – Coffee killer

May 19th, 2011

Did you know that killing the coffee is a common habit in Italy?

Credits: Flickr

The Ammazzacaffè is a funny way to indicate any liquor drunk after coffee. The name is due to the will of eliminate the savour of coffee with a starker taste. Generally drunk after dinner or lunch, it is usually sipped – and necessary!! to digest after a rich meal, above all during Festivities.

Typical Ammazzacaffè in Campania is certainly Limoncello, in Sardinia is Mirto.

Which is your favourite Italian ammazzacaffè?

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Merry Christmas from Puglia

December 22nd, 2010

Culinary traditions from the heel of the boot


Welcome to Puglia, the heel of the Italian boot, a region of seemingly endless miles of beautiful beaches, breathtakingly wild and unspoiled nature, cities of art, archaeological treasures and varied and delicious culinary traditions.

In Puglia, the Christmas season is particularly rich in delicious tastes and smells. The Italian Christmas dining experience is not limited to lunch on the 25th. The feasting begins on the eve of the 24th and continues for three days.

The traditional menu for Christmas eve is quite simple and features “frittelle,” fried dumplings stuffed with various fillings including tomatoes and mozzarella cheese, sauteed onions and capers, tomatoes and tuna, or the intense flavor of aged ricotta cheese. Boiled “cime di rape,” or turnip greens, accompany the frittelle as a side dish.

Credits: Flickr

 

Christmas day finds most Puglians seated around the table with loved ones ready to dig into a multi-course meal that will usually go on for hours and hours. A variety of “frutti di mare,” raw mollusks fished fresh from the Adriatic Sea, are often served as a delicious starter. These range from mussels to clams to oysters to scallops, but include local specialties such as hedgehog sea urchins.

The pasta course is usually something filling and rich like a lasagna. The main course is typically lamb. Favorite dishes include baked lamb with “lambascioni” (a small and bitter onion that only grows in the wild), or “cuturidd’,” spiced lamb and vegetables cooked for hours in a special terracotta pot.


Just when you thought you couldn’t eat another bite…it’s time for dessert. There is quite a selection of sweets in the Puglian tradition. “Cartellate” are the most typical Christmas sweet. They are made of fried dough rolled out in long strips and then swirled into the form of roses which are dipped in either honey or mulled wine. “Pettole” are small rounds of dough, first fried and then sprinkled with powdered sugar. “Porcedduzzi,” known as the poor man’s nougat, are small balls of dough mixed with chopped almonds and honey.

Credits: Flickr

Although you have been feasting like a king for the past two days, it’s time to celebrate Saint Stephen’s Day on December 26. Naturally, in Puglia that means another afternoon spent around the table. Puglians consider this to be a somewhat lighter meal, although it is once again a lengthy affair including all courses from appetizers to pasta, a main dish to side dishes, ending with all those leftover desserts from the previous days. So how is it lighter? The first course is traditionally a beef broth, served with “milleinfranti,” an egg pasta with Parmesan cheese and parsley cooked into the dough, and the main course is the meat used to make the broth. For Puglians, broth is a light lunch!

Take a deep breath and loosen that top button because New Year’s Eve and Day, with more mouth-watering Puglian cuisine, are only a week away!


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Other photo Credits: Sara Donahue

4 weird Italian Foods you never thought of

February 10th, 2010

 

 

Much more than Pasta and Pizza …


Talking about Italian food, the first things coming to your mind are, of course, pasta, pizza, and lasagne. Travellers who like testing, know that there is a large amount of savoury regional recipes having nothing in common with them. But not many of them know about some Italian culinary traditions that can sound a little strange or even disgusting to most.

But please, don’t say that: I assure you, weird foods are much appreciated in the regions they come from, and people are very proud about them as they’re considered a kind of speciality. In many cases also became illegal for health reasons. And for this, more precious too. Hereis a short selection of 4 Italian weird foods. Enjoy your reading and ….buon appetito!

 

 

1.    Casu Marzu – Maggot cheese – Sardinia

Sheep milk cheese, obtained in a natural way, thanks to the Piophila casei (cheese fly), which depose the larvae to the cheese. Eating the cheese, the larvae promotes a high level fermentation; when cheese has fermented enough, it can be eaten on a slice of typical thin bread Carasau. But pay attention! Cheese became toxic when the maggots have died. So, it has to be eaten when they are still alive…and jumping.

 

 

2.    Raw snails – Sicily
It’s a very common tradition (and not just in Sicily) eating raw snails, in order to fight various gastrointestinal disorders. This is why its dribble is able to close gastric ulcer and to destroy helicobacter, responsible of gastritis. It’s not just a popular legend: just try the snail’s syrup…

 

 

3.    Raw Octopus – Puglia
Eating raw fish is an ancient tradition in Puglia, and raw octopus is considered a delicious specialty. Once netted it, fishermen skilfully turn the head and start a series of precise procedures (pounding it against a rock, washing him from its “foam”…) in order to make the “curl” and make it tender. If you want to satisfy your curiosity, just have a look on this video.

 

 

4.    Pork blood cake – Tuscany
A popular proverb about pork says that nothing is thrown away, to underline that every part of the animal can be eaten, nothing is wasted. And that’s really true, even the blood can be used to prepare delicious recipes. It occurs in several parts of Italy but I’ve taken Tuscany as an example, in order to present you the tasty pork blood cake.

 

Are you dying to try this food?

 

Just follow the procedure!


Ingredients

1 litre of sifted out pork blood
1 spoon of sugar
1 glass of milk
4 beaten eggs
vanilla powder

Procedure

Prepare a sweet sheet of pastry with flour, eggs and sugar and cover the cake pan with it.  Make a blood stratum, a sheet of pastry stratum, until you reach the right thickness. Put into the oven and serve hot.

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