Americans get taste of real Italian

Italian

Americans get taste of real Italian

If you’re lucky, you’ve never known a world without olive oil or a time when Parmesan cheese only came in green cans.

But there was such a world. Once stigmatized as the cuisine of “garlic eaters,” Italian food and its ingredients were almost impossible to find in America 40 years ago.

“Certain foods were so associated with lower class people that it was a way of keeping those people and their food in their place,” says John Mariani, author of “How Italian Food Conquered the World.”

But as increased travel and waves of new immigrants coaxed Americans to be more adventurous, Italian food found its way onto American tables — and into their hearts. During the 1960s and 70s, retailers began marketing “healthy” Italian ingredients, such as olive oil. And during the 1980s, big name chefs like Wolfgang Puck adapted and enhanced foods like pizza, giving them culinary credibility and pushing them into the mainstream.

Today, dozens of oils, vinegars and other essentials vie for shelf space in supermarkets, and everything from pizza to pasta proliferates are on mainstream menus from Denny’s to the Cheesecake Factory.

“Italian food appeals to such a broad spectrum,” says Jonathan Waxman of the New York restaurant Barbuto. “It appeals to kids, snobby people, rustic diners. It appeals to big groups, or an elegant dinner. It goes the full gamut.”

Like other chefs who came up in the 1980s, Waxman made his name applying his classical French training to American ingredients. But he never forgot the “old school” Italian dishes he knew as a child in San Francisco, the cioppino and veal scaloppini. At Barbuto, and in his latest book “Italian, My Way,” (Simon Schuster; $32) Waxman adapts the simplicity, seasonality and most of all, the spontaneity of Italian dishes to American sensibilities. Overripe tomatoes are studded with garlic and roasted for a simple sauce, and fresh asparagus is shaved and dressed with lemon and hazelnuts.

The next frontier, say Waxman and Mariani, is to have Americans distinguish between the foods of Italy’s different regions. “The most important thing about Italy is that it’s not one cuisine, and now we’re discovering all the different regions,” Waxman says. “It’s like America. It’s the difference between what you get in Maine versus Louisiana.”

Already, Mariani says, restaurants are beginning to open in places like New York and San Francisco and even Boulder, Colo., that specialize in the cuisines of Rome or Venice or places that few people have heard of, such as Friuli, in the country’s northeastern corner.

Many Americans already love Italy’s quintessential regional dish: pasta.

“There’s something about this long, squiggly,

chewy comfort food that we all love,” says Domenica Marchetti, whose new book “The Glorious Pasta of Italy” (Chronicle Books; $30) offers recipes from Rome to Abruzzo to Sicily. “Wherever you go in Italy, the pasta is an expression of that place and the local ingredients.”

In the northern region of Emilia-Romagna, for instance, Marchetti says you’ll find lots of freshly made egg noodles, lasagna and tortellini. In Apulia and Calabria, on the Adriatic Sea, you’ll get heartier pastas of buckwheat and whole grains. Up north, a Bolognese will have lots of ground meat, but almost no tomato. But in Abruzzo, you’ll find a silky sauce bursting with tomatoes that were merely flavored by meat.

Just like Americans’ appreciation of Italian food in general, the country’s love of pasta has also become more adventurous, delving into dishes like pumpkin ravioli and squid-ink pasta. But while Marchetti and others applaud the development, the simple, comforting food of Italy will always be with us.

“There’s also something to be said for a nice dish of spaghetti and meatballs,” she says.

ANGEL HAIR PASTA WITH CRABMEAT, JALAPENO AND MINT

1/2 pound cooked crabmeat, cleaned and picked through (freshly cooked crab is essential; avoid crab marked previously frozen)
1 jalapeno pepper, stemmed, seeded and minced
1 clove garlic, minced
12 fresh mint leaves, torn
6 tablespoons (3/4 stick) unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
1 pound angel hair pasta
Juice of 1 lemon
Salt to taste

In a large bowl, combine crabmeat, jalapeno, garlic, mint and butter. Set aside.

Bring a large saucepan of salted water to a boil. Cook pasta according to package directions, about 3 minutes. When pasta is al dente (still slightly firm at center), do not strain.

Use tongs or a slotted spoon to scoop out the pasta and add it to the crab mixture. Toss, then add lemon juice. Season with salt. Makes 4 servings, EACH 629 calories, 20 grams fat, 86 milligrams cholesterol, 26 grams protein, 2 grams fiber, 293 milligrams sodium.

From Jonathan Waxman’s “Italian, My Way,” Simon Schuster.

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Alfredo, and Who on Earth Was He?

Alfredo, and Who on Earth Was He?

If you ask for pasta with Alfredo sauce at a restaurant in Italy all you get from your waiter is a stare. Why is one of the most famous “Italian sauces” for pasta unknown in its country of origin? The answer is simple: because in Italy an Alfredo “sauce” doesn’t exist.

Yes, Italians make a dish of pasta, fettuccine dressed with nothing else than good aged parmigiano cheese and a lot of butter, but is such a simple preparation that Italians don’t even consider it a “recipe”.

Waverly Root in his famous book “The Food of Italy” (New York, 1971) wrote: “FETTUCCINE AL BURRO is associated in every tourist’s mind with Rome, possibly because the original Alfredo succeeded in making its serving a spectacle reminiscent of grand opera. It is the same ribbon shaped egg pasta tat is called tagliatelle in Bologna; but the al burro preparation is very Roman indeed in its rich simplicity. Nothing is added to the pasta except grated cheese and butter – lots of butter. The recipe calls for doppio burro, double butter, which gives it a golden colour.”

Who was Alfredo then? Alfredo di Lelio, this was his full name, was an inspired cook who proposed this new exciting dish in the restaurant he opened in Rome in 1914. It was a high gourmet preparation in the Roman tradition of simplicity. Apparently he created his Fettuccine al’Alfredo when his wife lost her appetite during her pregnancy. To bring back her appetite he prepared for her a nutritious dish of egg fettuccine with parmigiano cheese and butter. That probably gave him the idea for his “triple butter” fettuccine.

He was an extravagant character who used to personally serve his paper-thin fettuccine with golden forks, apparently donated to him by Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, the famous silent movie stars. In the fifties and sixties, Hollywood discovered Rome. Paparazzi photographers took photos of actors such as Tyrone Power, Ava Gardner, Richard Burton, Liz Taylor, or Sophia Loren in front of a plate of Fettuccine all’Alfredo, making his restaurant famous all around the world. The restaurant is now run by his grandson, and the golden forks are still used to serve this dish for special occasions.

Samuel Chamberlain, journalist and food writer, met Alfredo in the late fifties and wrote in his book “Italian Bouquet – An Epicurean Tour of Italy” (New York, 1958): “Finally there is the great Alfredo, showman par excellence, who draws an endless file of amazed and hungry tourists to watch his calisthenics over a dish of hot noodles. The King of Noodles has come out of retirement, and now wields his golden fork and spoon at ALFREDO ALL’AUGUSTEO, at number 31 on the Piazza Augusto Imperatore. His Maestosissime Fettuccine all’Alfredo are most majestic, without a doubt. […] You have to visit this place at least once, we suppose, just to say you have seen this elderly, melodramatic good-hearted clown in action.”

So, forget the heavy cream, the parsley, the garlic, and all the other stuff suggested in the hundreds of Alfredo recipes that circulate around. Take down from the shelf that pasta machine, prepare your fresh fettuccine (you can substitute fresh fettuccine with excellent dry egg noodles), and enjoy the simple Maestosissime Fettuccine al Triplo Burro the way Alfredo himself would do them. Find the step-by-step illustrated recipe at this URL: http://www.annamariavolpi.com/pasta_alfredo_recipe.html Enjoy!

Anna Maria Volpi, Copyright(C)2004


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