Hungry? Eat this!

Hungry? Eat this!

For the record, “Italian Food” is SO much more than pizza, spaghetti, ravioli and fettucine alfredo. In fact, “fettucine alfredo” doesn’t exist except in the restaurants catering to tourists away from home looking for their favorite edible myth.

Hold your hand up in front of you with your thumb and forefinger a half inch apart. That measures the typical range Americans imagine of the variety of food in Italy. Now, stick your arms straight out to your sides. That’s the REAL measure of the bountiful range of edible deliciousness you’ll encounter in Italy. And that bounty is not at all spread uniformly throughout “the boot”. You can go 50 kilometers and find a completely different food culture. There are some foods you’ll find in one town only.

I urge you. When you answer that call to go explore Italy, please don’t fall back on ordering pizza, spaghetti and ravioli. Sure, they will be good, and not like what you’ve had in America. Rather, find out what the local specialty is and eat it with gusto. And please, whatever you do, don’t seek out that well-known, international hamburger chain. You’ll be in the land of good food! Eat well! You might just find your next, new favorite dish.

In the last month, I stayed in the north of Italy: Milano, Sanremo, Genova, Pavia and small towns scattered in the hills south of Milan. The following photos show a selection of the dishes I ate with great pleasure.

(For contrast, check out Eating the South to see some of the foods I enjoyed when I traveled in Sicily, the southern coast and “heel of the boot” in 2011.)

(Click on the first photo to view the images “plate-size” and click through the slide show.)
 

Eating the South

Eating the South

In Italy, one can go 100 kilometers and find a very different food culture. There are dishes and combinations found in just one town, and certainly in one region, not others. What Americans think of as “Italian Food” is a tiny representation of what Italians eat. In planning to visit the south of the country – Sicilia, Calabria, Puglia – I was looking forward to seeing how the food differed from what I’ve eaten in the north. When traveling, I ask the hotelier what some of the typical, local foods are, and where the locals eat. This serves me well.

ARANCINE – Palermo
A classic Sicilian quick, snack food. A deep fried rice ball, stuffed with prosciutto and mozzarella. (Sometimes with ragu sauce.) Probably as much fat as a Big Mac.

CANNOLO – Palermo
Another classic Sicilian treat. A deep fried shell, filled with sweetened ricotta cheese. I had to have one to say I did, but they’re really much to sweet for me.

DATTERINI TOMATOES – Palermo
Purchased at the street market. The vendor made a cone out of a scrap sheet of paper, and filled it with tomatoes. They were perfectly ripe, red and sweet.

MIXED PALERMITANI APPETIZERS – Palermo
A great way to sample all the best: caponata, grilled eggplant, caciocavallo cheese, green olives, fried dough balls and potato.

SPAGHETTI CON SARDA – Palermo
Buccatini pasta (with a hole through the center of the noodle), with sardines, bread crumbs, wild fennel, raisins, pine nuts.

MILZA – Palermo
Fried spleen, served on foccacia with grated cheese.

RISOTTO NERO – Palermo
Rice, cooked slowly with black squid ink.

SPAGHETTI CON GAMBERI E COZZE – Palermo
Spaghetti with shrimp and mussels.

POLPETTE SPADA – Palermo
Swordfish meat balls in tomato sauce.

INSALATA DI POLPO – Palermo
Octopus salad.

GNOCCHI SARDI CON SALSICCIA E SCAMORZA AFFUMICATA – Palermo
A different sort of “gnocchi” pasta than I’m accustomed to… unlike the little dumpling-types. This served with sausage and smoked scamorza cheese and some tomato.

SPAGHETTI ALLO SCOGLIO – Palermo
Flat spaghetti with mussels, swordfish, clams, squid and parsley with a light broth. In this case, the house wine was poor. (It’s often pretty decent.)

BUDELLO/STIGLIONE GRIGLIATA LUNGO LA STRADA – Palermo
Cooked on a roadside grill, these are veal intestines, skewered, grilled, cut and squirted with a little lemon juice.

CUNZATU – Monreale
The woman at the bakery made one big “grinder-style” panino, drizzling the bread with LOTS of olive oil, laying down some sardines, a slab of cheese and some tomato slices. Simple and perfect. I shared it with two friends.

SPADA GRIGLIATA – Cefalú
After all that pasta, I just wanted a simple, grilled filet of swordfish. The Donna Fugata Anthilia wine was wonderful with it!

MELANZANE PARMIGIANA E CAPONATA – Taormina
Eggplant parmigian with eggplant caponata. (I wanted veggies!)

PASTA ALLA NORMA – Taormina
Tortiglioni pasta with tomato/eggplant sauce and ricotta cheese.

TONNO CON CIPOLLE – Taormina
Grilled tuna with sauced onions.

MACCHERONI CON POMODORO E MELANZANE  – Taormina
“Macaroni” with tomato and eggplant.

STREET LUNCH: FOCCACIA, MORTADELLA, BLUE CHEESE  – Catanzaro
Foccacia with tomato, mortadella slices, blue cheese folded together on a park bench.

BAVETTE ARRIGANATE  – Catanzaro Lido
Like a flattened spaghetti, with a slightly “mad”, spicy sauce in Calabrese style.

DINNER AND TRAIN LUNCH  – From Catanzaro Lido
Fresh peas-in-the-shell, mozzarella di bufala, rolls, datterini tomatoes, biscotti, pears, mandarins.

GNOCCHI CON ‘NDUJA  – Catanzaro Lido
Gnocchi served with a sauce of ‘nduja, a soft, spreadable aged sausage of ground meat and red hot chili peppers. Very Calabrese!

SCALOPPINA ALLA MARSALA  – Catanzaro Lido
Veal with a marsala wine sauce.

VERDURE GRIGLIATE  – Catanzaro Lido
Grilled eggplant, zucchini and radicchio.

SOPPRESSATA  – Catanzaro Lido
Aurelia’s gift of spicy, slightly smokey soppressata.

PITTULE  – Lecce
An appetizer of fried balls of dough with potato, tomato and…?

MIGNOLATA  – Lecce
Freshly made whole grain flat noodles, some fried (called “tria“), some boiled. With mussels, fresh squid, clams, garbanzo beans, parsley, tomato.

CICCORI CON OLIVE NERI  – Lecce
Cooked chicory with black olives.

ORECCHIETE CON POMODORO  – Lecce
Orecchiete – “Little Ears” – pasta with tomato.

GNOCCHI DI OLIVE NERI  – Alberobello
Gnocchi made with black olive paste, served with cooked tomatoes.

FRICELLI CON FUNGHI E SALSICCIA  – Alberobello
Fricelli pasta with mushrooms and sausage, with a creamy tomato sauce.

PESCE MISTA GRIGLIATA  – Rimini
A mixed selection of seafood, grilled. I don’t recognize the fish here!

CHE RIMANA  – Rimini
The leftover backbone and head. I did fish out the tiny cheeks afterwards.

INSALATA DI RUCOLA, GRANA E POMODORI  – Rimini
A perfect salad of arugula, grana padano cheese and cherry tomatoes.