Jaffe

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Italy in August - Part 4: The Food

A trip to Italy always involves food. On this trip I had the chance to have some of my favorites, try some new dishes, and even have a new version of an old favorite.

Pasta e fagioli
The first time I had this was at Vicolo della Neve last Christmas. It made my list of favorites then, and is still near the top of the list. Vicolo della Neve was closed the first time we tried to go on this trip, but fortunately they were open again before we left so we could get our fix.



I tried two other things during dinner at Vicolo della Neve. The first was polpette, which are meatballs, and the other was ciambotta, which is a mixed vegetable stew. It's impossible to capture just how delicious each of these were. Clearly there were more things in the polpette than just meat, and more ingredients in the ciambotta than just vegetables. I have no idea what the other ingredients were, but if I grew up with these I would have been a much bigger fan of meatballs and vegetable stew!

Panzerotti
Serena's mother made these during the Christmas holiday last year. This was also on my list of favorites then (as 'calzoni'), and is worth another mention now. Apparently these are popular in South Jersey, although I suspect they wouldn't even come close to the ones Serena's mother makes. We had them one evening for dinner on the patio overlooking Salerno and the Mediterranean Sea. Bellissimo.


Panzerotti

Arrosticini
We had this traditionally Abruzzese dish at the dinner the night before Catia and Assagid's wedding. The dinner was at Catia's parents' house, and they made the arrosticini by hand. As far as I could tell, this was just grilled pieces of sheep on a skewer - no seasoning, no sauces. The simplicity, and the fact that the meat is extremely flavorful, is what makes this work. All you need is some bread and red wine, and you're all set. Buon appetito!

Home-made pizza
Growing up in the US, we made pizza from scratch a few times (when I say 'we', I of course mean my parents). I remember my mother (or was it my father?) rolling the dough out onto a circular metal pizza pan with a Tupperware cup, spreading the tomato sauce, covering it with mozzarella, and putting it into the oven. We didn't have pizza often, but when we did it was a real treat.

When I heard that Serena's brother Antonio would be making pizza, I had a feeling he would do things a little differently. For one thing, Serena's family has a coal/wood-burning oven outside that looks like the kind you see in a real pizzeria. Also, I've heard the water in Naples is supposed to make the pizza taste better.





The result was impressive - fresh, light, delicious pizza. It was a team effort (as far as I could tell... I was too busy eating them as they came out of the oven), and Antonio, Silvana, and Serena made several pizzas with different toppings. Serena's father told me that the 'house speciality' is topped with tomato, mozzarella, and arugula.


House speciality

Next time we'll have to make one 'Chicago style'!

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, August 27, 2007

Italy in August - Part 3: The Pictures

The pictures are now up! To see them, click on the date of the trip under the 'My New York Pics' sidebar.

Enjoy!

Labels: , , ,

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Italy in August - Part 1: Sagra

Arrived back in the States last Sunday after an amazing week with Serena and her family in Salerno and the surrounding area. I'm still working on getting the pictures up, but in the meantime I thought I would post some of the highlights of the trip. Here's the first chapter, about my sagra experience.

A sagra is a local festival with food that is often centered around a particular ingredient or item. During one of the evenings, we went to a couple of the sagre around Salerno. The first one was a little on the quiet side, but the second one - Festa del Boscaiolo - was exactly what I had imagined from Serena's description of a sagra. Boscaiolo means woodsman, so the food at this sagra was centered around things you can find in a forest. It was in a small town called Calvanico, and when Serena and I arrived with her brother Antonio and his girlfriend Silvana, we were met by a crowd of people walking among the stands for the wine (gratis), pasta, or panini. We bought tickets to try the 'Penne alla Boscaiola' and the 'Panino do' Cravunaro (patate e funghi)', grabbed a glass (plastic cup, actually) of wine and settled into the food lines. While we ate, we listened to a band playing folk music, and watched a couple of little kids dance like they were at a Grateful Dead concert. Maybe they had too much of the free wine...

Labels: , , , ,

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Bbq

Even though we only have a couple of Americans in the lab, putting on an 'American Bbq' isn't a problem when you have Costco just a short drive away. A pack of 24 burgers, some Nathan's hot dogs, and some Wonder Bread buns and you're all set. Throw in a bit of Pimms for a British touch, and we had the perfect recipe for an afternoon of excess.

Now I just have to do something with the leftover 15 ears of corn...

Labels: ,

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

New York Oddity #3 - hot subway tunnels, cold subway cars

It's definitely summer here - today is supposed to top out at 92F (33C), 'feeling like 98F (37C)'. I lived in London during the record-breaking heatwave a couple of years ago, when the temperature reached 100F (38C). Taking the Tube during the heatwave was disgusting, because the London Underground isn't air conditioned. Inevitably I wound up in a hot, crowded car (carriage) standing next to someone who hadn't showered, or at least smelled like they hadn't showered.

Hot days are rare in London, so having air conditioning in the Tube is only something you think about a few days a year, but here in New York it's a necessity. The subway cars are kept as cold as you would expect here in the States (i.e., very cold), but the subway platforms are often unbearably hot. Why? Two words - design flaw. Perhaps the engineer who designed the system should have spent more time learning how an air conditioner works!

Labels: , ,