Agnolotti
(Ah-gnaw-LOT-tee): A Piedmontese stuffed pasta which was born as
a way of using left-over meats, agnolotti are made differently depending
on the meat available, local habit and the preferences of the cook. To
prepare the stuffing, kinds of roasted and boiled meats are used separately
or in combination, and a cured meat is always included; escarole is the
vegetable of choice, although Swiss chard or spinach are sometimes used,
and rice cooked in milk is often added for a lighter texture. Agnolotti
can be served in a broth, tossed with melted butter and fresh sage, or
lavished with a truffle sauce or gravy from roasts.
Alla
carbonara (AHL-lah car-bo-NAH-rah): A sauce typically paired with spaghetti
in the region of Latium, whose capital is Rome, the name carbonara
comes from carbone, meaning coal or charcoal, and some believe it
was thought up by those who made charcoal up in the mountains. It
is prepared by sautéing cubed guanciale in lard; spaghetti
is cooked al dente, drained, and tossed into the pan with the warm guanciale.
Eggs and freshly grated Pecorino Romano are beaten until smooth in a large
serving bowl, then the spaghetti and guanciale are tossed in. Some versions
include garlic (cooked with the guanciale), or use butter or olive oil
rather than lard. Others use Parmigiano Reggiano instead of or along
with - the Pecorino, and add heavy cream to the egg and cheese. )
Alla
gricia (AHL-lah GREE-tch-ah): This sauce is the "white version of amatriciana another Latium
sauce that hails from the town of Amatrice in the province of Rieti; gricia
stayed closer to its tomato less roots, while amatriciana adopted a sporty
red coat. Guanciale is first sautéed in olive oil, then minced onion
is added and cooked until golden; a pinch of chili pepper or black pepper
gives a little kick. Some versions include garlic, which is cooked down
with the onion. When the spaghetti or bucatini (long, hollow spaghetti)
are al dente, they are drained, then tossed with the sauce and freshly
grated Pecorino Romano.
Amaretti
(Ah-mah-REHT-tee): These world-famous almond cookies probably originated
in Venice, though they are found throughout Italy, especially in the South.
The most familiar version is made with ground almonds (bitter almonds can
be added as well), fine sugar, and beaten egg white. Stored in an airtight
tin, they last for months. Most amaretti are hard in texture and are often
ground to a powder for use in other desserts. They are called amaretti
because they are flavored with bitter almonds (amaro means bitter),
which gives them their unique taste. Those from the Lombard town
of Saronno are the most famous of all. Look for amaretti in Italian
markets and gourmet stores, or make your own. There is, however,
a softer type of amaretto which more closely resembles a macaroon.
Baccalà
(Bah-cah-LAH): This is dried codfish, either salted or sundried, often
present in the menus from Veneto. A legacy of the Norwegians, and
found in the cuisine of many Mediterranean countries, it can be prepared
in a variety of ways beginning with a long soak in cold water (24
to 48 hours). The water should be frequently changed during the softening
process. Though baccalà can be fried in strips or even eaten
raw, the most familiar version involves cooking the cod very, very slowly
in milk with onion, garlic, parsley, and anchovy filets for at least four
hours. Baccalà mantecato, a classic recipe from Veneto, cooks the
cod slowly in water or milk, then drains, skins, and bones the fish
and pounds it into a paste, gradually adding olive oil, garlic, parsley,
salt, and pepper until the finished dish has a velvety quality but still
maintains a hint of fish texture.
Baccalà
in zimino (Bah-cah-LAH een tsee-ME-no): This Tuscan codfish recipe
is of ancient Arabic influence. In zimino denotes a dish cooked in butter
(although in Tuscany extra-virgin olive oil is used instead) with vegetables.
In some version onions, garlic, and parsley are sautéed in olive
oil, codfish (soaked in water and drained) is added and browned, then peeled
tomatoes are stirred in; the whole is cooked about ten minutes, then spinach
or Swiss chard is added and cooked a little longer. In other versions,
the vegetables are all cooked together, then the codfish (soaked
in water and drained) is placed on top and cooked fifteen or twenty minutes.
In Liguria, baccalà in zimino is prepared without tomatoes.
Bagna
cauda (BAH-gnah-COW-dah): Literally translated, "hot bath", this is
a typical sauce of Piedmont. Flavor from crushed, sliced, or minced garlic
is underscored by a generous amount of minced anchovies; these are
skillfully incorporated into olive oil and unsalted butter, which
are melted and kept hot at the table in a fondue pot. Raw vegetables like
radishes, peppers, cabbage, carrots, and cardoons are used for dipping
in this sauce, and cooked vegetables like turnips and potatoes are often
served as well. The original recipe called for walnut oil, and the
quality of the olive oil, now commonly used, is considered the key to a
successful sauce. The difficulty is in keeping the ingredients of the sauce
emulsified; many cooks feel the proportion of olive oil to butter is crucial.
Bagnèt
(Bah-GNEHT): In a dialect of Piedmont, this means sauce ("little bath").
A red and a green version are common, and both are used to accompany bollito
misto, a typically Piedmontese assortment of boiled meats. The red bagnèt
features tomatoes, carrots, celery, onions, and garlic that are cooked
for half an hour, to which wine vinegar and sugar are added; the sauce
is then simmered for two more hours. The green bagnèt is a piquant
blend of anchovies, hard-boiled egg yolks, parsley, garlic, capers, bread
that has been soaked in milk and squeezed dry, extra-virgin olive oil and
salt and pepper; some cooks add pickled gherkins, chopped onions, and lemon
juice in various amounts.
Batsoà
(Bah-tso-AH): A dish consisting of cubes of meat for pigs' feet, marinated
in vinegar, dipped in batter, then fried. Recipes for this Piedmontese
dish are not easily available, but it seems likely that the pigs' feet
are slowly cooked in the marinade (which can be flavored with aromatic
vegetables, spices, and white wine) for several hours before they
are cooled, cubed, dipped, and fried.
Bigoli
(BEE-go-lee): A type of pasta from the Veneto region in which the dough
(flour, eggs, melted butter, salt, milk) is worked until pliable, cut into
small stick shapes, and extruded through a special instrument called a bigolaro.
The resultant rough texture gives a surface that is excellent for absorbing
sauce (often based on duck stock and giblets). Egg noodles are a workable
substitute if a bigolaro cannot be found.
Bonet
(Bow-NEHT): This dessert is a specialty of many trattorie and home
cooks in Piedmont. First, a caramel is prepared and poured while hot into
the bottom of a baking dish. An egg custard typically flavored with crumbled
Amaretti di Saronno, rum, and melted chocolate is poured over the caramel
base, then the whole is baked in a water bath. While Amaretti di Saronno
are almost always incorporated into the egg custard, other flavors are
sometimes used instead of the chocolate and rum: Grand Marnier or Sambuca,
and puréed fruits like raspberry or peach, are among the variations.
Bottarga
(Boat-TAR-gah): Also called Sardinian caviar, bottarga is made with
salted and pressed mullet roe. It looks like a square brownish-orange salami
and keeps for months in the refrigerator if well wrapped. Bottarga is sliced
paper-thin and served with olive oil as an antipasto, and it flavors on
Sardinia's most famous pasta dishes, maccheroni alla bottarga.
Brovade
(Bro-VAH-deh): A peasant food that is virtually unknown outside the region
of Friuli-Venezia Giulia, based on sliced turnips macerated for a month
or so in grape skins. The turnips are most often served as an accompaniment
to meat dishes, but they can also be folded into pasta e fagioli or other
soups. Brovade sautéed with garlic, lard, salt, and pepper often
share the plate with cotechino friulano or musetto.
Bruz
(BROOTZ): Sometimes called bròs, this is a cheese preparation
typical of Piedmont and Liguria. It is made by mixing together left-over
bits of robiola or goat cheese, adding grappa or brandy, olive oil,
vinegar, chili pepper or peppercorns, and salt, then placing the mixture
in hermetically sealed terra-cotta pots to ferment and become spicy. The
fermented cheese is slathered on warm toasted bread and grilled polenta.
Buccellato
(Boo-chel-LAHT-toe): A traditional wreath-shaped sweet of Lucca in Tuscany,
buccellato was often prepared to celebrate confirmations. It is a simple
dessert, made of a leavened dough enriched with eggs, sugar, and butter
or lard; dried citron or Marsala are sometimes folded in. There are endless
variations of buccellato, and every baker has his or her special touch.
Some buccellati measure an impressive three feet in diameter (adding to
their celebratory impact), although most are quite a bit less imposing.
There is a Sicilian Christmas sweet called buccellato as well, but it is
different from the Tuscan dessert despite its spherical shape: it is stuffed
with dried figs or raisins and is more heavily spiced.
Burrida
(Boor-REE-dah): This Sardinian specialty is not a soup like the similarly
named buridda of Liguria, but rather a way for dressing fish from the shark
and skate family. The fish is poached in an aromatic broth with onion,
carrot, celery, parsley, and a wedge of lemon, then served with a flavorful
garlic sauce stretched with mild vinegar and thickened with crushed pine
nuts or walnuts.
Cacciucco
(Cah-CHOO-koh): A Tuscan stew made by Etruscans as long as three
thousand years ago, cacciucco is made either with fish and seafood or with
meat. In both cases, many varieties of meat or fish are cooked with vegetables
and given an especially sharp flavor by a generous quantity of garlic and
chili pepper. The seaside town of Livorno is famous for its fish and seafood
cacciucco.
Caciocavallo
(Cah-chow-cah-VAH-low): A type of hard cheese, typical of Sicily, somewhat
similar to provolone, which is made of whole milk, processed without cooking,
and aged for at least two months. Though it is often smoked, its flavor
is also affected by the amount of time it is aged. After two months the
mild quality of caciocavallo becomes increasingly assertive. One version,
made in Ragusa from a blend of cow's and lamb's milk, exhibits a strong
flavor after prolonged aging and is used, grated, in many typical Sicilian
dishes. The cheese originated in the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, and both
its rather bulbous shape and odd name have provoked speculation. Some of
the credulous believe the cheese was first made with horses' or asses'
milk. Some thought the cheeses were paired like saddlebags and transported
on horseback (each cheese weighs about four and a half pounds). It
could be the name had to do with an early cheese tax with a stamp in the
form of a horse. But most likely caciocavallo is simply a variant of a
very similar Turkish cheese called "qasqawal".
Canederli
(Cah-NEH-dehr-lee): A specialty of Trentino-Adige, these bread dumplings
are the Italian version of Austrian and German knödel. Often served
in rich meat broths, they are made with stale white or rye bread
moistened in milk and bound with eggs, and frequently flavored with parsley,
speck (a local cured ham), nutmeg, and caraway seeds. Liver is sometimes
add to make canederli al fegato.
Cannoli
(Cah-KNOW-lee): A Sicilian specialty, named for its pipelike shape and
intended as a treat at Carnevale, cannoli spread through Italy and were
eventually a fixture in almost every pastry shop. The elaborately flavored
dough is rolled and shaped around a metal cylinder, then deep fried. When
cool, the crisp cookie-like tubes are filled with a sweetened ricotta mixture
enriched with candied fruits and small bits of chocolate. In one classic
version the dough is made from flour, sugar, egg white, bitter cocoa, powdered
coffee, Marsala, brandy, salt, and a tiny amount of lard, and candied pumpkin
and orange are used in the filling. The origins of cannoli, also
called Turkish hats, can be traced back to the Saracens or even to pre-Christian
times. The tubelike shapes may have imitated the steles and menhirs common
to the Druids, and were thought to be fertility symbols.
Capocollo
(Cah-poe-COHL-oe): The name both of a cut of pork and a cured
meat prepared in central and southern Italy from the upper part of the
neck (collo means neck) and part of the shoulder of pork. Meat and
fat are chopped into large chunks, flavored differently depending
on the region, and cured for four months to one year. Initially,
capocollo was made with mountain pigs, whose meat was leaner than
that of farm-raised pigs. Umbria turns out the most characteristic
capocollo of all, flavoring it with wild fennel seeds or black pepper and
garlic. Calabria smokes its capocollo and uses more lean meat than
fat. Apulia's capocollo is also slightly smoked. Capocollo
is almost exclusively eaten raw, sliced thinly and presented as part
of an antipasto selection or with a variety of cured meats. Other
regions produce similar cured meats under different names: the most
famous is the coppa from Emilia, a prized meat, followed by scammarita
in Latium and mulette in Molise
Carbonnade
(cahr-boh-NAHD): This robust stew hails from the northern region
of Val d'Aosta but is also common in France, where it is called carbonade.
(In the rest of Italy, it goes by the name of carbonata.) Traditionally
carbonnade has been made with salted rather than fresh beef, for
it was one of the region's staples.Today fresh beef is used instead, but
the dish is salted heavily to retain its ancient character. To make carbonnade,
lean stewing beef is cut into strips, dredged in flour, and browned
in hot butter onions are stirred in and browned, the whole is deglazed
with a full-bodied red wine, and salt is stirred in. As the meat
cooks and the sauce reduces, more wine and a generous amount of pepper
are folded in; the end result is a rich, densely sauced stew best accompanied
by steaming hot polenta.
Carta
da musica (CAR-tah dah MOO-see-cah): Often confused with pane carasau
- a similar but thinner, crunchier bread this bread is a staple
in Sardinia and its name (literally, sheet of music) refers to its
parchment-like appearance. Its preparation is lengthy and requires
patience: a yeasted dough is prepared with durum flour and all-purpose
flour, left to rise, kneaded, repeatedly stretched with a rolling pin,
left to rise again, then shaped into very thin disks. The disks are
left to rise again, baked, cooled, and baked again until dry and
crunchy. Carta da musica keeps for months and has traditionally nourished
shepherds on their seasonal journeys as they accompanied their livestock
to faraway pastures.
Cartellate
(Car-tell-LAH-teh): A traditional Christmas sweet from Apulia, prepared
both at home and in bakeries, cartellate are also called carteddate in
dialect. Each family has its own recipe, but the common point is a yeasted
dough flavored with olive oil and wine, shaped like a flower, and fried
in hot olive oil. Once patted dry, cartellate are dipped into a hot
syrup (usually grape must, sometimes honey) and cooked until they float
to the surface. They are then dusted with cinnamon and confectioner's sugar
and served at room temperature.
Cassata
all'abruzzese (Cah-SAH-tah ahl ah-broo-TZEH-seh):This spectacular cake
was born in Sicily, where it took its name from a deep, rounded bowl called
quas at in Arabic (Sicily was under Arab rule for many centuries
and a number of its sweets were elaborated in the pastry shops of convents
after the Normans conquered the island). Abruzzo's cassata consists of
four layers of sponge cake imbibed with centerbe, each spread with
nougat, croquant, or chocolate pastry cream, and it is a specialty of the
town of Sulmona.
Cassola
(Cahs-SOLE-ah): For this old Roman Jewish dessert, fresh ricotta is
beaten with sugar and eggs, then cooked like a pancake in a hot pan with
a little olive oil until golden on both sides. Some people prefer
to cook the top side under the broiler rather than flipping the cassola.
When done, cassola is firm and brown on the outside, soft and creamy on
the inside. Some elaborate variations include cinnamon, cognac, or grated
lemon zest; one calls for rice cooked in milk, to give the cassola a firmer
consistency.
Castagnaccio
(Cah-stah-GNAH-choe): This is a Tuscan specialty made of chestnut flour
combined with sugar, water, and olive oil, then baked in a round pan. Rather
high and dense, castagnaccio is sometimes garnished with raisins and pine
nuts; it has been the traditional after-school snack for generations of
Tuscan children.
Cavatelli
(Cah-vah-TELL-lee): Apulia's classic pasta, made of durum flour and water,
is similar to the rascatieddi of Calabria, the saffron-tinted malloreddus
of Sardinia, and the gnucchiteddi of Sicily. Cavatelli are made of a hard
dough, traditionally worked a few minutes by hand and shaped into
one-inch long pieces with a long indentation along one side. They are sauced
differently in the various regions which prepare them; in Apulia, they
are often paired with arugula and a fresh tomato sauce. Industrial production
of cavatelli has grown significantly in recent years, so you should be
able to find some in upscale Italian markets across North America.
Cedro,
Cedrata (Tceh-DRAW, Tceh-DRAH-tah): This is a large fruit (weighing
at least two pounds) that resembles a lemon. It is cultivated in
Southern Italy and is thought to have come from Media, a large area of
ancient Persia. The harvest is between October and December, but the fruit,
prized for its aromatic peel and essential oils, is used year round. After
candying, the cedro peel is used in a wide variety of desserts, especially
in raised doughs, cakes and puddings. It is a classic ingredient in Christmas
Panettone, the Easter Dove, and is found in regional specialties like cassata
siciliana or panforte senese. The peel can also be macerated and used as
a flavoring in summer drinks. Flowers of the cedro produce an essence similar
to orange flower water which is used in syrups, candies, and
a range of desserts.
Centerbe
(Chent-HER-bear): Literally, "hundreds of herbs," centerbe is a digestive
from Abruzzo made by infusing a variety of medicinal herbs, some say as
many as one hundred (which explains the name), in alcohol. It has a very
high alcoholic content, usually 32 proof. Homemade centerbe can be made
by placing orange leaves, basil, chamomile, rosemary, sage, juniper,
cloves, cinnamon, toasted coffee beans, saffron, mint, lemon leaves,
mandarin leaves, thyme blossoms, and marjoram in a bottle, pouring alcohol
over the whole thing, and letting the mixture macerate, covered, for ten
days, then straining it and adding a sugar syrup. Aged at least one month,
centerbe is an excellent digestive.
Cialzons
(Tch-al-TZ-ONS): Stuffed pasta from Friuli-Venezia Giulia. There are numerous
versions, including a very famous one from Carnia - often called agnolotti
carnici despite the fact that their filling is very different from that
of other agnolotti. The
distinguishing
feature of cialzons, and what surprises those unaccustomed to Friulian
cooking, is the mingling of sweet and salty that is typical of so many
Friulian dishes. The filling is a combination of boiled spinach (although
plums and pears are common too), raisins, unsweetened cocoa or chocolate,
lemon zest, nutmeg, cinnamon, and eggs beaten with sugar; once the egg
pasta is filled with this mixture and boiled, the cialzons are layered
with smoked ricotta from Carnia, butter, sugar, and cinnamon. Some cialzons
are stuffed with sausage and potatoes, others still with mashed potatoes
flavored with mint, cinnamon, cognac, sugar, and Parmigiano.
Ciauscolo
(Tchah-OOS-coe-loe): The city of Norcia in Umbria is home to the norcini,
pork butchers who so perfected their trade that the word norcino has come
to mean butcher in central Italy. The norcini - and the Umbrians in general
- are very fond of pork, and they make an astounding number of specialties
based on it, including ciauscolo. This unusual salami is originally
from the Marche, but it is also prepared in Umbria, especially in the area
that borders the town of Macerata. It is made by kneading very finely ground
pork with a good quantity of fat until the mixture is very soft. The meat
is flavored simply with garlic, salt, and pepper, and it is often smoked.
Ciauscolo is meant to be spread onto bread rather than sliced, given its
soft consistency; some versions from outside the Marche include a preponderance
of pork liver, and are even closer to a pâté than to a salami.
Ciauscolo resembles the rillettes of France, which differ because they
are cooked while ciauscolo remains raw unless it is smoked.
Cibreo
(Chee-BREH-o): A Tuscan stew of chicken giblets, very popular in nineteenth
century cooking. According to Pellegrino Artusi's 1891 recipe, the giblets
are stewed in broth with butter, salt and pepper, then topped with a sauce
of egg yolk cooked with lemon juice, flour and broth. The origin of the
name cibreo is unclear, but over the years it has come to mean mixture
or combination.
Civet
(see-VEH): This braised game dish is a classic of northern Italian cuisine.
The favored meat for civet is hare, but venison, chamois, and young boar
are also common. The indispensable step in the preparation of civet is
the binding of the sauce with the animal's own blood; substituting pork
blood is a permissible variation even in classic recipes if the animal's
blood is unavailable. In some parts of Piedmont and Lombardy the same sort
of dish is called salmì.
Coda
alla vaccinara (COH-dah allah vah-CHEE-nah-rah): One of the most famous
dishes of Roman cooking is braised oxtail with celery, a typical example
of the robust cuisine of this pastoral area. The work of butchering animals
in Lazio was done by the vaccinari, or "cow men," who were compensated
for their labor with the animal's hide, including the tail and cheeks.
They created numerous dishes with the innards and frugal cuts of
the animals, rendering them savory with herbs, vegetables, and spices,
building an entire cuisine that can be savored to this day in Rome's traditional
restaurants. To prepare coda alla vaccinara, the oxtail is parboiled,
then simmered with celery, carrots, and herbs for two hours. Prosciutto,
onions, and more herbs are browned, and the drained oxtail is added and
cooked one hour longer with wine and tomato until the meat literally falls
off the bone; at the end of the cooking time, more boiled celery is stirred
in, and the whole is flavored with raisins, pine nuts, cinnamon,
and nutmeg.
Cotechino
(Co-TEH-kee-no): A sausage which was first produced in Emilia
and later in Veneto. Made from pork and lard, it was originally wrapped
in pigskin. A favorite of Rossini and very popular in Rome, cotechino is
most often served on lentils. Another classic preparation is
cotechino wrapped in prosciutto and a thin slice of beef, then stewed
slowly over sautéed onions in broth and Lambrusco. Cotechino
lasts very well, from three weeks in hot weather to three months
in the winter. When serving it unadorned, cotechino should
be steamed rather than boiled.
Cotognata
(Coe-toe-GNAH-tah): Somewhat similar to Turkish Delight, cotognata
is an ancient sweet, mentioned in Italian cookbooks as early as the fourteenth
century. It is made from a purée of quince cooked in water,
which is mixed with sugar, and then carefully cooked, until it obtains
a rosy color and becomes clear. A strip of foil is then oiled and
the cotognata is spread out on it to dry for two days (it can also
be dried in the oven). It is then cut into cubes or lozenges, rolled in
crystallized sugar, and stored in glass jars or wooden boxes with
each layer separated by oiled paper.
Crescionda
(Creh-SHON-dah): Eggs, amaretto cookies, milk, and unsweetened cocoa combine
to make a luscious spoon dessert called crescionda. Typical of Umbria,
crescionda has not traveled beyond its area of origin, and is little known
in other regions of Italy. Recipes for it are hard to find.
Cugnà
(Coo-GNAH): This is the Piedmontese term for cotognata, a quince and
sugar paste made in many regions of Italy (especially Sicily and Apulia).
In the Piedmont area, particularly Asti, cugnà is prepared at the
time of the wine harvest and is more complex than the cotognata from other
areas. It includes grape must, quince, walnuts, sugar, and various fresh
and dried fruits, and it is served more as a fruit relish than a sweet.
It is a perfect accompaniment to roasted meats and poultry.
Culatello
(Coo-lah-TEHL-lo): A very expensive and rare cured meat, culatello
is a product of Parma. Generally formed into an oval, and weighing as much
as seven pounds, culatello is made using a posterior muscle of a pig's
haunch (the same haunch that is used for prosciutto). Culatello is made
from very lean meat and requires, during its very long aging, a humid climate
- just the opposite of prosciutto, which has much more fat and needs to
mature in a very dry atmosphere. Since a genuine culatello ages for a year
and other types of sausage must be made from the discarded parts of the
haunch, the cost is considerable and some lesser grade culatello is found
- either made commercially by a faster process or using shoulder meat,
which is fattier. Once cut, the culatello must be wrapped in a damp cloth
to prevent it from drying out.
Diavolillo
(Dee-ah-voe-LEE-loe): Abruzzo and Molise's super-hot chili, or peperoncino
rosso, diavolillo nearly defines the cooking of these two regions. Since
Abruzzo and Molise are fond of spicy food, you'll find minced chili infusing
in local olive oil, ready to pour on soups, marinades for meat
or poultry, and most commonly to sauce spaghetti: spaghetti al diavolillo
is a signature dish of the area. Diavolillo is also dried and ground, flavoring
much of the food in Abruzzo and Molise.
Farro
(FAR-roh): Farro is an unhybridized grain which belongs to the wheat family,
grown for millennia in the Middle East and North Africa. True farro
(Triticum dicoccum) is not spelt (Triticum spelta) as is commonly believed:
it has two distinctive spikes and a fuller flavor. Today most of Italy's
farro is cultivated in Umbria, Latium, and Tuscany; the one from the Garfagnana
area of Tuscany is most famous for its pure, nutty taste. Farro is rich
in fiber, magnesium, and vitamins A, B, C, and E, and because of its low
gluten content, people who are gluten-intolerant can often eat farro without
difficulty. Farro flour can be used to make pasta and bread, but since
it is so low in gluten it should be combined with wheat flour or eggs;
a good combination for making pasta is farro flour and semolina.
Fettunta
(Feht-TUNE-tah): Born as a way of savoring the year's new olive oil, fettunta
is absolutely Tuscan in its simplicity: a slice of coarse country bread
toasted until golden and rubbed with a peeled clove of garlic, then doused
with abundant olive oil and sprinkled with salt. Literally, fettunta comes
from fetta unta, or "oily slice."
Frico
(FREE-co): Made with Montasio, the famed cow's milk cheese, frico is
a dish that has sustained generations of shepherds and woodsmen. Today
it is a traditional antipasto in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, and every valley
in Carnia has its own version of it. The basic recipe for frico is nothing
more than slices of aged Montasio fried in hot butter, oil, or lard until
crisp and golden on both sides. Some versions have the cheese fry slowly
over a bed of caramelized onions. Frico can also be served with fried eggs.
The name frico comes from the Latin frigere, for frying.
Friselle
(Free-SELL-eh): Also called freselle or frisedde, these are large round
breads with a hole in the center typical of Apulia. After the first baking,
they are sliced in half horizontally and baked a second time until dry
and crispy; before eating, they are soaked in or sprayed with water until
they become soft again. Friselle are a wonderful accompaniment to salads
and can be eaten with any meal; they are often served drizzled with extra-virgin
olive oil and topped with tomatoes and oregano or basil . Because they
are dry, friselle can be stored for long periods of time.
Granita
(Grah-KNEE-tah): A Sicilian specialty, granita was originally made
with the pressed snow from Mt. Etna that was kept in caves and scooped
up in the summer. Closer to sherbet than ice cream, granitas are meant
to be drunk. A simple sugar syrup is combined with a liquid flavoring,
most often lemon juice or coffee. Much less sugar is used than in sherbet.
Granita is beaten or whisked to break up the crystals which form as it
freezes. The texture remains somewhat grainy. Granita is served in tall,
narrow glasses, often topped with whipped cream. Since a granita melts
rather rapidly, it is eaten with a spoon as well as drunk.
Gröstl:
A combination of potatoes and onions, typically cooked in a skillet
with beef, speck, or (less frequently) poultry. There are numerous variations
on gröstl. Some are flavored with garlic, others with chives,
oregano, or cumin. Gröstl is often served as a cake to be cut into
wedges, either hot or at room temperature, and is an ingenious way to use
leftover meat in Trentino-Alto Adige.
Guanciale
(Gwahn-TCHAH-leh): The meat from the cheek of a pig, guanciale (from guancia,
meaning cheek) is rubbed lightly with salt and freshly ground black pepper
or chili pepper, then cured for three months. It is very common in the
cooking of central Italy, particularly Latium, where it flavors numerous
pasta sauces (see alla carbonara and alla gricia). Since it is rarely available
outside Italy, pancetta - an Italian cured meat similar to bacon but not
smoked - can be used instead. Bacon will do in a pinch.
Gubana
(Goo-BAH-nah): A sweet in the shape of a spiral or wreath commonly
baked in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, gubana is often confused with presnitz.
A version made in the town of Cividale boasts a puff pastry made with egg
and brandy and a filling of nuts, almonds, raisins, pine nuts, candied
citron and orange, Malaga wine, stale bread cooked in butter, sugar, egg
yolks, and beaten egg whites. In Trieste, the pastry dough is made only
with flour, melted butter or oil, and a little water. Other cities prepare
a yeasted sweet dough and a filling that also includes prunes and chocolate.
Gulasch
(GOO-lah-sh): One of the most noted Hungarian dishes, gulasch was originally
a soup of thinly sliced meat cooked with onions. Friuli-Venezia Giulia,
as part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, incorporated gulasch into its cooking
repertoire. Today, gulasch is most often made by sweating onions in lard,
then adding beef cubes and browning them lightly; a little water or broth
is poured in to prevent the meat from drying out, and the whole is cooked
until the meat is tender. Tomato is sometimes stirred in, and paprika or
chili pepper add a little bite. Polenta is a frequent partner to gulasch.
Indugghia
(Een-DOO-ghee-ah): Sometimes called 'ndugghia or nnuglia, indugghia is
a typical Calabrese sausage made with a combination of the meat, lard,
liver, and lungs of pork. It is a close relative of the famous andouille
sausage of France, which became fashionable in that country much later.
Indugghia is often served as part of an antipasto or with a selection of
other meats and sausages.
Kaiserscharrn:
A simple dessert from Trentino-Alto Adige, made both in restaurants and
at home by filling crespelle (thin crêpes) with stewed fruit, cutting
them into thin strips, and serving them hot with fresh cream. Given the
region's numerous heirloom apple varieties, kaiserscharrn are often stuffed
with local apples; prunes and cherries are traditional fillings as well.
Kaminwürzen:
This is a smoked pork sausage from Trentino-Alto Adige, usually served
accompanied by an assortment of cured meats, sauerkraut, and steamed potatoes
for a filling, hearty main course.
Knodel:
(Canederli in Italian) These dumplings evolved as a way of using leftover
bread in Trentino-Alto Adige. Most versions begin with rye or dark bread
that is cubed and soaked in milk, ater, or broth, then enriched by speck,
liver (leberknodel), or cheese. Herbs and spices are folded into the batter
for additional flavor, and eggs usually hold it together. Knodel are served
as accompaniments to hearty, flavorful stews like gulasch or boiled
meat, or as a filling garnish for clear broths. Most recipes call for poaching
the knodel in water for a few minutes, although some suggest boiling them
directly in the broth in which they are to be served, despite the fact
that they tend to make the broth cloudy. Schwarze knodel (black knodel)
are among the most famous variations, a combination of rye bread and buckwheat
flour with pancetta, onion, leek, and garlic.
Krapfen:
In every Italian region except German-speaking Trentino-Alto Adige the
word refers to sweet yeasted fritters, more often than not filled with
vanilla or lemon-scented pastry cream or a simple fruit jam and dusted
with confectioner's sugar. Since krapfen simply means fritter in German,
without reference to the filling, the various types are identified
in German-speaking areas by a modifier such as mohnkrapfen, meaning poppy
seed fritter. It seems that krapfens were named in the late 1600s by a
woman named Krapft, who invented the pillowy fritters in her own kitchen.
Leberknodelsuppe:
A filling soup that combines a rich meat broth with leberknodel (see knodel
). It is a traditional first course in Trentino-Alto Adige.
Maccheroni
alla chitarra (Mah-keh-ROE-nee ahl-lah key-TAHR-rah): This is the quintessential
pasta dish of Abruzzo. Fresh pasta is made using semolina flour and eggs,
rolled thin and pushed through steel wires arranged in a wooden frame.
The pasta is typically served with a chili pepper-laced tomato sauce or
a ragù of lamb or beef. Until 1860, maccheroni alla chitarra did
not have their present shape; it was then that the tool used to make them
- called a chitarra because it resembles a guitar - was created in the
province of Chieti.
Malloreddus
(MAHL-lo-red-doos): These tiny Sardinian dumplings resemble cavatelli
and are often called gnocchetti sardi. They are made of semolina flour
and warm water tinted and flavored with saffron, shaped into inch-long
pieces, and rolled over a sieve (in Sardinia they use a tool called ciurili,
or a piece of lined glass) to form their characteristic grooves and indentation.
Malloreddus are usually served with butter and Pecorino.
Merca
(MER-cah): Another Sardinian way to conserve fish, merca is a type
of salami made of gray mullet that is first cooked in salted water, then
pressed and wrapped in an aromatic herb called salicornia that grows in
the Cabras swamps. The water in which the fish is cooked is more or less
salty depending on how long one intends to keep the final product.
Murseddu
(Moor-SEH-doo): Also known as suffrittu or mursiello (especially in the
towns of Reggio Calabria and Cosenza), murseddu is among the most notable
of Calabria's dishes. It is an old specialty that combines tripe cut into
thin, longstrips with slices of calf's liver and pork liver, red wine,
bread dough, tomatoes, chili pepper, aromatic herbs, and olive oil. The
whole is cooked very gently in lard until tender, and is often tucked
into warm pitta, a yeasted Calabrese flatbread, as a hearty filling. In
its most refined version, it is baked in a deep pie dish, whereas in trattorias
the more time-consuming bread dough is replaced with Spanish almuerzo,
or breakfast, and to this day, Calabrese farmers eat a heaping portion
of murseddu before setting out for a day in the fields.
Muset
(Moo-SEHT): This elongated, conical sausage is made of pork, lard,
rind, and jowl (muso means jowl, hence the Furlan name muset or the Italian
musetto), and resembles cotechino. Spices used include cinnamon, coriander,
nutmeg, chili, and pepper. A little wine - usually Tocai, Picolit, or Marsala
- is also added. The meat for musetto is ground more finely than for cotechino.
Typically prepared during the chilly winter months in Friuli-Venezia Giulia,
musetto is aged for a maximum of four to eight weeks before it is cooked.
Murstica
(MOO-stee-cah): A favored antipasto in Calabria, mustica is otherwise known
as ìCalabrese caviarî or rosamarina. It's prepared with newborn
anchovies (called bianchetti) that have been salted, strewn with black
pepper or chili, and packed in olive oil to be kept for months in glass
or enameled terracotta jars. The name is derived from the ancient Arab
jug made of clay called mustica, also a hint of Arab occupation in Calabria
centuries ago.
Ombra,
ombretta (OM-bra, om-BREHT-tah): A small glass of white wine from the
Veneto region. Drunk for breakfast in colder areas, an ombra is basically
a social drink, perfect for stimulating conversation. The origin of the
name, which means shadow in Italian, has its roots in a colorful episode
of Venetian history. The shadow in question is that of the bell tower of
Saint Mark's Cathedral, cast over Piazza San Marco. Sprawling in the cool
arc of its shade was one of the city's favorite wine bars, a popular destination
on hot days, where many chilled glasses of wine were poured to the barman's
thirsty customers. Over the years, the expression to get "a shadow" simply
became a euphemism for the consumption of a small glass of wine.
Orecchiette
(Oreh-key-ET-tay): This ear-shaped pasta (orecchietta means little ear)
is made throughout Southern Italy, both at home and industrially. The dough
is made of durum flour and water and is quite hard. The indentation and
grooves in orecchiette make them the ideal vehicle for sauces. They are
most often paired with rapini (or broccoli raab), but are also often served
with a lamb ragù or tomato sauce. There are half a dozen colorful
names for orecchiette in other regions: cicatelli, chiangarelle, stacchiodde,
strascinati (dragged), pociacche and pestazzuole; in Rome they are called
orecchini (earrings).
Pandolce
(Pahn-DOLE-cheh): Literally translated, "sweet bread." Pandolce is a Genoese
sweet very similar to Milanese Panettone, but denser. Like Panettone, it
is a traditional Christmas dessert. The batter for pandolce is made of
eggs, butter, sugar and flour, enriched by candied fruit and pine nuts,
and perfumed with fennel or anise seeds and orange flower water.
Pane
carasau (PAH-neh car-ahs-AH-OO): See carta da musica.
Pane
frattau (PAH-neh fraht-TAH-OO): A Sardinian dish made with carta da musica
soaked briefly in boiling water and topped with crushed tomatoes, grated
Pecorino, and a poached egg.
Panforte
(Pahn-FOR-teh): A traditional sweet from Siena, panforte literally
means strong bread (pan means bread and forte means strong), because the
batter from which it is made is firm. It has been prepared almost the same
way since the thirteenth century. Toasted walnuts, almonds, and hazelnuts
are stirred into hot honey caramel, flavored with candied fruit, cocoa,
cinnamon, vanilla, cloves, and nutmeg, and bound with a little flour. The
batter is poured into a round pan lined with communion wafers, dusted
with confectioner's sugar, and baked. Panforte can be conserved for some
months if well covered.
Pan
pepato (Pahn peh-PAH-toe): This is an ancient sweet with the heavily
spiced character of medieval cuisine. Almonds, hazelnuts, walnuts, pine
nuts, citron, candied orange, raisins, honey, cocoa and a little flour
are combined with ground cinnamon, coriander, and nutmeg. The batter is
poured into a round pan and baked. Pan pepato can be kept for months. Freshly
ground pepper appears in some versions of pan pepato, hence its name: pepato
means peppery.
Panzanella
(Pahn-zah-NELL-la): This is the Tuscan name for a rustic dish made
of stale bread and raw tomatoes dressed with extra-virgin olive oil and
wine vinegar. Basil leaves are folded in, and purple onion, cucumber, and
celery are sometimes added. The bread becomes imbibed with the juices of
the tomato and fragrant with the olive oil. There are similar salads all
over Italy: the caponata dei marinai of Sicily, featuring the local bread,
tomatoes, anchovies and oregano; the cappon magro of Liguria, a complex
bread creation enriched with fish, seafood, hard-boiled eggs and
a multitude of vegetables; and another Ligurian specialty, capponalda,
made with soaked bread, anchovies, capers, and choppd olives. Panzanella,
like all other bread salads, was born as a way of using leftover
bread.
Papassine
(Pah-pah-SEE-neh): These crumbly Sardinian sweets are typically prepared
for Easter, Christmas, and on the first of November for All Saints' Day.
They are made with flour, dried fruit, eggs, sugar, lard, and orange, and
variously flavored and shaped depending on where they are made within
the island.
Pappa
al pomodoro (PAHP-pah ahl po-mo-DO-ro): The quintessential country
dish and one of Tuscany's most famous soups, pappa al pomodoro is made
of stale bread and ripe tomatoes, flavored with garlic, onions, and basil.
When the soup is served, each bowl is drizzled with extra-virgin olive
oil.
Pappardelle
(Pah-par-DEHL-leh): Long, flat, wide pasta typical of Tuscany, but also
prepared in Umbria and other regions. The word pappardelle comes
from the Tuscan word pappare, meaning to eat. Pappardelle are usually
topped with hearty meat-based sauces; Tuscany's most famous pappardelle
and sauce coupling is pappardelle sulla lepre, featuring a robust hare
ragù.
Passatelli
(Pahs-sah-TEHL-lee): A traditional first course in the neighboring
regions of Romagna and the Marche, passatelli are so called because they
are passed through a special iron that looks like a slotted spoon mounted
on two horizontal handles. In Romagna, the dough is made with fresh bread
crumbs, eggs, Parmigiano, and a grating of nutmeg and lemon zest; beef
marrow can be used to make passatelli particularly rich. In the Marche,
passatelli include ground beef, and the lemon is omitted. The dough is
placed on the counter, the passatelli iron is pressed over it, and the
dough makes its way up the iron's many small holes, ready to drop into
hot broth. Once the passatelli float to the top of the broth, they are
removed with a slotted spoon. Freshly grated Parmigiano is the classic
accompaniment, although Pecorino is also common in the Marche.
Piadina
(Pyah-DEE-nah): Romagna's famous flatbread has been emblematic of the
region since the Middle Ages. Also called piada or pié, the name
piadina derives from the word piadena, a wide bowl or flat, low vase.
Piadine are in fact round and flat bread doughówhich traditionally
does not include yeast, although recent versions call for itóis
made by kneading flour, lard, salt, and wate together. Once the dough is
smooth and firm, it is left to rest for thirty minutes, at which point
it is ready to be cut and rolled out thin, then cooked over a hot surface.
Piadine are always served when soft and pliable, never dried out, and they
commonly accompany prosciutto, cheese, or other antipasti.
Pizzoccheri
(Pee-TZOH-keh-ree): These thick tagliatelle are prepared in Valtellina,
a northern valley in Lombardy, from a mixture of buckwheat flour and all-purpose
flour. They are boiled, then layered with blanched cabbage, sautéed
onions and garlic, topped with a local cheese and dotted with butter.
Traditionally made only by hand in the area where they originated,
pizzoccheri are now produced industrially and sold throughout Italy, and
in specialty stores across North America.
Polenta
e Osei (PAW-lent-tah a oh-SAY): Traditionally thrush, lark, and other
small songbirds (called "osei" in Veneto's dialect) were skewered
and roasted, then served piping hot over polenta. A legend of the area
claimed that polenta arrived in the world one day between the rivers of
Oglio and Brenta and that when small spit-roasted birds were added to the
dish it became food for the gods. This classic is now prohibited because
the birds were killed in a slow, painful way, but the Venetians keep the
concept alive in a dish called polenta e oseleti scapai (polenta and the
birds that got away) made with pieces of veal, chicken liver, bacon, mushrooms,
and fresh sage leaves which are buttered, skewered, and oven roasted.
Porchetta
(Pork-EHT-tah): This pork dish is not to be confused with roast
suckling pig. A whole young pig, weighing about 100 pounds, is deboned
through two incisions along its back and thighs. Once deboned, the pig
is stuffed with a mixture of salt, black pepper, wild fennel, and garlic.
The entrails are washed, cooked, and seasoned with these same aromatic
ingredients, then used as a stuffing. The incisions are sewn shut and the
pig is slowly roasted in a wood-burning oven, set atop a large roasting
pan which catches the juices as they melt in the heat. One of the characteristics
of this dish is the pork's crispy skin. Porchetta can be eaten warm, but
it is mostly savored at room temperature or cold. Originally from
Umbria, the preparation of porchetta spread into Lazio, where it is made
mostly for feasts, served in restaurants, or sold in shops.
Presnitz
(PREH-snits): Made much like gubana but with a dough that contains
no liqueur (water is used instead), presnitz is traditionally served at
Easter in Friuli-Venezia Giulia (particularly Trieste) and is a Hungarian
legacy. Shaped into a wreath like gubana, this dessert keeps for a long
time.
Prosciutto
Toscano (proh-SHOOT-toh toh-SKAH-noh): The memorable prosciutto of
Tuscany, produced especially in an area called the Casentino near
Florence and Arezzo, is quite different from the more famous Prosciutto
di Parma. Typically smaller in size, saltier, and chewier, it is
generously flavored with black pepper and aged for eight to ten months,
somewhat less than Prosciutto di Parma. Unavailable in North America,
it can be savored only locally.
Ratafià
(Rah-tah-FEE-AH): A sweet liqueur made from bitter cherries (amarene, from
amaro, or bitter) in Abruzzo, ratafià is traditionally prepared
with summer-sweet cherries at their peak. Every June, the cherries are
stemmed, dried in the sun for a day, then macerated in red wine (preferably
Montepulciano d'Abruzzo) with cinnamon and vanilla for forty days
in the sun. The liquor is then strained, the cherries squeezed to extract
the most flavor, and sugar and alcohol are stirred in; the longer ratafià
ages the better it is. Other regions too make ratafià, and Piedmont
is one of its biggest producers. Apricots, oranges, plums, walnuts,
lemons, and marasca can also be used to make the liqueur.
Ribollita
(Ree-boel-LEE-tah): The very name of this Tuscan soup says it all:
literally translated, it means "reboiled," and reflects how this ancient
soup came about. Leftovers of thick Tuscan minestrone (full of Swiss
chard, Savoy cabbage, white beans, potatoes, leeks, tomatoes and onions)
are reheated, then layered over stale bread and drizzled with the finest
extra-virgin olive oil. In some versions, the leftover soup is simply poured
into an ovenproof casserole, topped with a layer of thinly sliced onions
and drizzled with olive oil, then baked at 375o until the onions form a
light crust. There is some disagreement as to whether ribollita originally
hails from Florence or Siena, but everyone who tastes it agrees that it
is one of Tuscany's great soups.
Robiola
(Row-BEEOH-lah): This cheese hails back to ancient times. Originally
from the Valsassina and other pre-alpine valleys, it is also produced in
the plains of Piedmont and Lombardy. Made mostly from cow's milk
(sheep's and goat's milk were more common decades ago), robiola is mild
and buttery when fresh (aged only 8 to 10 days) and sharper when matured
(aged 40 to 50 days). Fresh robiola is used in numerous dishes both sweet
and savory, from pies to pasta to antipasti, and is sometimes marinated
in extra-virgin olive oil with herbs and spices.
Rocciata
(Roe-TCHA-tah): A pastry shaped like a strudel filled with a rich fruit
stuffing, rocciata is common in the pastry shops of Umbria.
Rosolio
(Roh-SOE-leo): One of the glories of liqueur-making, little known outside
Italy, is rosolio, made by macerating rose petals in an alcoholic infusion.
Legend has it that a mysterious physician who worked in fifteenth-century
Italy had prescribed an alcohol-based treatment to one of his female patients
and, in an attempt to mask the unpleasant flavor of the alcohol, the good
doctor added honey and rose oil to the mixture, thereby inventing rosolio.
Rosolio is moderately alcoholic, between 22% and 24%, with a sweet taste
and delicate bouquet that make it an excellent dessert liqueur.
Sagne
Chine (SAH-nieh KEY-neh): This lasagna, which is generously stuffed
with a flavorful combination of ground pork, fresh peas, diced or shredded
mozzarella, mushrooms, artichokes, and sliced hard-boiled eggs, is the
crowning glory of traditional Calabrese cookery. It is a feast dish like
few others which requires time, patience, and a skilled hand. During the
cold autumn and winter months, when greens are hard to come by and fresh
peas and artichokes are out of season, the vegetables are sometimes substituted
by locally made salami or crumbled sausage. Sagne in Calabrese means lasagne
(plural of lasagna).
Saltimbocca
(Sahl-teem-BOE-cah): Literally, "jump in the mouth," an indication
of just how good this classic Roman dish is. Slices of very young milk-fed
veal are topped with prosciutto and a leaf of sage (held together by a
toothpick), sautéed quickly in golden butter, and deglazed with
white wine or a little water. Sometimes saltimbocca are rolled into plump
little bundles.
Sanguinaccio
(sahn-gwee-NAH-choh): This pork blood sausage is a specialty of northern
Italy. There are numerous variations of sanguinaccio. Val d'Aosta
calls it boudin and mixes in boiled potatoes, lard, and spices, and sometimes
combines the pork blood with ox blood. In Friuli bread crumbs, marjoram,
cracklings, lemon zest, and garlic are folded in. Tuscans call it biroldo,
buristo, or mallegato, depending on the area. Abruzzo adds cooked must,
pine nuts, candied citron, walnuts, sugar, and chocolate to the ingredients,
and the Neapolitans make it into a rich, thick cream to be eaten cold with
ladyfingers. In Sardinia, where it is made in a similar fashion, sanguinaccio
is eaten after it is warmed lightly on the grill.
Sardenaira
(Sar-deh-NAH-ee-rah): A traditional Ligurian focaccia, sardenaira was created
by Admiral Andrea Doria and was initially called Pizza dell'Andrea. A simple
olive oil-enriched yeasted dough is prepared and allowed to rise, topped
with a cooked mixture of onions, tomatoes, and basil, flavored with anchovies,
garlic and olives, then baked. In some variations, the onions are left
raw and capers are added to the topping.
Schlutzkrapfen:
Fresh pasta filled with sauerkraut, potatoes and herbs, or cheese, a typical
first course in Alto Adige. Not all schlutzkrapfen are fried: some are
boiled.