Praise indeed ?????

12/10/2011 - 10:43

I saw this comment from a Californian news item............Emerging Cuisines from Emerging Markets - As the world grows smaller, the selection of cuisines grows larger and guests’ palettes are begging to try new flavours. Executive Chef Thierry Papillier of Four Seasons Hotel Cairo at Nile Plaza notes the varied regions of China, Brazil and India as having an increasing influence over restaurant concepts and menus; Chef Victor Casanova of Culina, Modern Italian at Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills says to keep an eye out for interesting flavours coming out of Le Marche region of Italy.He must have been around our village...............don't tell anyone !!!S

Comment

My neighbour showed me where to pick wild chicory, I cannot remember the dialect word, but it was absolutley delicious and so digestable....miles better than spinch....but not telling where it is!, and the fungi pickers have been down our lane again, but a bit hesitant to try the mushrooms.

I think my neighbour calls it a very similar name - sounds like 'cheekoria', with the emphasis on the 'o' (as in orange) bit. He farms around our place and at times his wife (and others) come down and dig up baskets full of (what I think) is weeds, they say to me just take them, but weeds look all the same to me. I occasionally see  cars parked up near the fields on the Piane de Falerone road with lots of people walking around with baskets picking greens out of the fields. They know what to do around here ! S  

The fact(S) are firstly that Italian cuisine doesn't exist, there are a number of VERY different cuisines from different parts of the country.Where cultural influences from outside are more tangible like the big cities not only is there a huge variety of different restaurants (from different countries) ethnic food,from different regions of italy and you might be suprised to see how oriental and middle eastern spices are VERY present in modern cuisine for example in Milano.For the same reasons  on the opposite side deep in rural Italy where large scale immigration is inexistant,contact with outside cuisine also ,areas with very traditional agricultural values tend to eat what they've always eaten.I suppose in remote and rural parts of the U.K. it wouldn't be so much different.I think you would be very suprised to see what inroads foreign cuisines have made in Italian cooking especially over the last ten years.In fact the top three chefs at the moment in Italy are all of German origin, tempura has become a regular "italian" dish,  cous cous using north african spices is considered a "traditional" dish in south western Sicily..the list is very long..

sebastaino, I tend to agree with your view, I suspect that the Chef Victor Casanova (that praises the food) may be a Marchigiano ? I havn't seen (as yet) much sign of 'tempura becoming a regular "italian" dish' other than at the nearby Japanese restaurant ........... buon appetito ! S