Italian Cuisine
RESOURCE PAGE




 

 

Italian Cuisine in the news

Academia Barilla "Italian Food Lovers" Blog Wins Best of the Blog Award Within One Week of its Launch --- ... 

[Press Release] PR Web via Yahoo! News - Jan 12 4:00 AM
Parma, Italy (PRWeb) January 12, 2007 -- Gourmet food blog Italian Food Lovers was awarded its first blog award only one week after its launch by a popular news source from Sault Sainte Marie, Ontario, Canada.
Academia Barilla "Italian Food Lovers" Blog Wins Best of the Blog Award Within One Week of its Launch --- ... 
[Press Release] PR Web - Jan 12 12:30 AM
Italian Food Lovers Blog is honored with ceremonial award for its work in promoting gourmet Italian food and traditional Italian culture. City of Sault Sainte Marie, Ontario, Canada news source heralds Italian Food Lovers blog and the Barilla family as "Ambassadors of traditional Italian Gastronomic Culture". (PRWeb Jan 12, 2007) Post Comment:Trackback URL: ...

LIDIA'S ITALIAN TABLE: Pan-seared steak takes veggie sauce 
The Myrtle Beach Sun News - Jan 10 12:08 AM
One of the marvels of Italian cuisine is that vegetables are an integral part of the majority of dishes. Not only are they the "contorni" - side dishes - but they also play a prominent role in most pasta sauces as well as meat and fish preparations

She definitely cooks: Gloucester's Sue Favazza is known for her Italian dishes and delicious cookies 
Gloucester Daily Times - Jan 11 6:53 AM
"Do you cook? Or do you eat?" Gloucester resident Sue Favazza asks when she meets someone for the first time. Favazza definitely cooks. She's known in Gloucester for her fine Italian dishes.

- Itailan Cuisine

Here is an article on Italian Cuisine.

This article is part
of the Cuisine series
Preparation techniques Itailan Cuisine and cooking items
Techniques - Utensils
Weights and measures
Ingredients and types of food

Food
Vegetarian cuisine
Herbs and Italain Cuisine Spices
Sauces - Soups - Desserts
Cheese - Pasta - Bread - Tea
Other ingredients

Regional Itallian Cuisine cuisines
Asia - Europe - Italina Cuisine Caribbean
South Asian - Latin America
Mideast - North America - Africa
Other cuisines...
See also:
Famous chefs - Itaian Cuisine Kitchens - Meals
Wikibooks: Cookbook

Italian cuisine is extremely varied: the country of Italy was Itlaian Cuisine only unified in 1861, and its cuisines reflect the cultural variety of its regions Ialian Cuisine and its diverse history (with culinary influences from Greek, Roman, Norman and Arab civilizations). Italian cuisine is Ittalian Cuisine regarded as a prime example of the Mediterranean diet, and is imitated all over the world.

To a certain extent there is really no such thing as Italian cuisine in the way that one usually understands national cuisines. Each area has its own proud specialties, primarily at Regional level, but also even at Provincial level. Italian cuisine is not only highly regionalised, it is very seasonal. The high priority placed on the use of fresh, seasonal produce distinguishes the cuisine of Italy from the imitations available in most other countries.

Contents

  • 1 Regional differences
    • 1.1 Northern versus Southern Italian cooking
  • 2 Traditional menu structure
  • 3 Holiday Cuisine
  • 4 Regional cuisines
  • 5 See also
  • 6 External links

Regional differences

Roman cuisine, for example, uses a lot of pecorino (sheep milk cheese) and offal (called frattaje in Rome), while Tuscan cooking features white beans, meat, and unsalted bread. Pizza also varies across the county, the crusts of pizzas in Rome are thin as crackers, while Neapolitan and Sicilian pizza is thicker. The influence of Northern Italian cuisine can be seen in French and German cuisines. Piemonte and Lombardia each grow their own different kind of rices, which are used to make risotto. The North of Italy is the home of polenta. Emilia-Romagna is known for lasagna and tortellini (stuffed pasta), mortadella, prosciutto, and parmigiano. Naples (Napoli) is the home of pizza, mozzarella and pastries (babà, sfogliatelle). Calabria's cuisine uses a lot of hot pepper for its distinctive salami (that are common, in several varieties, throughout the country) and uses capsicum. Sicily is the home of gelato (ice cream) and granita but its cuisine also has many influences from Arab cuisine (lemon, pistachio) and also includes fish (tuna, swordfish). Sardinia is famous for lamb and pecorino. Every province (sub-division of a Region) has proper desserts and many other recipes.

Northern versus Southern Italian cooking

As a general rule, northern and southern Italian cuisines are differentiated primarily by the cooking fat and style of pasta commonly used. Northern Italian cuisine (other than on the coast) favors butter, cream, polenta, Mascarpone, Grana Padano, and Parmigiano cheeses, risotto and fresh egg pasta, while Southern Italian cuisine tends toward Mozzarella, Caciocavallo and Pecorino cheeses, olive oil and dried pasta. Southern Italian cuisine also makes greater use of the ubiquitous tomato. Wines of great renown are produced especially in northern Italy (such as Piedmont's Asti Spumante) but also in southern Italy (just to name one, Marsala).

Traditional menu structure

A traditional Italian menu consists of:

  1. L'antipasto - hot and cold appetizers
  2. Il primo ("First Course"), usually consists of a hot dish like pasta, risotto, gnocchi, polenta or soup. There are usually abundant vegetarian options.
  3. Il secondo ("Second Course"), the main dish, usually fish or meat (Pasta is never the main course in a traditional menu). Traditionally veal is the most commonly used meat, at least in the north, though beef has become more popular since World War II and wild game is very popular, particularly in Tuscany.
  4. Il contorno ("Side Dish") may consist of a salad or vegetables. A traditional menu features salad after the main course.
  5. Il dolce ("Dessert")
  6. Il caffè ("Coffee") (espresso)
  7. Liquors/liqueurs (grappa, amaro, limoncello) sometimes referred to as ammazzacaffè ("Coffee killer")

One notable and often surprising aspect of an Italian meal, especially if eaten in an Italian home, is that the primo, or first course, is usually the more filling dish, providing most of the meal's carbohydrates, and will consist of either risotto or pasta (both being excellent sources). The secondo, or second course, which in French or British cuisine really is the main course, is often scant in comparison. The exception to this tends to be in Tuscany, where a traditional menu would see soup served as a primo and a hefty meat dish as the secondo.

Holiday Cuisine

Italians celebrate each holiday with a different cuisine, each in turn having a specific meaning.

La Festa di San Giuseppe (St. Joseph's Day in English) is the feast day of St. Joseph. In Sicily, many Italian-American communities, and other Italian communities worldwide, thanks are given to St. Joseph ("San Giuseppe" in Italian) for preventing a famine in Sicily during the Middle Ages. The fava bean was the crop which saved the population from starvation, and is a traditional part of St. Joseph's Day altars and traditions. Other customs celebrating this festival include wearing red clothing, eating a Sicilian pastry known as a Zeppole and giving food to the needy.

During the Christmas season, Italians will celebrate the birth of Jesus with some variation of the Feast of the Seven Fishes where seven different meatless seafood dishes are served on Christmas Eve.

Regional cuisines

  • Sicilian cuisine
  • Food of Southern Puglia
  • Cuisine of Abruzzo: This area is predominantly mountains with some small valleys, and sheepherding, farming and livestock were all traditional ways of living. As such, pork, sheep, and goat are the main meats eaten in Abruzzo. Abruzzese cuisine is one of the few in Italy which uses hot peppers to any degree, and the Abruzzese call their red chili peppers diavolino or "little devils."
  • Cuisine of Calabria: Pork is the dominant meat, and there is often a striking balance between meat and vegetables in many Calabrese dishes. Eggplant is used extensively in Calabrese cuisine.

See also

  • List of Italian dishes
  • Italian American cuisine
  • Il cucchiaio d'argento, a popular Italian general reference cookbook
  • Il talismano della felicità by Ada Boni, another popular Italian reference cookbook
  • Pellegrino Artusi
  • Feast of the seven fishes

External links

Wikibooks Cookbook has an article on
Cuisine of Italy
  • The Italian Cook
  • Italian recipes
  • Italian Recipe Database
  • Complete Recipes: Italian
  • MangiareBene.net, an Italian recipe archive
  • BellaOnline Italian Food Recipes
  • About Italian Cuisine
  • Italian Food Recipes: illustrated recipes from Italy
  • The Real Italian Pasta
Search Term: "Italian_cuisine"