Tag: art

carbonara, the art of being – Italian Cuisine

carbonara, the art of being


bacon and egg, just the name makes us hungry, it reminds us of the small trattorias in Trastevere, the ones with the tables on the side of the road, the ones that when you pass in front of us you see pretty little women kneading. A warm climate that envelops you: there is a taste of history in the streets of Rome, of romance, all that is contained in a perfect bite of pasta carbonara.

But what is its history? It is said that it was the dish of the woodcutters of central Italy who ventured into the Apennine mountains to do charcoal. In fact, coal and carbonara, we are there. But the most accredited narrative is the one that derives from the legend dthe Roman innkeeper who with a nice flair attributed to his dish the name of his old work: the charcoal burner. The result was a first fatal meeting between the pasta, bacon and fresh eggs.

The pig cheekobviously a fundamental ingredient. Never trust anyone who offers you an alternative: an offense to the Romans. Bacon and bacon absolutely to be eliminated. However, the use of bacon is granted a historical attenuation: it seems to have been introduced in pasta sauces by allied American soldiers who, engaged during the Second World War on the Reinhard line, between Lazio, Molise and Campania, had the opportunity to taste and become attached to typical Abruzzese “Cacio e ova” pasta, to which they wanted to contribute with their typical product. "You fare spaghetti", this was the fateful phrase that triggered this Italian American mix, where their beloved bacon was inserted everywhere.

"Excuse me a moment, listen a little, but do you know how to make spaghetti carbonara?". He said Aldo Fabrizi in the famous comedy Good looking waitress offering herself …, but yes you know how to make it, but maybe you don't know very well which best pasta can make sparks fly. Spaghetti and rigatoni are the most coveted. Spaghetti obviously better if bronze-drawn, since this is what makes them more suitable for holding the sauce and those chosen to make it at home. But rigatoni are considered a classic, because the sauce hides the pasta in the vaults, giving it that inimitable flavor.

Let's clarify immediately. Pecorino cheese and not the Parmesan as many do. And not just any one: for the carbonara Doc it takes Pecorino Romano DOP.

But besides the classic, how many other versions do you know?

With all due respect to the purists, there are infinite variations of carbonara (also -ahinoi- with cream mixed with egg dressing): vegetarian carbonara, with peas and green beans or that with zucchini. Ah, that's not all, because there are those who prepare it with fish: carbonara marina, in fact, has its own audience of connoisseurs.

A question of technique

And here we come to the technique, a theme on which even the New York Times, thus giving carbonara a stars and stripes identity. Obviously the freshness of the ingredients is essential. The eggs they must be at room temperature and must only be cooked very quickly when they come into contact with very hot pasta. The browning of the pig cheek, on the other hand, it does not want oil or butter since it already independently releases the fat (which must be used), the pasta it must first be passed into the pan where the browned bacon lies and only afterwards it must be added to the mixture eggs and cheese. This is the fundamental step, summed up in a daring balancing act and a sudden movement. In fact, the mixture of egg yolks and cheese, mixing quickly: the still warm pan and the hot pasta lightly cook the eggs making them creamy. Be careful not to let them clot and make them take on the appearance of a scrambled egg, otherwise it's done.

Of Elena Strappa

90 years of Fisher-Price .. with a touch of art! – Italian Cuisine

90 years of Fisher-Price .. with a touch of art!


Fisher-Price joins Vogue Italia for a collaboration that brings an artist's touch to the heart of the brand: Eva Cremers, Dutch illustrator and digital artist, has been selected to create, for the November issue of Vogue Italia, a reworking of visual key to some of the most iconic Fisher-Price products

2020 was a very important and significant year for Fisher-Price: the most loved and known brand in the world in the childhood and preschool category has celebrated its first 90 years of life. In fact, it was in 1930 that Herman G. Fisher, Irving L. Price and Helen M. Schelle founded the company in East Aurora: since then Fisher-Price toys have entered the childhood memories of entire generations around the world.
Fisher-Price, for 90 years, has been working alongside families to invite them to discover the wonder of being children and to see the world with their own eyes, just like when they play with a Fisher-Price product. To end the year with a flourish and to effectively show what it means to see the world through the eyes of the little ones, Fisher-Price joins Vogue Italia for a collaboration that brings an artist's touch to the heart of the brand: Eva Cremers, Dutch illustrator and digital artist, has been selected to create, for the November issue of Vogue Italia, a visual reworking of some of the most iconic Fisher-Price products.

Eva Cremers is an emerging Dutch illustrator and digital artist who has made fantasy and humor the strengths of her works. The artist for Fisher-Price has combined the contemporaneity of shapes with the characteristic and inimitable features of the brand, giving life to a unique reinterpretation of 3 "historic" Fisher-Price products, which shows at 360 ° the playful and imaginary potential that springs from Fisher-Price toys, so even the older ones can enjoy it. Playfulness and dream are therefore the two keywords that have guided the Dutch illustrator and digital artist in her reinterpretation of the iconic Telefono Chiacchierone, Cagnolino Ridi & Learn and the 5 ring Pyramid.

It is not the first time that Fisher-Price, in the year of celebrations for its 90th anniversary, joins the world of art: to celebrate the legacy of the brand, on October 16 it was inaugurated, on the account of the same name Instagram, the digital experience "Fisher-Price Toy Museum" a real exhibition with more than 90 different images of as many exhibits organized for decades, so that visitors can find and rediscover the vintage toys of their childhood. The Fisher-Price Toy Museum digital exhibition was conceived by American designer Leila Fakouri, who in the past has created sets for brands such as Nike, Chanel and Gap.

Farewell to the art historian Philippe Daverio: he was 70 years old – Italian Cuisine

Farewell to the art historian Philippe Daverio: he was 70 years old


Gallerist, publisher, television host, columnist and even politician, died last night at the Cancer Institute in Milan

He was an art historian, gallery owner, publisher, television host, columnist and also a politician: Philippe Daverio, 70, died last night at theCancer Institute from Milan. The director Andree Ruth Shammahe, director of the Franco Parenti theater, made it known. "His brother wrote me this morning to tell me that Philippe passed away tonight," he explained. "My friend … your silence forever is a piercing scream this morning."

Who was Philippe Daverio

Daverio, fourth of six children, was born on 17 October 1949 in Mulhouse, Alsace, to a French mother, Aurelia Hauss, and an Italian father, Napoleone Daverio, a builder. He moved to Italy and he studied at Bocconi of Milan, but without graduating. He often said: "I'm not a doctor because I didn't graduate, I was enrolled at Bocconi in 1968-1969, in those years people went to university to study and not to graduate". Instead, in Milan he opened his first gallery (which soon became one of the most important in the city), and found himself a publisher and popularizer of art.

Councilor for Culture, Leisure, Education and International Relations of the Municipality of Milan from 1993 to 1997, he oversaw the reconstruction of the Contemporary Art Pavilion, which had been destroyed by a bomb in 1993. But the great public got to know him thanks to television, starting from 1999, when he started working as a broadcast correspondent Art on Raitre. The following year he led Art.tù (of which he was also the author), and from 2002 to 2012 Passepartout, a successful art and culture program that brought art to the homes of Italians. Increasingly known as a television personality, in recent years he has often participated in Strip the news, on Canale5.

In politics collaborated with Vittorio Sgarbi, mayor of the Municipality of Salemi, in various cultural and artistic initiatives and was a candidate in the province of Milan in 2009 in the list of Filippo Penati. According to him, who had an idea of ​​politics as a noble service to the community, "left and right no longer make sense".

Daverio was also a university professor: he taught History of Art at the IULM in Milan, History of Design at the Polytechnic of Milan and Industrial Design at the University of Palermo. He wrote many popular books, including The good way, Art on the table, The game of painting. And the last, in 2019, My Europe in small steps, for Rizzoli.

Daverio and the kitchen

Since October 2019, on the occasion of the celebrations for the magazine's 90th anniversary, Philippe Daverio has also collaborated with "La Cucina Italiana" making 10 videos of the history of food. Fascinating as always, full of anecdotes, Daverio has revealed to us curiosities and secrets with his innate elegance, his humor and a boundless love for knowledge.

You can review them here.

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