Tag: Mondo

In Brussels they make Neapolitan pizza… with water from Naples! – Italian cuisine reinvented by Gordon Ramsay


Miracle in Brussels. For all pizza lovers, stuff for true fundamentalists: Neapolitan pizza made… with Naples water.

The hero is called Bernardo D’Annolfo, the address to note is that of Neapolitan Education. With the name of the place which is already a whole project, very clear. In quotes, “educate” the local people about all that is good, all that is best and all that is tasty about the truest authentic Neapolitan spirit. With this latest move that is truly unprecedented in the world.

«My doughs will be made, every week, only and exclusively with the water of Naples, says Bernardo proudly as he unpacks the first platform that has arrived from the foot of Vesuvius to the heart of the capital of Europe.

An initiative that falls right between science and heart.

«I’m certainly not a scientist, he adds, «but after months of research and consultancy we used, we understood that the PH of Brussels water is 6.2, while the PH of Naples water is 7.2. And, above all, we understood that to make a good Neapolitan pizza you need a higher PH than what we have here.”

But, beyond science, the real reason is that of the heart. Founded on the charm of being able to enjoy, thousands of kilometers from the historic center or the Mergellina seafront, an extraordinary, unattainable pizza, exactly as a pizza made in Naples is extraordinary and unattainable. After the flour and yeast from the Mulino Caputo, the “Mulino di Napoli” in fact, after the tomatoes and mozzarella, therefore, even the formula of the dough, even the essential element of water.

No to modified carbonara: from London to Rome, the chefs’ comments – Italian cuisine reinvented by Gordon Ramsay

La Cucina Italiana


It happened again: yet another modified carbonara sparked a controversy, this time of international dimensions. She confirms how much (little) we are willing to accept variations of this much-loved dish, and says a lot about the way foreigners conceive Italian cuisine, even though it is voted the best in the world.

The question concerns “Delicious Shop”, restaurant in the elegant Shoreditch neighborhood of London, where Gianfillippo Mattioli, a true Roman, has made a radical decision. He chose to eliminate carbonara from the menu because, after having proposed it in its canonical version – eggs, pecorino, bacon and pepper – he found himself having to deal with so much negative feedback and so many requests for modified carbonara that he couldn’t take it anymore.

«Many customers didn’t like the original recipe, and many asked additions such as chicken, mushrooms, or removing the bacon. We preferred not to serve it”, Mattioli told Tg1. Yes, even the main Italian news program covered it, followed by almost all the British newspapers, and some Italians, attracted by a post from the restaurant on Instagram. A post entitled “Carbonara Gate” in which Mattioli essentially told the story, ruling: «Let’s be clear that we respect our customers’ preferences, but we don’t want to compromise our quality and authenticity.

Why does carbonara inflame us?

Not an isolated case, in fact. The carbonara-gates pop periodically. Sometimes they are fun, others less so, and they always unleash a never-dormant gastronomic fundamentalism. But why do cases like this happen with carbonara and not with other dishes? «In my opinion because carbonara is one of the popular dishes par excellence. Everyone does it and everyone thinks they know how to do it better than others, so they feel entitled to have their say“, He says Luciano Monosilio, among the youngest chefs to obtain the Michelin star, who is truly among the most entitled to talk about carbonara, given that in Rome he is considered the “king” of it. For his carbonara he earned praise New York Times and his recipe is one of the reasons to book a table in his restaurants: Luciano Cucina Italiana e Follie, in the historic Villa Agrippina Gran Meliá, which he has been managing for two years.

As Monosilio thinks another pillar of Roman cuisine, that is Simone Panellawho with his brother Francesco runs the kitchens ofAncient weighbridge of Romeamong the restaurants that have made the history of Capitoline cuisine (they also celebrated the centenary), and – for 12 years – of Antica Pesa in New York: «Carbonara will never stop being discussed because it is a very well-known dish in Worldwide. They do it almost everywhere, and for this very reason everyone has applied their own idea. I add: unfortunately. Because the recipe remains only one”.

How much carbonara can be changed according to Luciano Monosilio and Simone Panella

«The carbonara is the done one with eggs, bacon, pepper and pecorino. It is tenaciously Roman even in its ingredients. There is not a single codified recipe precisely because it is a dish of the people: the preparations can vary but not the raw materials, because it certainly doesn’t include chicken, mushrooms or cream, continues Monosilio. For this reason, and not only that, in his restaurants he does not give in to variations on the theme: «It has almost never happened that I have been asked for variations on the carbonara. However, I won’t compromise: I wouldn’t even change the pasta shape, imagine if I would add ingredients to the customers’ liking. If you go to a boutique to buy a pair of shoes, do you ask to change them at will?”.

«I’m quite a fundamentalist too, especially when it comes to first courses, continues Simone Panella. «I often receive unusual requests, and when possible I look for a middle ground without ever distorting the recipe. Maybe I’ll change the format for the pasta, but looking for a suitable one and explaining to the customer that it is not the best for that seasoning, but I do not add ingredients that are not foreseen. I rather recommend changing the order: if they ask for a carbonara with chicken, I suggest choosing a completely different dish. Or, if they really can’t do without it, to have a carbonara and a roast chicken to eat as they please, even at the same time, because a carbonara that isn’t a real carbonara will never come out of my kitchen.” «Not even from mine, adds Monosilio. «And for sure I wouldn’t remove carbonara from the menu if some customers didn’t like it as it is: it is an expression of my cuisine, of the cuisine of the restaurant that offers it. The customer is always free to choose.”

Carbonara and Italian cuisine abroad

It may make you smile at times to think about it, but having to respond to the request for a carbonara with chicken or mushrooms (or any other completely distorted Italian dish) for a catering professional it is much less simple than you think, especially if you interface with foreign customersthe. «In Rome it happens less often, perhaps because foreign customers come to us with awareness. But in New York it is common to receive requests for changes. Foreigners abroad are the most difficult customers, especially for dishes with strong flavours, such as a carbonara with pepper and pecorino. They are normally used to variations created to pursue their taste, in Italian-American or Italian-German restaurants depending on their origin, so they struggle to appreciate the originals”, says Panella.

«The fact, however, is that carbonara is just the tip of the iceberg, Panella points out. In fact, the issue for restaurateurs is broader: it’s a matter of whether or not they are willing to come to terms, deciding whether to make the same (mistake) that Italian restaurants abroad have made for many years. In short, there are two ways: indulge palates that are not well trained in our cuisine, or go straight on your own path aware of the fact that you are also ambassadors of a culinary culture, ours. «Customers’ needs must be satisfied, but there is a limit: if I know that calling fresh pasta filled with fish “lasagna” is misleading for them, I will call it “fresh pasta” and I will continue to call “lasagna” only that with ragù and bechamel. But no further,” says Panella. «And then – concludes Monosilio – let’s not forget one thing: maybe everyone has their own version of carbonara, but let’s leave the chefs the chance to be chefs. Otherwise – we add – what fun would there be in going to a restaurant?



Pope Francis: stuffed calamari and other curiosities at the table – Italian cuisine reinvented by Gordon Ramsay

La Cucina Italiana


Pope francesco he is perhaps the most interviewed pope in history, but no one has yet asked him for the recipe stuffed squid. «Jorge cooks very well, he makes amazing stuffed calamari, the pontiff’s sister confided in an interview, Maria Elena Bergoglio, a few days after his brother’s election as pontiff. From that March 13, 2013Bergoglio no longer had the opportunity to cook and the recipe for that “stunning” dish remains a well-kept secret.

The credit for the pope’s culinary skills goes to the mother Queen Marywho in turn had learned cooking secrets from Rose, Bergoglio’s paternal grandmother, who emigrated to Argentina from Italy. Lunches in the Bergoglio household were plentiful and long, especially on Sundays, when the women of the house went at it with their traditional dishes: risottos, homemade pasta, baked chicken, desserts.

The young Jorge Mario glanced into the kitchen, memorizing the skillful gestures of his mother and grandmother. “My mother,” Bergoglio said in the interview book El Jesuit, published in Argentina in 2010, «she remained paralyzed after giving birth to her last child, her fifth. When we returned from school, we would find her sitting peeling potatoes, with all the other ingredients for lunch already laid out. She told us how we should mix and cook them.”

Thus Bergoglio, even as a simple priest and then as bishop, he has always felt at ease around pots and stoves. When he was a professor at the Collegio Massimo, the future pope cooked for his students on Sundays, a day of rest for cooks. «He always prepared a fantastic paella for us, recalled his Jesuit brother, Father Angel Rossi. To those who asked him if he is really a good cook, Bergoglio replied: “Well, I have never killed anyone with my food.”

Elected pope, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, did not want to occupy the papal apartment. For him, therefore, no personal cooking service. No private chef or even, as often happens with ecclesiastics, cooking nuns. Pope Francis sleeps in a small apartment in the Domus Santa Marta and eats lunches and dinners in the common canteen.

The Pope is served at a secluded table. The cuisine is simple and not different from that of many other canteens: pasta or rice first courses, soups, meat and fish second courses, vegetables, salad, fruit. We drink white and red wine, generally Piedmontese. The products of the farms of the Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo also arrive on the pope’s table: milk, ricotta, yogurt, cheeses, meat, vegetables and excellent honey. The Pope probably also enjoyed the gifts that Queen Elizabeth of England brought him during her visit to the Vatican in April 2014, all products of the royal estates, or rather, “of my garden”, as the Queen said to moment of exchanging gifts: honey, twelve eggs, ribs of beef, apple juice, cider, chutney, jams, shortbread, tea and even a bottle of whisky.

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