Tag: Naples

Pasta alla Genovese, the recipe as they make it at home in Naples – Italian cuisine reinvented by Gordon Ramsay

La Cucina Italiana


You don’t necessarily have to be from Naples to understand the profound meaning of a dish like this Genoese. Of course, for a Neapolitan, its smell will always be linked to endless Sundays with the family; but in reality that perfume remains impregnated even on those who are just passing through, even just once. Because in an era where speed and efficiency remain the imperatives, they are needed to make the Genovese hours and hoursmove on to peeling kilos of onions with tears in his eyes; tears that don’t stop even amidst the fumes of its long cooking times; tears that are enough for a breath. This is why in the Genoese area there is Naples and its intrinsic ability to always find solutions, in life as well as when faced with remains, waste or overabundance of food; that same genius that has always characterized so-called kitchens poor, which in reality have absolutely nothing poor about them and always reveal themselves to be the quintessence of creativity, as history shows us. Because it’s when you have nothing that you can do everything, mo, ambress ambressin an eternal present: “the future doesn’t belong to us, what if I don’t wake up tomorrow? So I’d better do the Genovese today”. This is the philosophy of Patrizia, known to everyone as an aunt, one of the many women who has been preparing it all her life, because her mother, Angela, and even before her grandmother, Fortuna, taught it to her, according to a tradition handed down with the simple know-how. Over the years you have prepared it throughout Italy for various occasions and everywhere it has always been a great success. But it remains a doubt: why is one of the most Neapolitan recipes there is called that?

Why is “la Genovese” called that since she is from Naples?

There are various hypotheses, from the Aragonese period in which it seems that the port of Naples was full of Genoese chefs, to a Neapolitan chef who cooked it and was nicknamed “or Genoese”, up to those who think that the name derives from Geneva in Switzerland and not from the Ligurian city…

But the reality is simpler: Genovese belongs to Mediterranean and dates back to that era when exchanges between ports were so common that sharing a dish was a habit. Even more so if it was a city like Naples that made him, incapable of not giving confidence, with its innate nature predisposed to meeting without preconceptions and contamination without hesitation.

Therefore, the origin or belonging of something that ultimately has its roots in the middle of the sea, imbued with an ancient and profound sense of sharing, matters little; the same one that today makes sure no one misses the table when she is finally ready.

How to prepare Genovese

For the preparation of Genovese, it is essential to choose the meat well, which must always be as tender as possible: Aunt Patrizia prefers the pig henamong the lesser known, but equally valid cuts, near the shin, in the lower part of the leg, where the muscle masses embrace the posterior aspect of the tibia.

Ingredients for 4/5 people

  • 500 g large penne (or ziti and candles)
  • 1 kg of pork gurnard (or tender beef rump)
  • 2 kg of onions
  • 2 carrots
  • 1 celery
  • 1 glass of white wine
  • 5 cherry tomatoes
  • basil – salt – parsley – Parmesan – extra virgin olive oil

Method

  1. Peel the onions and cut them into small pieces.
  2. Then clean the carrots and celery and cut them into small pieces too; Put the extra virgin olive oil in a pan and brown the previously cut meat.
  3. After about a quarter of an hour, remove the meat and in the same pan add a little more oil with onions, carrots and celery and cook with the lid closed for a few minutes.
  4. Then add a glass of white wine, then add the meat with five crushed cherry tomatoes; Season with salt, add a little more white wine and leave to cook over low heat for at least an hour, although the time depends on how well the meat is cooked.
  5. Once the meat is almost ready, boil the water, throw in the pasta and finally season directly on the plate, never forgetting a sprinkling of parmesan ‘ncoppa.

Octopus broth for the Befana: 5 addresses in Naples and recipe – Italian cuisine reinvented by Gordon Ramsay


1. To Marenaro’s daughter

Via Foria, 180/182. Tel. +39081440827
If the restaurant was born with octopus broth, in the times of Papucc ‘o Marenaro, when in 1943 it began selling o’ bror e’ purp in cups in the Porta Capuana area, today the restaurant has become a place with demands for refinement beyond measure. But the octopus broth here remains a delicacy, as does the mussel soup.

2. Raffaele ‘O Mericano kiosk

Via Foria. Cell. 333 834 0932
On the side of the long street in the historic center of Naples, there is this small kiosk run by Raffaele ‘o mericano. Protagonist in plain sight is the steaming pot where boils or bror e’ purp with ranfetelle (octopus tentacles). Hot and tasty and even with a spicy touch.

3. Pescheria Addo’ Figlio and Carlucciello

Via Cesare Rosaroll, 140. Tel. 0810335053
Fishmongers with kitchens are now in fashion, and this is one of the most basic and authentic ones in the city. Here you can eat fried foods and an exquisite octopus broth.

4. Cca’ is to Luciano’s daughter

Piazza Enrico de Nicola, 38. Tel. 081293302
For some customers, the ones to try are the Luciana-style octopus and the mussel soup. Try asking for the octopus broth too, and it will be given to you. Hoping that there is, because, alas, it is not in great demand.

5. He’s ready ‘or he’ll eat

Via Cesare Rosaroll, 65. Tel. 0810098833
Homemade cuisine includes meat and fish based dishes, but they are fried and, as we read, octopus with salad, octopus “co russ” (i.e. spicy) and, on request, bror e’ purp.

The counter of the Pescheria Addo’ Figlio e Carlucciello (photo @FaceBook).

The octopus broth recipe

In addition to the original recipe that we share below, there is someone who also serves octopus sauce as a soup, with slices of toasted or fried homemade bread and enriched with some mussels.

O’ bror e’ purp

Ingredients

  • 2 kg of octopus
  • 500 ml of water
  • salt
  • freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 bunch of parsley

Method

  1. Clean the octopus and pour the water into a saucepan, with a pinch of salt, plenty of freshly ground black pepper and the coarsely chopped parsley. Bring to the boil.
  2. Holding the octopus by the head, immerse the tentacles in the water for a few seconds, repeating the operation at least 3 times.
  3. Completely immerse the octopus in the water and cook it for about 50 minutes.
  4. Leave the octopus in its cooking water for about 5 minutes and pour the octopus cooking water into the cups. Try adding the octopus tentacles into pieces so it’s tastier.

The city of Naples has a new mural: Partenope, Mother of the neighborhoods – Italian cuisine reinvented by Gordon Ramsay


It is well known that the city of Naples always reserves some pleasant surprises. Perhaps it is not one of the Italian capitals of street art.
If you have the opportunity to take a guided tour of the city to discover these open-air works (there are guides specialized in just this), the quantity and quality will leave you speechless.
Just like the new gigantic mural donated by Voiello to Naples and created by the artist Leticia Mandragora in collaboration with the Neapolitan fashion designer collective VNMNS1926.

The mermaid of Naples

The mural Partenope, Mother of the neighborhoods of Napleswhich represents the mermaid Partenope, the mythical founder of the city, is located in Piazza Francesco Muzii, in the Arenella district, takes us back to the origins of the city and underlines the beauty and variety of the neighborhoods that compose it.
The mermaid Parthenope, according to one of the legends concerning her, was among those who tried to enchant Ulysses in Homer’s Odyssey. Desperate for her failure, she decided to take her own life and her body, dragged by the waves, landed in the gulf of Naples, on the islet of Megaris. Here in Piazza Muzii he holds ears of wheat in his hand, a symbol of fertility and abundance and right on the tail, depicted as scales, there are the 30 coats of arms that identify the neighborhoods.

The artist

The artist, Leticia Mandragora, born in Madrid to a Spanish mother and Neapolitan father, is closely linked to the capital of Campania, so much so that she decided to move there at the age of 15. The city hosts several works by her, all characterized by the use of cobalt blue (Maradona, Sophia Loren, Eleonora de Fonseca Pimentel) – a color that has always also characterized Voiello’s brand identity – and by the intensity of the expressions that her interpretation makes it even more realistic. Furthermore, her predilection for the representation of female subjects ties perfectly with the idea behind the mural.

A moment from the inauguration: Clementina Cozzolino, president of the Fifth municipality (second from left), the artist Leticia Mandragora, the designer couple VIENMNSUONNO1926, Francesco Del Porto, president region Italy Barilla and Gianpasquale Greco, art critic and doctor research at the University of Naples Federico II.

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