Stories of Food and Life
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About this ebook
A delightful collection of stories about Italian lifestyle, cooking, and human connection. Each bite-sized story includes a recipe served on a platter of memories, where food preparation is a social art to be shared.
The spontaneous approach celebrated in Stories of Food and Life will give you confidence to cook on the fly with finesse. Flow with the seasons and discover food as a way to be together rather than a culinary exam.
Wouldn't you like to know how to make a delicious strawberry risotto? Or learn something new about figs as Mariuccia tells you about her kids playing in her Italian country garden? You'll learn about the origin of the Caprese salad from someone who was there and also discover the “spaghettata,” a go-to midnight snack.
Cosa si puó dire? It’s worth the money. You’ll learn something and be entertained by this tribute to the simple treatment of the best ingredients.
Food is a celebration of life, so read this, or listen to the audiobook, and go cook for your friends.
Then, mangia!
Mariuccia Milla
Mariuccia Milla (AKA Mary Scipioni) left New York at age 25 to spend eighteen years in Italy. In addition to living in Milan, where she was immersed in the design community (architects as well as product, fashion, and graphic designers), Mariuccia lived in Viareggio (coastal Tuscany) and in the vicinty of Lago Maggiore in the Piedmont region.She is currently practicing landscape architecture in the Finger Lakes Region of New York, as well as publishing fiction books and nonfiction essays.Mariuccia will be returning to Italy to do more writing, and plans to travel back and forth.And, despite the fact that it drives her crazy some times, she loves Italy.You can also follow Mariuccia on Instagram: @mariumilla.
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Book preview
Stories of Food and Life - Mariuccia Milla
Stories of Food and Life
A voyage to culinary pleasure by the scenic route
by Mariuccia Milla
Author of
Meet Me in Milano
Blue Sky with Clouds
Stories of Food and Life
is narrated by
Dr. Sandra Boysen Sluberski of SBS Vocalworx
and produced by
Dave Sluberski of West Rush Media
Illustrations by Penelope Spica
The sharing of any part of this book without permission is unlawful
according to the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976.
Thank you for respecting my intellectual property.
©2018 Mariuccia Milla
Table of Contents
Title page
Penne all’arrabbiata
La bruschetta (or, Too Hot to Shop)
Trofie al pesto
Il fico (The Fig Tree)
Risotto all fragole (Strawberry Risotto)
L’insalata Caprese (Caprese Salad, or La Caprese)
Spaghetti alle vongole (Spaghetti with Clams)
Oranges and Artichokes
Melanzane con la rucola (Eggplant with Arugola)
Asparagus risotto
Carrot Pasta
La spaghettata
Afterward
1. Penne all’arrabbiata
The road to Ludovico’s house was not a crushed stone drive that wound up a Tuscan hill accompanied by cypresses. You know, the kind silhouetted against the sunset on the cover of romantic novels in the Italy porn
genre.
Instead, it was a narrow alley whose masonry buildings stood at point blank with the edges of a street where pedestrians scattered only slowly, like jaded farmyard chickens. We were driving a red Fiat Cinquecento, thankfully, and deftly made the tight turn through the arched portal that led into the cobblestone courtyard. The Milanese fog had lifted and the sun was starting to appear, white and diffuse, through the gauzy air. The gray of everything was offset by the red car and the ochre-tinted plaster of the building chipped in some spots.
Ludovico had an American visitor named Roberto who had recently arrived from a place called Watkins Glen. He was preparing lunch. I was visiting Milan from the Ligurian town of Camogli, where I had spent the summer rehabilitating a private garden that had fallen into disarray. Ludo’s partner, Alessandra, was my host in Milan; she had invited me to tag along.
I had been going back and forth between Italy and the U.S., and while I did meet some expats during my stays in the bel paese, I generally avoided other Americans. I didn’t think we had much in common.
Ludovico’s apartment was a third-floor walk-up with windows on both the courtyard as well as the canal. He greeted us enthusiastically in the foyer, while his guest held back. I walked down the short corridor to the kitchen. Roberto was tying an apron at his back.
The first thing is to pour a glass of wine,
he said after I introduced myself.
Roberto’s blue eyes had nothing of the pretty boy about them thanks to his luxuriously bushy black eyebrows. The eyes themselves were penetrating, searching, and a little careworn. He looked to me like someone who was missing something longed-for in his life. Yet he was happily preparing our lunch of penne all’arrabbiata. The tools were arrayed, the wine was airing, and he held a bulb of garlic in his right hand, which he set on the counter so that he could shake mine.
Why do you go by Roberto,
I asked, and not Robert?
It is Robert,
he said, but Ludovico has decided to Italianize my name. He doesn't like it when people call me ‘Bohb.’
Okay, Roberto,
I conceded. Thank you for making our lunch.
I like to make people happy,
he said. Especially when I'm here because Italians enjoy food more than Americans do.
Americans like to eat, by the looks of things,
Alessandra said.
Overeating or depriving ourselves, that’s what we do,
I said.
Exactly,
said Roberto. The U.S. is still a Puritan country at heart. Sin and repentance.
He poured some extra-virgin olive oil into a skillet and started peeling garlic cloves with a small knife.
I’m generally not very good at enjoying things I have to do,
Roberto said to me, but I seemed to have managed it with cooking.
What brings you to Italy?
I asked him.
It suits me,
he answered. I love the food, the wine, the cars, and the countryside. And the people, of course! I met Ludovico through a mutual friend on my last visit. He invited me to stay for a few days here before I head to Montepulciano. I’m taking a full-immersion course in Italian next week.
Roberto had plucked the leaves from a bunch of fresh parsley and placed them in a small drinking glass. He took the kitchen scissors and started snipping the leaves in the glass.
Why do you that?
I asked.
The parsley is confined in the glass, and that makes it easier to cut,
he said.
By now the garlic was getting abbrustolito, or toasted, an even brown. Roberto carefully picked the cloves out one at a time and placed them in a small bowl. Then he tossed hot pepper flakes, or peperoncino, into the oil, and I watched them skitter at a respectful distance. The pungency filled the small kitchen, drifting up my nostrils. It made my eyes water.
"Toasting the garlic and the peperoncino is what gives the sauce its flavor," said Roberto.
"It puts the rabbia into all’arrabbiata," Ludovico said, filling a pot with water from the sink.
You’re using canned tomatoes,
said Alessandra.
Yes, well, that’s my habit in the States, because I like to use Italian tomatoes. The soil is different, and you can taste it in the tomatoes. Besides, if I used fresh tomatoes, it would take too long for lunch. I’d have to remove the skins. This sauce is more spontaneous than ritualistic to me.
Well,
said Alessandra, taking a sip of wine, I don’t have to agree with you to recognize that it is very Italian to have an opinion about cooking. We’ll have to make you an honorary citizen.
He lowered the heat and dumped the diced tomatoes into the skillet, standing back to avoid the fallout.
"Where are you staying in