Friday, May 28, 2010
A Triathlon of Sandwiches, including Vegetarian Olive Bar Muffaleta
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Vegan Caprese Salad
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Cashew Noodle Salad
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
The First Summer Tomato
Monday, May 24, 2010
Platelist
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Smoked Garlic
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Pop Pop Pop!
Thursday, May 13, 2010
Panelle + Asparagus & Gorgonzola over Yellow Tomato Sauce
Sunday, May 9, 2010
Vegetarian Pizza Chiena
Friday, May 7, 2010
5 Quick Questions with Lidia Bastianich
We were thrilled to be able to ask one of our favorite chefs a few questions this week! And we're over the moon about her being in Memphis this weekend. You can see her tomorrow and get your cookbook signed at this event.
Cooper-Young Community Farmers Market
Thursday, May 6, 2010
Fresh Grits Topped with Baby Artichoke Hearts + Fried Egg + Red Wine Gastrique
Flora Farms Chioggia Beet Salad + Crispy Goat Cheese
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
More Italian than Southern
My mother taught me all that I know about cooking and food, and she learned in the kitchen of her parents and grandparents in Jeannette, Pennsylvania. Jeannette is a grimy, industrial suburb of Pittsburgh that once boasted the largest glass factories in the world. Immigrants actually left New York City for Westmoreland County, where they could find work at the Jeannette Glass Company. Early in the twentieth century, following fateful meanderings around the globe, my family ended up there. They had dug up their tomato gardens in Calambria, Italy, and transplanted them in the hills of Jeannette.
By the time I was old enough to understand this, most of these Italian relatives were either dead or living far away. I know their names and had seen their black-and-white faces in old photographs, but those didn't mean anything to me. Campania was as about as remote as Jeannette must have seemed to the generations before mine. But as it turned out, we had a lot in common. We shared my mother, my grandmother, and food. I didn't know it, but I was more Italian than I was southerner.
When I first moved to Memphis at the age of nine, I found the practice of eating barbecue ribs with baked beans and cole slaw to be the depths of bad taste. We didn't eat such things. We liked zucchini, fried eggplant, gnocchi (pronounced nuh-yawk-ee), chicken parmesean, Italian spinach, pizza, Syrian pizza, and calzone. For Easter we had pizza chiena and homemade manicotti (Mom still makes her own crepes). Christmas Eve dinner was angel hair pasta with anchovies, fried fish, pizelles, and cheese fondue.
We didn't just eat Italian food, though. There were as many Poles as Italians in Pittsburgh, and much of my favorite food is Polish. We still eat kielbasa, bratwurst, perogies, sauerkraut, cabbage and dumplings, and "Polish hand grenades," cabbage leaves stuffed with ground beef and onions and sometimes covered in a citrusy glaze.
The cheese fondue may be a hanger-on from trendy 1970s cuisine, but the rest is a part of a precious family history that informs not only what I choose to buy at the grocery store, but who I am on a more important level. I didn't realize this when I was young, of course. It didn't matter to me then. Eggplant tasted good; okra was gross.
It matters more than ever now. My wife and I had our first child in 2008. We named him Rocco, a nod to the Italian heritage that grows more distant with each generation. When he was old enough for solid food, my mother instinctively made him a meal that I hadn't seen in twenty-five years—a cupful of pastine tossed in butter and a little parmesean cheese. He loved it.
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Strawberry-Rhubarb and Olive Oil Crumble
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Vegan Sloppy Joes + Jaime Oliver's Food Revolution
Seriously -- this show rocks. We really liked it, but then a seemingly premature wrap-up last week left us feeling a little bereft. We wish there was more show! Anyway, here's the link to the Food Revolution episodes; they are definitely worth watching today if you're stuck in this weird, siren-punctuated storm just like we are.