Everything and anything Italian gets my heart racing…….
From their names, way of pronouncing certain words, their
food, their fashion, their art, their architecture, their opera, their wine,
their parmesan and their men…..
Contemplating anthropologically – how is it that certain
countries produce beautiful men – leaving the female of that population out of luck. Take France, Italy, or Greece, be it their
waters, wine or food that they eat, they
seem to generate these incredible and delectable men simply meant for
procreation.
With the women of Turkey, Egypt and Persia, under the
Purdah, these ladies have beautiful skin, blue-green eyes with striking
beauty. The men did not have such good
fortune on their side, (Allah gave them oil - so what do they need good looks for?) with their rough bearded skin cloaked in white robes,
hiding what could be a six-pack or more likely a bloated belly. In South East Asia, the Thai women are well
known for their charm, beauty and femininity but their men fail miserably
trying to look like plastic Korean dolls bordering on hermaphroditism.
So gets lets back to the Italian charms – of Pedro, Pasta and Proseco. For
after all I am a woman, that likes her chianti, men and linguini not
necessarily in that order.
Campo De’Fiori in Roma is where my pillow is for the next few
weeks or months conditional on many issues. The field of flowers, Campo De’Fiori is south of the Piazza Navona. Abandoned field of flowers in the 14th
century, the square became a daily market.
In the 1600 it was the scene of many an execution, notably Giordano Bruno burned at the stake for his philosophical ideals.
In the 1600 it was the scene of many an execution, notably Giordano Bruno burned at the stake for his philosophical ideals.
Today as I walk along the cafes and shops,
the ‘ambiente’ begs of fresh Mediterranean produce, an extraordinary
butcher shop called Il Florentino. The
meat is displayed as if it were jewels from Harry Winston’s. From the back of vans, rows of pretty white cotton dresses complimenting the
summer sky selling like hot cakes. Tents selling produce of Italy, from sun dried tomatoes to limonchello, meandering round
these shops, I am late for my Italian cookery class.
The day passed by so deliciously, experiencing shopping in
the market, and then later cooking in Chef Andrea’s kitchen. I am slowly devouring the taste and texture of the chocolate souffle as taught by Pedro to use my tongue simply tasting and awakening the taste buds to the velvety smoothness of every ingredient that has gone into this special souffle. Re-creating this for my special man, Pedro says that this kind of seduction will work every time. Is he hinting?
My time in Campo d'fiori is a mixture of learning a language, becoming more eloquent and knowledgable on art, loving more passionately, and consuming excellent Chianti.
Two days of cooking interwoven by two days worth of art lessons from Pedro began to rejuvenate my soul, my stomach and my heart.
My time in Campo d'fiori is a mixture of learning a language, becoming more eloquent and knowledgable on art, loving more passionately, and consuming excellent Chianti.
Two days of cooking interwoven by two days worth of art lessons from Pedro began to rejuvenate my soul, my stomach and my heart.
Great read again!
ReplyDeleteLa vita e bella ;-)
Grazie, Milano prossima
ReplyDeleteMilano! Looking forward to your post! I've been there so many times,...mostly flying there in the morning to have lunch at my favourite restaurant and heading back to Switzerland in the afternoon with a full stomach!
ReplyDeleteArrivederci e alla prossima volta!