Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Christmas in Lucca


So it’s time I posted something of interest, Christmas lunch!

My sister Amanda arrived from Melbourne mid December to spend the Christmas and New Year period with us which was great, we also had our good friend Helen Booth join us from London – so we were 4. The menu had been discussed and approved by the Christmas committee back in November when I promptly made 2 Christmas puddings and 8 tiny Christmas cakes (or torta di Natale as I’ve been calling them). There was great interest from my Italian class mates when I’d told them (or tried to tell them in Italian) that the puddings were steamed first for 3 hours, and then another 2 on the day of eating – they’d never before heard of anything requiring so much cooking. For my last language class I took 2 of my tiny Christmas cakes to class for the insegnante (teachers) and a huge batch of my Cantuccini di Natale for the class to share, other students brought traditional foods from their countries and we had a grand festa!



Lucca during the Christmas period was very pretty. The narrow cobblestoned streets were hung with festive lights, the shops were beautifully decorated and there was an ice skating rink set up in the main piazza. A perfect Italian winter wonderland. Another Italian tradition is the ‘presepe’ a religious nativity scene set up in many churches and piazzas. Some have been amazing, others not quite worth the waste of straw, but we’ve had a lot of fun seeking them out. Amanda and I have even discussed bringing the tradition to Melbourne – stay tuned!














OK, back to our Xmas feast. We had decided to do a combined Australian/Italian style meal as there were things we couldn’t live without (ie. the pudding) and of course yummy local dishes we wanted to include - this is where we ended up:




The gorgeous table – courtesy of Amanda

 

Antipasto

We had these while we opened our pressies with a glass or two of prosecco. I’d made chicken liver pate which is a Lucchese specialty and quite different to what we eat in Melbourne. This one has heaps of capers in it and is deliiiicious! I then made some baccala which we’d been enjoying in Venice; it’s kind of a pate/dip made with the really hard dried stockfish that you soak for days and stinks the house out! Again served on warmed toast it was deliiiicious! The last addition to the plate was a potato and leek frittata (or torta) which I added a red pepper relish to. 


Thank goodness for the red pepper relish as Marino has just reminded me "that without it, it would have been an abject failure". Such kind words from my loving husband!





Mary Christmas at work ...

Something for you …..























 

 

and something for you!

 

 

Primo Piatto

Home made spinach and ricotta ravioli with a simple cherry tomato salsa – one of our favourites and always yummy!!



Next course please!


Secondo

 


Melanie butchers the meat (literally)
I had intended to do a loin of pork and wrap it in pancetta, a dish I’d made when I attended the cooking class earlier this year and similar to Porchetta which we’d made previously, but Marino struggled at the butchers to ask for the right cut of meat and somehow we ended up with half a pig (skin and all). I then had to remove the skin and copious amounts of pig fat, filled it with heaps of fresh herbs, rolled it and tied it back up in the pig skin to roast – not really sure what I’d call it.

It was yummy, but not what I intended.













 

 

 

Contorni


Wasn’t that bad!
Steamed potatoes with butter and parsley (no room for anything else in the oven with half a pig in there), and of course, my favourite, some steamed broccoli.













 

 

 

Dolce

Chocolate Xmas Pudding with chocolate sauce and gelato. Had to add the chocolate because Helen our other guest had told me that the only good pudding was a chocolate pudding.  Of course I forgot she hates figs and loaded the pudding with them – she ate it nonetheless!


Mmm …Xmas Pud!


Looking back I can’t tell you what was so Australian in all that other than the pudding (Italians don’t do Xmas pudding...).  Anyway it was all wolfed down with copious amounts of carefully selected Italian wines courtesy of our local sommelier – Marino.


A wonderful day was had by all!

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Wine in Italy - 199 bottles and counting

An occasional post for wine enthusiasts...

The ONAV course #1
So I've enrolled into a Wine Tasting course, run by the Organizzazione Nazionale d' Assaggiatori Vini (ONAV) which consists of 12 weekly lessons, and a final exam.  Each lesson is mainly theory based, with a final half hour to taste and score a few wines (the best part).  As I'd hoped, it's a great way to taste wines from different parts of Italy, as well as learning more about all things wine - making it, organolettical aspects, oak barrel types, chemical changes etc

A further aspect is that the course is all in italian - I'm the only foreigner in the class of 20 - so it's an Italian lesson as well. Heaven knows how I'll go in the final exam, hopefully they'll go easy on my woeful grammar and sentence construction......
 
My classmates are friendly and interesting - we've all been out to dinner, and to visit a winery - I've noticed that they look much like wine geeks do in Australia!




Vino di casa - What we're drinking at home.... 
Finally, with autumn almost finished (winter in Italy officially starts 21 December), we have been enjoying red wine for awhile now! Recently we went to an enoteca and bought sfuso - where one BYO's the bottle, and has it filleld with bulk wine.  The enoteca we go to has 4 different reds - Chianti, a local Lucca sangiovese, a nero d'avola from Sicily and a Morellino di Scansano.  So we bought a bottle of each, and over lunch Melanie and I had a taste test.  The winner was the Chianti from the Pisan hills, and so this has become our occasional vino di casa.  The cost? All of euro 1.50 per bottle.....




Unknown winery (sfuso)
Chianti
1.50 euros per bottle

100% sangiovese grapes, grown in the Pisan Hills DOC region about 50km from Lucca.  In the glass, it's a lighter shade of crimson, not quite opaque, hinting about being a lighter bodied wine.   The nose revealed a touch of cherry, but somewhat closed.  On the palate, the lighter body is confirmed, the alcohol content low - I'd guess 13% - with simple red fruit flavour. 

Surprising for the price, the palate is balanced with soft tannins.  Good with casual lunches, but not suited to fuller bodied meats and meals.







 .....and Something Better


Scopone 2004 Brunello di Montalcino
14 euros (on sale at local supermarket)
13.5%

A friend is over for dinner, Melanie has gone to the trouble of preparing a delicious osso buco - bless her - , I've made velvety soft polenta (thanks to parmesan and mascarpone mixed in) so it's my duty to come to the party..... and this Brunello from a family owned vineyard did the trick!
In the glass, it's dense and opaque with orange tinges showing a little of its age.  The nose reveals red fruits of the forest, earthy forest floor, and coffee/chocolate overtones.

Tasting reveals a medium bodied style, and confirms the fruit - raspberry, cherry.  There is good mouthfeel, fine but still obvious tannins and refreshing acidity, leading to a conclusion that this wine needs more time.





* 199 bottles and counting.... is the number we've consumed at home (excludes restaurants) since arriving on 12 April.