My Italian Experience

 

 
     
 
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My Italian Experience

 

 

To Check out My love of Italy and authentic Italian products (click here)!

 

Barbara (right) and Chef Luisa at Arte e Cucina 
Cooking School in Siena, Italia.

Arte e Cucina – My Delicious Experience at Cooking School in Italia
By Barbara Seelig Brown

 

This past July I had the privilege of attending Cooking School in Siena, Italy. I couldn’t have been more excited just thinking about it, cooking and Italy, what could be better! I had high hopes for this experience and my expectations were met thanks to Chef Luisa Neri and Direttore Sonia Di Centa at Arte e Cucina at Society Dante Alighieri,

www.artandcooking.com

 

My experience began on a Monday morning with a true Italian espresso and the introduction of the talented Chef Luisa. Chef Luisa had a lovely way about her, knew how to handle the students as well as the food and provided a most wonderful environment in which to learn. One day’s discussion about music resulted in Chef Luisa bringing in a small CD player with the CD’s of the artists discussed the day before in class. She didn’t miss a trick and her food was outstanding! When the chef is dancing around the kitchen, you know you are lucky to be learning from her.

 

Her excellent menus included such dishes as Ragu di Carne over homemade Tagliatelle (we made homemade pasta every single day), Osso Buco (my favorite), Panzanella (bread & tomato salad), Spinaci alla fiorentina, Pollo al Limone, Crostata ai frutta fresca, and Torta ubriaca agli amaretti. The Panzanella was not just chunks of tomato and huge cubes of bread, it was crusty Italian bread soaked and then torn into very small pieces, tossed with perfectly ripe tomatoes, basil, celery, cucumbers, and onion, then dressed with the finest olive oil and red wine vinegar. 

 

The class cast of characters varied daily and I made some wonderful new friends from our west coast all the way to Japan. The international flavor added even more seasoning to an already delicious mélange. Chef Luisa taught the class mainly in Italian (and why not?) but some participants needed a bit of English thrown in, that is where I found a niche and began to translate. After all, the language of food is universal and it was a pleasure to lend a hand. It turned out that Chef Luisa and I made a great team. 

 

There is so much to tell but one thing that kept ringing true to me is this. You know those delicious family favorite recipes that your mother or grandmother made and never wrote down because they didn’t have exact measurements, well, in Italy cooking is still an art, not an exact science. It is not over complicated. The cucchiaio (teaspoon) is a teaspoon not a measuring teaspoon. The ingredients, which are of the highest quality, are the basis for the dishes. Go to market, see what looks good, and go home and cook. Plan the menu at the market based on what is seasonal and looks good, don’t plan the menu at home and then go to 100 stores until you find the missing ingredient – that is already making cooking way too complicated. 

 

Cooking is a way to express yourself and be creative. You know what you like, put it in a pot with a little love and try it! The recipes used in our classes were guidelines with room for tasting and tweaking, this was cooking the way it was intended to be, a labor of love. Taste it, season it, relax, and then enjoy it. It will be good because you made it. So get mom or grandma to show you how she makes her special dishes and make some notes. Each time you prepare the dish, it might come out different but the idea and the memories will still be there. Maybe it’s the memories that really did make that dish so special. And yes, I only like my mother’s meatballs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
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