Foodbuzz 24, 24, 24: An Italian Affair—recipes and a glorious meal from an Italian farm kitchen

[28 Mar 2010 | By | 14 Comments]

4464511549 a185cd8d06 Foodbuzz 24, 24, 24: An Italian Affair   recipes and a glorious meal from an Italian farm kitchenOh yes, I am having an affair with Italian food. Day by day, I am falling in love.

I signed up to participate in Foodbuzz’ 24-24-24 and was selected. My theme: pure Italian food. Better said: all of the Italian I can possibly insert into one fantastic menu, an outpouring of all I have learned and experienced while living in Italy. Yes, I am living in Florence. Normally from Seattle, mio marito (my husband) and I are suckers for risk and living large: we sold our house, our cars, gave up our jobs and left the country. Our goal was to go abroad for year; we started with cycling from Amsterdam to Paris, visited friends in London and landed—decidedly—in Florence, Italy for the school year.

I was fresh out of culinary school, we took the earnings from our house and cars and plopped our lives in Italy. For ‘mio marito’ it was a well-deserved break to soak up family; for me, it became an extended focus on food and writing—while our sons dove into soccer and school (we put them in an Italian school).

4464457695 a807c357801 Foodbuzz 24, 24, 24: An Italian Affair   recipes and a glorious meal from an Italian farm kitchen

Toward the end of February, we took a ‘6 day Tuscan road trip‘—which was ‘wicked awesome’ as it included hot springs, seeing Elba Island and finding Sant’Egle Agriturismo. An agriturismo is essentially a Bed and Breakfast but in a Tuscan, farm-like setting. It means the food you enjoy for breakfast is local, from the farm and made from scratch (heavenly preserves from fig to green tomato to wine confettura, mixed fruit and white peach… wild honey). They could call it Local or Organic—but that would be redundant. Of course it is the most natural meat, and organic eggs and fruit from their own/neighbors’ trees…

4465380922 09ce91b670 Foodbuzz 24, 24, 24: An Italian Affair   recipes and a glorious meal from an Italian farm kitchenIf you travel in Tuscany: stay at an agriturismo. No two are alike, and each offers a unique, special experience. We have been to a few, but Sant’Egle will forever stand out in our minds because it was so cozy and quiet, the hosts/hostess were fantastic, we loved breakfast and signed up for dinner—twice. Some agriturismos offer the option of dining ‘in’ for your evening meal (while the breakfast is included in the price, the dinner is a flat fee per person—in this case 25Euros. And worth every bite). If dinner is an option: take it. Traveling about all day and coming ‘home’ to a meal made just for you with all the trimmings? Priceless.

So when I invited Erika to my house for this Foodbuzz event, I was floored when she turned the tables: she invited me to come cook a dinner with her. I rented a car and drove to Sorano, Italy (Sorano pictured, is in Grosetto—the southern region of Tuscany). And we cooked—and ate—a full Italian meal. (And I learned some fantastic new recipes and kitchen tips—stay tuned as I share them in the next few posts!).

4464457715 f0be8a2758 Foodbuzz 24, 24, 24: An Italian Affair   recipes and a glorious meal from an Italian farm kitchenItalians don’t mess around. Their dinner is multiple courses, starting with an Antipasti (appetizer), followed by a Primi (pasta, risotto), Secondi (meat, fish), Contorni (vegetable side, salad) and Dolci (dessert). Add in a basket of bread, wine for every course, espresso or grappa/limoncello/liquori to finish… and you are: FULL. And in this instance, not only was my stomach full—my brain and heart were overflowing as well.

And I find that after being in Italy for months and months my culinary brain is starting to deconstruct meals in a similar fashion (starter, first and second courses, side vegetables and dessert). Even if the starter is just olives or slices of salami. Even if dessert is just a smallish plate of biscotti and a decaf macchiato. It isn’t that each course has to be huge… but nothing is better than when each course is heavenly and leaves you wanting for more. (Plus, it helps me mentally organize my meals!).

This Agriturismo—and the meals Erika served us—will be some of the meals-from-Italy I remember my entire life. It will color my own kitchen experience, inspire course-by-course menus and propel me to new heights. When signing up for this 24-24-24 event I simply meant to create a typical, multi-course meal with my new Italian friends. Which happened… but it turned out to be so much more: cooking with Erika at her farm house Agriturismo was about as cool as it comes for a cheeky food blogger from Seattle.

Heart palpitations. Thump, thump, thump.

I brought ingredients and some wine, Erika supplied even more ingredients and with new Sant’Egle aprons on (thanks Erika!)—we stepped into the kitchen to begin (recipe names in English):

Grilled Vegetable Appetizer

Eggplant Parmesan

Blue Cheese & Walnut Ravioli

Balsamic Pork

Chocolate ‘lava’ cake

This week’s posts will include more tips, recipes and pics from this once-in-a-lifetime meal—heart beating happily. It just leaves me hungry for more: more Italian food, meeting more Italian chefs, sponging all I can learn from talented cooks and restaurant kitchens and and and…

I am in love.

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    14 Comments »

  • Simply Luxurious said (28 March 2010 at 5:12 am):

    Wow! I am mesmerized and and excited to read more. What an adventure you and your husband and family are on. It sounds absolutely amazing. Thank you for taking on us on the ride.
    By the way, honestly – (I’m assuming the pictures are of you and Erika), but it looked like Julia Roberts in the kitchen for her new movie – Eat, Pray, Love. =)

  • janelle (author) said (28 March 2010 at 6:50 am):

    Simply: aw shucks—you are too kind. I suppose I should have said I am the one on the right;). I have been told that I look like her before!!! (Especially when she was in Pretty Woman and I had the same out-of-control ‘big’ hair). It will be super weird to see her in that movie, since I am living in Italy!

  • The Italian Dish said (28 March 2010 at 6:51 am):

    Great post. I can’t wait to read your upcoming tips and recipe! I love your photos.

  • Erika said (29 March 2010 at 7:39 am):

    Ciao Janelle!
    thank you so much for the nice words you wrote.
    You are a special person and I was very lucky to meet you!
    I hope to cook again together.
    I’ll be in Florence soon! :-)

  • janelle (author) said (29 March 2010 at 8:12 am):

    Elaine: thanks! I love learning all this stuff;).

    Erika: likewise, ditto and doppio Gina;))). We will have to cook on this end too!

  • Lori said (29 March 2010 at 9:16 am):

    You continue to amaze me with how much you are experiencing. I loved your family frolics. I’ve gained valuable information for my upcoming visit. It’s great to see your sons’ perspective for my daughters. I’ll keep an eye out for the lunch suggestions. Thank you!

  • Jacqui said (30 March 2010 at 3:18 am):

    Wow, this is truly inspiring. Thank you for sharing your experiences and recipes! I couldn’t imagine a meal more satisfying than one made from scratch using all local ingredients. It sounds like you are living life to its fullest!

  • Kimmy said (31 March 2010 at 10:57 am):

    Very jealous! I used to live in Florence (Borgo La Croce 32 to be precise) and I miss it everyday. Our wacky neighbors, the mopeds, THE FOOD… yum! Everything about the way I ate and cooked changed after living in Italy. I can honestly say that 2 years later I’m still reaping the benefits of all I learned there. Many blessings and good eats to you and your family on your journeys!

  • tuscan chocolate cake | Talk of Tomatoes said (31 March 2010 at 3:00 pm):

    [...] talking « Foodbuzz 24, 24, 24: An Italian Affair—recipes and a glorious meal from an Italian farm kitche… [...]

  • Krista said (31 March 2010 at 4:19 pm):

    Oh! How FUN!! :-) I’m so glad you got to do and experience this. :-) Thank you for sharing!!!

  • kitchen tips | Talk of Tomatoes said (8 April 2010 at 2:11 pm):

    [...] recently cooked with my friend Erika, at her agriturismo. She happens to have a nickname too (affectionately given to her from a friend): Gina. We have had [...]

  • Sara said (10 April 2010 at 5:33 pm):

    I am so jealous that you live in Florence, one of my favorite cities! :) Next time I am going to stay at an Agriturismo! Great Post!

  • Eggplant Parmesan | Talk of Tomatoes said (11 April 2010 at 3:01 pm):

    [...] Its Eggplant Pecorino. Or so it was when I cooked it with Erika at her Agriturismo in Tuscany. [...]

  • gorgonzola ravioli | Talk of Tomatoes said (20 April 2010 at 3:05 pm):

    [...] makes me so happy that Erika and I (aka Gina and Gina) made ravioli. Pasta has been on my list of ‘things to make’ since I [...]

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