“I realized very quickly that within their own family the entire complexity of this push and pull between past and present and future was contained between mother and father and then their three young sons…The mother and father thought the idea of putting matcha powder into burrata was fucking nuts and grandma’s rolling over in her grave…These guys were like, ‘Well we just came back from Japan. Matt illustrated the tensions between staying true to time-honored traditions even as younger generations are looking to do something new with an anecdote about a burrata-making family in Puglia. They need to be taken very seriously, but to say that Italian food is the same as it has always been…overlooks the fact that there are incredible chefs, young and old, and artisans and innovators that are doing amazing things with pizza in Naples or ragu in Emilia-Romagna.” Or, as he so eloquently says, “I wanted to toss off this idea of this calcified cuisine that’s encased in amber, that Italian food is a museum piece…So what this book is really about is, yes, the traditions are beautiful and they shouldn’t be screwed with half-heartedly. Matt spent months eating his way through the country for his extraordinary new book, Pasta, Pane, Vino: Deep Travels Through Italy’s Food Culture, and he explains that what he found in his travels was a vibrant and evolving food culture, not one that is frozen in time. Listening to Roads and Kingdom co-founder Matt Goulding talk about the food culture in Italy on this week’s Special Sauce was a real treat for me.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |