If He Had a Hankering for Spaghetti Carbonara, I Made It

January 10, 2012

My husband died a month ago, the woman says.

Woman in Southeast Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

@J Huizenga

Do you know how long we were married? Fifty-four years.

 You are surprised? Yes, because nowadays such a long marriage is rare.

Sicilian Woman in Monterosso Almo, copyright Jann Huizenga

@J Huizenga

And do you know why? Because people today are egoists. They think only of themselves. They want what they want.

How did Paolo and I stay together for 54 years? I cooked him whatever he wanted. If he had a hankering for spaghetti carbonara, I made it.

 And Paolo never ever complained about anything I cooked.

Sicilian Woman in Monterosso Almo, copyright Jann  Huizenga

@ J Huizenga

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All Around Etna, Pillar of Heaven

January 5, 2012

Well, Mount Etna–Pillar of Heaven, as the Greeks called her–is spewing her ash again as I write this. First blast of 2012. Clouds of smoke are visible all the way down here.

We toured around her just last week. Small puffs of smoke, like breaths on a cold day, blew from her crater into the gray-blue sky. She looked breathtakingly serene then, but there’s always more than meets the eye in Sicily.

Vulcan, god of fire, was tink-tinking away in her burning bowels.

Mount Etna in December, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

How odd to live cheek-by-jowl with such a force of nature.

Stone homes–still inhabited–nestle against the black scabs of lava that are etched like witch’s fingers down her green shoulders. Some homes, like the one below, are just a distant memory.

Ruined House in Lava Field on Mount Etna, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Lava fields outside Randazzo

Randazzo, closest to the summit, is a dark town on the north slope built entirely of lava stone.

Church in Randazzo, Sicily, a town near Etna, copyright Jann Huizenga

Church of Santa Maria in Randazzo

Scene in Randazzo, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Center of Randazzo

In spite of the danger, Sicilians feel an intense affection for Etna, identifying deeply with her volatile nature.

The boys in Randazzo deck themselves out in black–to match their surroundings I presume–and behave just like Etna, puffing great rings of smoke into the sky.

Boys in Randazzo, Sicly, copyright Jann Huizenga

Scene in Randazzo

Does your life lack excitement?

Here’s a house for you. It’s just under Etna, and for sale!

House for sale under Etna, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

 

***

Tips for tourists: Wine tours and trekking are favorite past-times around Etna. The north face of Etna is a gorgeous place to drive around–full of vineyards, baronial manors, and mountain panoramas, but when you get to down-at-the-heels Bronte (home of the famous pistachio nut), the roads become trashy–especially shocking to see in the presence of this great natural wonder.

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A New Year Dawns on a Sicilian Piazza

January 1, 2012

After days of chilly wind and rain, 2012 started just purrfectly.

There was bright white sun on the piazza.

And a gigantic, baroque Kiss-Fest.

I smooched with my newspaper-tobacco man. I don’t know his name, but he held me in a tight embrace.

I pecked the pink cheeks of the myopic, eccentric composer who once invited me and my husband into his house to show off his antique objets, family coat of arms, and pianos.

I kissed the village aristocrat, who towers head and shoulders above all the other little men of his WW II generation.

My husband, a rather shy and undemonstrative sort, had to embrace these same men. Their abrasive stubble unnerved him, and he got his sunglasses tangled up in the specs of the myopic composer. “I’d only let Sicilians get away with this,” he said.

I did not get photos of him cringing and doing the Sicilian Smooch-Smooch Ritual (darn), but here are others from New Year’s morning on the piazza:

Coffee and brioche at a Sicilian al fresco bar, copyright Jann Huizenga

brioscia integrale con miele

Two Sicilian Men, copyright Jann Huizenga

Scene in Ragusa Ibla, copyright Jann HuizengaSicilian Man in Little Truck (Ape), copyright Jann Huizenga

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In 2012, Follow Your Bliss Through the Door

December 31, 2011

Hi everyone,

Buon Anno! Auguri! Best wishes for a blissful year ahead.

Follow your bliss and the universe will open doors for you where there were only walls.

Joseph Campbell

Man Pushing Open Green Door, copyright Jann Huizenga

Open Green Door, copyright Jann HuizengaWeathered Wooden Door, copyright Jann HuizengaOpen Blue Door in Pink Wall, copyright Jann Huizenga

Open Green Door, copyright Jann Huizenga

 

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Death by Sugar in Sicily

December 26, 2011

Sicily tries to kill you with sugar, and Christmas Day is no exception.

Everyone was walking the streets yesterday morning smooching and shouting “Auguri!”  And juggling a cake or two. Sicilian Man Carrying Christmas Cake, copyright Jann Huizenga

These are no ordinary cakes. They’re saccharine clouds pasted together with cinnamon-ricotta goo, doused with cognac or rum, laced with teeth-achingly sweet marzipan, and topped with pistachio nuts, berries, chocolate or a blood-rush of sugary icing and spirals of candied orange, lemon, and citron.

Dig in for a glucose overdose, and don’t blame me if you gain a few kilos:

Christmas Cake in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Christmas Cassata in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Christmas Cake in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Sicilian Christmas Cake, copyright Jann Huizenga

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