In Sicily, Snails on Your Lettuce, Feathers on Your Eggs

January 22, 2011

The roving veggie peddlers who park outside the house and bay till they’re hoarse have lettuces so fresh they crawl with snails. You tear off a giant leaf and there they are—antennae waving in terror.  I suppose if I were a brave Sicilian, I’d boil them up and bolt them down with some lemony oil. (Old Sicilian Proverb: You never get enough of kissing a sweetheart or eating snails.) Instead I toss them onto the terracotta roof across the alley and hope they’ll live a day longer.

Produce in Sicily is so fresh it comes with extras. Mushrooms with the roots and soil that fed them…

Sicilian Mushrooms, copyright Jann Huizenga

Tomatoes with their umbilical cord…

Sicilian Plum Tomatoes, copyright Jann Huizenga

Oranges with their branches…

Sicilian Oranges, copyright Jann Huizenga

Eggs with mommy’s feathers.

Fresh Sicilian Eggs with Feather, copyright Jann Huizenga

I HEART my fruit & veggie hawker.

Roving Veggie Hawker in Ragusa Ibla, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Click here to subscribe to BaroqueSicily.

Is Italy European?

January 19, 2011

Yes or no. Is Italy really part of the EU? (The current Berlusconi-Ruby scandal makes you wonder even more.)

See for yourself in this funny Bruno Bozzetto video.


(click here)

Click here to subscribe to BaroqueSicily.

A Cupola in my Computer

January 16, 2011

If icicles dangle from your lashes and hoarfrost coats your lips, I’m sorry.  Really, I am.

Here in Sicily the sun warms my limbs as I work on my tiny balcony. And reflected in my computer screen is an image that makes my heart burble:

Cupola in Ragusa Ibla reflected in a computer screen, copyright Jann Huizenga

You know how some people have a zillion photos of their dog, or their kid?

I’m obsessive that way about my cupola.

Cupola of the duomo in Ragusa Ibla, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Cupola in Ragusa Ibla, Sicily at dusk, copyright Jann Huizenga

Cupola in Ragusa Ibla, copyright Jann Huizenga

Cupola in Ragusa Ibla, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Cupola in Ragusa Ibla, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Cupola in Ragusa Ibla, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Cupola in Ragusa Ibla, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

What would you like reflected in YOUR computer screen?

***

Click to subscribe to BaroqueSicily.


4 Ways To Cut a Bella Figura This Winter

January 12, 2011

Here’s what the Sicilians are wearing this winter.

Winter Fashion in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

1. The puffy.

The temps here in Sicily are not really low enough to warrant these. But fashion is dictated by freezing-cold Milan, and shops in Italy all sell the exact same clothes, so that’s why down here in sunny Sicily, where trees are dripping with lemons and oranges and almond blossoms are popping out, people walk around looking like they’re ready to schuss down the Matterhorn. Note that the jackets must be either black or white–absolutely no colors. Capisci?

Men's Hats in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

2. The hat.

Men wear hats in Sicily, and they’re ADORABLE, don’t you think? The coppola (on the left) is a symbol of the island, and now adventurous women in Sicily are wearing them, too.

Winter Fashion in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

3. The scarf.

My friends Roberta Corradin and Antonio exude Italian chic with a boho twist.  Look at the ease, the nonchalance of these scarves. How do they do that? I got my husband one similar to Antonio’s for Christmas, but he can’t for the life of him figure out how to tie it. The scarf either strangles him or unfurls like a long flag in the wind.

Men's Red Plaid Suit in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

4. The red plaid suit.

Men are the real peacocks in Italy. As they say here, Wowa! Would you or your guy wear that?

***

Click here to subscribe to BaroqueSicily.

Lemony Sicilian Roast Chicken

January 8, 2010

This sunny isle bursts with lemons. They roll around the streets with abandon, and nobody even bothers to pick them up (except me, that is—I perfume my house with big bowlfuls of  ’em).

So it’s no surprise that Sicilian kitchens are redolent of lemon. Islanders are either marinating fish in lemon, squeezing a big fat lemon over a salad or just-roasted pork, or whipping up a batch of  lemon gelo or granita.

I’ve slightly adapted this recipe for lemon chicken from Giovanna Bellia La Marca’s Sicilian Feasts (Felice’s Lemon Chicken), full of great old Sicilian recipes. This one’s easy, but you have to think ahead for the salt-water soaking and the marinade.

Ingredients

1 chicken, cut into pieces (free-range/organic is best)

1/8 cup coarse salt

1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil

1/8 cup lemon juice

1 tsp dried oregano

2 cloves garlic, crushed and skin removed

salt and pepper to taste

1 lemon, thinly sliced

xxx

xxxx

1. Pre-soak the chicken in water to cover and the coarse salt for 30 minutes. Rinse well, dry with paper towels, and set aside.

2. Meanwhile, make the marinade: place the olive oil, lemon juice, oregano, garlic, salt and pepper in a jar or bowl with a tight-fitting lid. Shake vigorously to blend.

3. Place a layer of the chicken pieces in a glass bowl, spoon the marinade on top, and continue until all the chicken is used up. Pour leftover marinade on top, cover with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for several hours or overnight.

Sicilian Lemon Chicken, copyright Jann Huizenga

4. Preheat the oven to 375 Fahrenheit. Remove the chicken from the marinade, place it on a rack in a roasting pan, and bake for 1 and 1/4 hours or until browned. Brush the chicken with the marinade as it bakes.

5. Now this is where I simplify. Giovanna adds the remaining marinade to the pan juices after the chicken is done. Then she puts the pan on two burners, adds the lemon slices, and simmers for 3 minutes, finishing the sauce off by adding a cup of water, stirring, bringing it back to the boil, and pouring it over the chicken. I, being a Lazy Bum (un barbone pigra), use up all the marinade as the chicken bakes, and then just pour whatever sauce has accumulated in the pan directly over the chicken. (I have also been known to not bother using a rack at all, and to just bake the chicken pieces directly in a glass or a roasting pan.)

6. Serve hot or at room temp, garnished with lemon slices.

Sicilian Lemon Chicken, copyright Jann Huizenga

Click to subscribe to Baroque Sicily.

Site Meter BlogItalia.it - La directory italiana dei blog