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.
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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.
Click to subscribe to BaroqueSicily.
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. 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: December 22, 2011 So you’re wringing your hands trying to figure out what in blazes to cook for Christmas Eve? You can unwring them now: sciabbò is the answer. These are Sicilian Christmas noodles: a wonderfully easy dish that drew raves (I kid you not) from my three luncheon guests today. The recipe comes from Pomp and Sustenance by Mary Taylor Simeti. Mary is the absolute authority on Sicilian cuisine and its history, and I’m thrilled she’s given me permission to share it with you. Take a look at some of the ingredients: The complete list of ingredients: 1 medium onion 1/4 cup olive oil 3/4 pound pork meat, diced small (I used ground pork) 2 T tomato extract or 3 T tomato paste 1/2 cup red wine 2 cups plain tomato sauce (I used a good store-bought sauce) 2 cups water salt 1/2 t ground cinnamon 1 T sugar 1 T unsweetened cocoa 1.5 pounds lasagna ricce (I used pappardelle) Instructions: Sauté the onion in the oil until soft. Add the pork and cook, stirring, until browned. Add the tomato extract and the wine, stirring to dissolve the extract completely. Add the tomato sauce and the water. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat and simmer for about 40 minutes until the meat is tender and the sauce is thick. Correct the salt (if the extract is salty, it may not be necessary to add more). Stir in the cinnamon, sugar, and cocoa. Cook the pasta in abundant salted water until it is al dente, drain well, and toss with the sauce. You may wish to serve grated cheese on the side, although I think sciabbo is better without it. Merry Christmas! *** Some Sicilian-Americans still cook seven fishes for Christmas Eve, but Mary Taylor Simeti emailed me that this tradition pretty much died out in Sicily itself after World War II. She has written other wonderful books too, including Sicilian Food: Recipes from an Abundant Isle and a memoir, On Persephone’s Island. *** December 17, 2011 Bright red, a rosso the color of Rudolph’s nose, is the leitmotif of the season here in Southeast Sicily. ![]() Ms. Santa was handing out "gifts" of scrolled paper that read "Merry Christmas. Monti's government is gifting you a cut in your pension." (A better kind of protest than throwing molotov cocktails, as in Greece, don't you think?) Click to subscribe to BaroqueSicily. *** To learn more about Monti’s austerity package for Italy, click here. To learn more about Santa Lucia, click here.
December 12, 2011 It’s nice to be away from forced Yuletide cheer, piped-in Jingle Bell Rock, wild mobs in big-box stores, Santas tolling bells in your face, parking lot chaos. Call me Scrooge if you will. But a low-key Christmas is a welcome change. Sicilians in villages get festive by hand-painting Santa scenes on shop windows.
Take it easy this holiday and don’t forget the simple things. Buone Feste! *** My fellow blogger from Calabria speaks eloquently about this very topic. *** |
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