Water from Stone

August 9, 2011

Water runs again in our village fountains.

How many years were they dry? I’m not sure, actually, but this year the village coughed up around 250,000 euro to make them gush again.

These antiques now have a modern twist. See for yourself.

 

Restoring a Fountain in Ragusa Ibla, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Restoring Ibla's Fountains

A large, wide basin at the foot of Ragusa Ibla where donkeys drank and women did the laundry is also under reconstruction.

Ragusa Ibla is lucky to have money for things like this, thanks to its status as a World Heritage Site. In the poor village of Cassaro about an hour away, a wall mural has replaced the old village fountain. It sort of breaks my heart.

Mural on wall in Casaro, Sicily, Italy, copyright Jann Huizenga

Casaro, Sicily

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Giuseppe, and Memories of Monica Bellucci

August 2, 2011

It’s 7am and already hot in Siracusa. A scirocco is blowing.

I find Giuseppe sitting on his motorino. The way he waves me over makes me think he’s a little bit crazy.

He’s not surprised when I ask if I can take his photo.  He seems to have been waiting for someone like me.


“I was in a film with Monica Belluci,” he says.

A crazy jokester, this guy.

“No, no, veramente!” he says. “You know Malèna?”

“The Tornatore film?”

“Yes, that one. I was in a group of men that yelled Ciao Bella as she walked by. And then, let’s see, there was a scene I played with Mussolini, and we all yelled Il Duce !”

“So you were an actor!”

“Well, I also worked on botta here in the port.”

“What’s botta?”

“Botta, ship.” He’s suddenly trying to speak English.

“What did you do?”

Here Giuseppe loses me, saying something about working inside the boat.

“Did you repair the boat?” I ask.

No, no.

“Did you clean? Cook?”

No, no.

He points to a lamp post and says “material like that.”

Maybe he was a welder?

But we don’t pursue the topic because Giuseppe isn’t interested. He wants to talk movies. He was in other films, too, with other actresses. What were their names? He’s forgotten, but the light in his eyes tells me that those were the days.

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RAFFLE RESULTS

Congratulations to Janie, who has just won the cookbook raffle. Janie is passionate about two things: cooking and Italy. Take a look at her super-scrumptious blog, Panini Girl.

Sicilian Jasmine Blancmange & Book Raffle

July 28, 2011

It’s the Season of Jasmine. Take in a lungful and you get high. I don’t know how many Sicilians perfume their family altar with jasmine like Santina does, but I do know many use it in their cooking.

The bush I planted on the balcony two years ago has finally exploded into bloom. So I couldn’t pass up the chance to try the Jasmine Blancmange recipe from a little book called Sicily’s Favorite Recipes by Russotto and Sichel. Below is a slight adaptation.

INGREDIENTS

20 jasmine flowers

500 ml (2 cups) whole milk

50 g (2 oz) white chocolate

50 g (3-4 Tbsp) cornflour/cornstarch

100 g (1/2 cup) sugar (I used more like 1/4 cup)

 

1. Pour the milk in a saucepan and add the jasmine. (I let the jasmine steep in milk  for a while before step 2.)

Sicilian Jasmine Blancmange, copyright Jann Huizenga

2. Bring just to the boil and turn off immediately. Allow to cool and then strain, squeezing the flowers gently to extract the flavor.

3. Add the cornflour to the sugar and mix thoroughly to avoid lumps.

4. Add the grated white chocolate. (I didn’t bother to grate it–just broke it into chunks and it melted just fine.)

5. Place on the stove and stir continuously until thick. Stir briskly for one more minute after the liquid boils and then turn off.

Mixing Sicilian Jasmine Blancmange, copyright Jann Huizenga

6. Pour the mixture into molds, allow to cool, and refrigerate for 2 hours. Decorate.

Sicilian Jasmine Blancmange, copyright Jann Huizenga

YOU CAN WIN SICILY’S FAVORITE RECIPES. It’s the English translation, but recipes are in grams & liters–finding conversions on the web isn’t hard. All you have to do is leave a comment on this post or a previous one and your name will be entered in the drawing to take place at midnight EST on August 1. You need an address either in Italy or North America. Buona fortuna!

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Wordless Conversation with a Fishmonger

July 25, 2011

Sicilian Fishmonger in Siracusa, Sicily, copyright Jann HuizengaSicilian Fishmonger in Siracusa, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Sicilian Fishmonger in Siracusa, Sicily, copyright Jann HuizengaSicilian Fishmonger in Siracusa, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Don’t miss the fish and veggie market next time you’re in Siracusa. It’s every morning, starting at 5am. Great entertainment!

 

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Santina, Part 2

July 21, 2011

Santina and I had drunk our coffees in the kitchen and viewed the family altar in her bedroom. Then she led me into a third small room.

Every inch of wall space was hung with paintings. Unframed canvases were stacked high on a table. “They are mine,” she said, beaming.

Paintings by Sicilian Woman, copyright Jann  Huizenga
She pointed to an exuberant painting of a fishbowl full of roses and purple tulips.

Painting by Sicilian Woman, copyright Jann Huizenga

“One night my mother was suffering so much that I didn’t know what to do. So I painted this.”

She went back into the kitchen and left me looking and thinking. I picked up a portfolio. Its cardboard cover had been painted over with a bright-eyed young woman wearing a strand of pearls.

“Who is this, Signora?” I asked, carrying it back into the kitchen.

Sicilian Woman with Painting, copyright Jann Huizenga

“That is me,” she smiled.

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Thanks to Haley at Fa l’Americana for this nice award.

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