The next stop on the Grand Tour of Ohio is Rome. There are at least three villages in Ohio named Rome. My first stop will be in Richland County, since it is nearby.
The traditional and modern cuisines of Rome, Italy is very typically what we think of as Italian food. Pasta in all its shapes and variety, especially spaghetti. Fresh vegetables abound. Fava, or broad, beans are very typical and have been for centuries. The specialty meats such as cured jowls, tripe, and oxtail were widely available due to the slaughterhouses of Rome, along with fish and seafood from the Mediterranean. Cheeses such as the famous Peccorino Romano are eaten.
Many of these foods were produced in the Roman Campagna (Italian: campagna romana), which is a low-lying area surrounding Rome. In the Middle Ages, it was also a source of malaria, and so was abandoned for farming, supposedly also because the water supply was not adequate. During the 17th through the 19th centuries, it was a source of inspiration for many landscape painters, and was a "required" stop on the Grand Tour.
By Claude Lorrain - Unknown source, PublicDomain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1739828 |
A traditional Roman meal consists of five or six courses.
Antipasto - an appetizer, perhaps a bruschetta or cured meats and marinated or fried vegetables in bite-sized pieces
Primo - usually a pasta dish. Rome has four : cacio e pepe (pecorino and pepper), carbonara (pecorino, guanciale, and egg), gricia (guanciale and pecorino), and amatriciana (guanciale, pecorino, and tomato).
Secondo - A piece of meat or fish, with vegetables ordered separately
Dolce - a sweet dessert. Perhaps tiramisu, a gelato, a piece of fruit
Coffee - no doubt an espresso or latte, my favorite, followed by a
Digestif - a liqueur such as amaretto, frangelico, grappa, limoncello
Martha Stewart offers us a recipe for bruschetta with mint and fava beans.
According to Johnny's Selected Seeds, fava beans like cool weather, like peas do. I planted peas this year and the weather changed from cool to hot in a matter of a few days. My peas withered on the vine faster than I could pick them. The pods shattered later in summer, and when the weather was cool again, the pea seeds germinated and grew more plants. The days are getting shorter and I doubt whether I will harvest any at all from this second crop.
As hope springs eternal for a better garden success next year, I will order some fava bean seeds. This is a crop I have never grown before.
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