Kataguide
A blog about human stories and places
17/04/2012
MAMMA PAPPA... Culinary delight the way it should be
There's a beautiful lake, Lago di Bolsena, in the province of Viterbo, Lazio Region, Italy.
It's the biggest of volcanic origin in Europe and the fifth biggest lake in Italy.
At he lake, there's a small town called Montefiascone, Etruscan origin here, glorious past as a summer residency for the Popes.
It's Easter Monday, lunch time, I'm with my family in Montefiascone; hunger and... desperately looking for a place to eat.
We find the tiny, slightly hidden Osteria Mamma Pappa. This place is located in a 400 years old wine cellar, at the feet of the town's Rocca, Rocca dei Papi. The restaurant is a slow food member, guaranteeing that most of the products are from the area, fresh and - mostly - organic.
The welcoming ambience, the pleasant and knowledgeable owner, Angelo, just give the feeling that the food will be sensational.
And so it was: ah! We started with 'la colazione del pellegrino', the pilgrim's breakfast, an Easter holiday special with hams, salamis, sweet and salty focaccias. Other unforgettable dishes were the fresh asparagus omelette, the fried artichokes and lamb, a special pasta carbonara prepared with a sauce of red wine and sausage.
The sausages were among the best I have ever eaten and everything was prepared and served with care and attention.
Some people were sharing a table; the atmosphere was festive and relaxed. We sat there for a long time, just enjoying the place, the friendly service, the attentive look of Angelo.
We had some local white wine, Est! Est! Est! The name has interesting origins. The legend says that a bishop on his way to Rome from Germany was very passionate about food and wine and every time he was travelling, he used to send his cup-bearer to the next village to explore what there was on offer. The cup-bearer was supposed to leave a sign on the door of the inns saying EST!, Latin for "is", in the sense of "the good wine is here".
Apparently the wine was so good, that the cup-bearer wrote EST three times on the door of an inn in Montefiascone and once the bishop arrived, he decided to spend not only the night but to stay longer, falling in love not only with the wine, but also with the village and the scenery.
I could not agree more with the bishop, Johannes Defuk, who visited Montefiascone later on as well and died there in 1113, now resting in a local church: the village is really worth a visit.
I would recommend even spending a couple of days there and visiting the enoteca located in the Rocca, or strolling at the romantic lake Bolsena. Plenty to see, excellent restaurant, just an hour away from Rome.
06/04/2012
Who can remember L'Aquila?
Three years ago the earth trembled in L’Aquila; it was April 6th at 3:32 AM. The earthquake lasted for 25
seconds and it left behind a disfigured city, 309 dead, thousands of injured, thousands of homeless and countless tears.
Three years after that day the city
still resembles a ghost city, with only a few cafes and restaurants open, most
of the shops still closed. The military is controlling that no cars go to the
city centre and that no people venture among the ruins.
When I arrived in L’Aquila
on a cold Sunday afternoon in January, a group of men advised me to park the car outside
the main centre: “Don’t go up there; the military doesn’t let anybody pass;
we’re still living here like in Santiago de Chile and we have no idea why”.
L’Aquila is a dead city
right now; having been there before the earthquake, I found it hard to
understand that I was in the same place. I remembered the city as being lively,
glimpses on the majestic mountains at every corner, beautiful buildings, most
of them, today, in ruins.
“There had been many foreshocks,” recalls
a lady eating next to my table in one of the few open restaurants, who happens to be the owner of the very building we are in. “Just a few days before the
earthquake a commission of scientists had come here and told everybody that
there was no risk for a ‘big one’. One has to laugh not to cry.”
She says: “We were allowed to reopen the restaurant and the cafe next door a year ago, but we still
cannot move back in our apartment, which is on the fourth floor because it is
not considered safe and there is no gas supply for private households.”
Her family lives out
of the city, like everyone else: “Yes,” she says, “the city has completely
relocated and it seems there’s no hope we can move back soon.”
The reason is that most of
the buildings in the city centre are of historical value and therefore under
the protection of the Ministry of Culture: rebuilding operations follow detailed - governmental - procedures.
She says: “It is sad that
people may think that we, as inhabitants of the city, should do more, that we
should rebuild L’Aquila whereas the truth is that we can’t. Unfortunately we
often read about some involvement of the mafia; there’s been so much money
pumped in, all gone in the pockets of some politician, or some ‘study group’,
or some ‘expert’.”
Unfortunately, as Natalia, a bar owner, tells me, “there is always someone who is getting rich thanks to us”. “We are lucky because we
could reopen our activity ‘officially’ already in December 2009. Unofficially
we were working already a few weeks after the earthquake, sneaking in from the
back door because this is our family business, the only one we have and we
couldn’t afford not to work.”
Not everybody has been as
lucky and walking on the small, barely lit streets, a profound sense of
emptiness is tangible.
Natalia says: “I find it
hard to understand that everyone has forgotten about us; what we want is to be
able to rebuild our city, we want to reopen our hotels, welcome tourists, do
our Christmas shopping in the old town and not in a sterile shopping centre in
the suburbs.”
The aftermath of the
earthquake has been disgracefully handled; for some people, the only decent thing the Government did, was building real houses for the homeless. For others, that money could have been spent in starting the reconstruction earlier. But, as someone I talked to pointed out: “If
things would have gone that way, this would be our third winter in a container.”
Last night, at 3:32 AM the bells of the main Church in L'Aquila rang for 309 times, as a sign that the community is not forgetting those who died three years ago.
Let's hope that L'Aquila - which also means eagle in Italian - will be freed from her cage of ruins and debris and will be able to fly, free, once again.
06/03/2012
My first blog
It was about time...
Years ago, in the 'last' century, I was sitting in a car with my friend, brother, life consultant Paolo, who kept on saying... "DO IT!"
He thought I should write travel guides because of my curiosity and my capacity - in the good and in the bad - to end up in strange places and to find interesting people with a story to tell.
I was very young back then, but we always kept that fire burning and the discussion came up from time to time. Lately last year in Hong Kong.
And now, after so many years, today, it's the 'official' introduction of:
In the last years for some strange combination of events, our family holidays have actually become more and more a sort of gourmet and wine tours; nothing to complain there, on the contrary even! It's the perfect way to get to know people and, at the same time, to be delighted by whole new flavours, tastes and sensations.
The Kataguide wants to be a blog about the small, the local, the sometimes unknown to the most but therefore - maybe - even more interesting.
In general, I want it to be a blog about human stories and places.
Years ago, in the 'last' century, I was sitting in a car with my friend, brother, life consultant Paolo, who kept on saying... "DO IT!"
He thought I should write travel guides because of my curiosity and my capacity - in the good and in the bad - to end up in strange places and to find interesting people with a story to tell.
I was very young back then, but we always kept that fire burning and the discussion came up from time to time. Lately last year in Hong Kong.
And now, after so many years, today, it's the 'official' introduction of:
The Kataguide, for the good things in (my) life!
It's true: passion for travelling and exploring has brought me to incredible places through the years, allowing me to meet diverse and extraordinary people.
The human kind is incredible! My surprise, amazement, astonishment, interest do not seem to quiet down. I'm thrilled and I feel engaged to the bone in really getting to know people.
Truly listening to people's stories, be it touching and personal, or funny, or inexplicable, or unexpected, or just a recount of events in an individual way is one of the biggest fortunes we have!
All that, combined with my dedication to food, wine, cultural events and local traditions has become a way of life more than simple travelling.
The human kind is incredible! My surprise, amazement, astonishment, interest do not seem to quiet down. I'm thrilled and I feel engaged to the bone in really getting to know people.
Truly listening to people's stories, be it touching and personal, or funny, or inexplicable, or unexpected, or just a recount of events in an individual way is one of the biggest fortunes we have!
All that, combined with my dedication to food, wine, cultural events and local traditions has become a way of life more than simple travelling.
In the last years for some strange combination of events, our family holidays have actually become more and more a sort of gourmet and wine tours; nothing to complain there, on the contrary even! It's the perfect way to get to know people and, at the same time, to be delighted by whole new flavours, tastes and sensations.
The Kataguide wants to be a blog about the small, the local, the sometimes unknown to the most but therefore - maybe - even more interesting.
In general, I want it to be a blog about human stories and places.
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