(Picture taken in Umbria at Altabella Properties, 2015)
Umbria, Italy’s Best-Kept Culinary Secret, Is Budding
By ERIC ASIMOV via The NY TIMES
NORCIA, Italy — Norcia, a small town in Umbria, is little known outside Italy. It’s not a celebrity hill town like Siena or a religious destination like Assisi, but in Italian food its name is even more resonant.
NORCIA, Italy — Norcia, a small town in Umbria, is little known outside Italy. It’s not a celebrity hill town like Siena or a religious destination like Assisi, but in Italian food its name is even more resonant.
Norcia
has been famous for centuries for its butchers and the extraordinary
array of cured meats they produce. Last month it acquired a wider and
sadder renown as the town closest to the epicenter of a deadly earthquake.
Norcia,
like most of Umbria, was touched but not transformed. The most serious
damage was just south of Umbria, in the devastated towns of Amatrice and
Accumoli, which, like Norcia, lie in the foothills of the volatile
central Apennine mountain range. San Pellegrino di Norcia, a village
near here, was leveled; many of its residents are still living in tent
villages (where, photographs show, volunteers and field kitchens have
been dispatched to produce pasta and tomato-meat sauce from scratch).
Good
food may seem like a low priority when nearly 300 people have lost
their lives and thousands more their homes. But in Italy, it is an
obvious panacea in a disaster.
The
salumifici of Norcia (NOR-cha), where the magnificent prosciuttos and
salamis are produced, are intact. “To be honest, we were much more
scared for our lives than for the meats,” said Paolo Viola, the owner of
Norcineria Viola. “It didn’t even cross our minds.”
Structural
damage in Umbria was extensive, but there were no reports of
fatalities, largely because the province had been decimated by
earthquakes in 1979 and 1997, and most buildings had already been
rebuilt to code.
The
immediate problems for the province’s food producers and restaurant
chefs are logistical, according to Ramon Rustici, a pig farmer outside
Assisi, who said that many small roads remain closed. And their
long-term concern is that the disaster will deter people from coming to
the region to eat, just as gastro-tourism has begun to take off here.
Umbria
is known in Italy as the nation’s “cuore verde,” its green heart, where
the landscape still reflects ancient traditions — agricultural,
artistic and spiritual. But the rest of the world knows little about the
region and its cuisine: its gold-green olive oil, its rich red wines,
its diverse grains and its unmatched artistry in salumi.
In
the great medieval hill towns like Bevagna, Assisi and Todi, built by
counts and cardinals to show off their wealth, there are restaurants
with professional chefs who cook in a modern, creative style. They spin
global variations on the classic Umbrian dish porchetta, a juicy roast
of pork tightly rolled around garlic and herbs. But they do not seem to
cook much certifiably Umbrian food.
“The
young people here will take a Japanese cooking class or a tapas class,
but not an Umbrian cooking class,” said Letizia Mattiacci, who teaches
in her home kitchen in the hills above Assisi, where I visited several
weeks before the earthquake.
“Their
mothers and grandmothers make this, and it’s not interesting to them,”
she said, gesturing at the hand-cranked pasta roller she uses to cut
fresh strangozzi, long noodles that are fat and pointed at both ends.
Ms.
Mattiacci is part of a new wave of cooks, farmers, chefs and bakers
working to preserve and popularize the food of Umbria, which has long
been upstaged by its neighbors.
Like
Parma in Emilia-Romagna, Umbria produces spectacular aged prosciutto;
like the Roman province of Lazio, it has richly flavored sheep’s milk
cheeses and vegetables; like Tuscany, it boasts ancient traditions of
making bread, olive oil and wine, and it has a staggering variety of
beans and pulses. Umbria is Italy’s largest producer of black truffles,
which are lavishly used in season (but not as prestigious as the ones
from Piedmont).
Umbria’s
size — just over 3,000 square miles, smaller than Connecticut — may
have limited its global audience, but the scarcity of tourists has
helped preserve traditional cooking.
Many restaurants, like Centro de lu Munnu
in Foligno, which is run by three generations of the Savini family,
still produce classic Umbrian dishes like pasta with potato and veal
ragù; tomato-braised snails; and torta al testo, a griddled flatbread
that perfectly sets off the region’s salumi.
The
restaurant’s name means “center of the world” in old Umbrian dialect,
referring to an ancient belief that Umbria, because it is in the center
of the Italian peninsula, is the center of the world.
“Umbria
is small, so from ancient times, each area had its own way of calling
things, and many of them are still alive,” said Diego Mencaroni, who
manages an international artists’ retreat, Civitella Ranieri, in a grand and ramshackle 15th-century castle in Umbertide.
From
the top to the bottom of the Valle Umbra, a distance of only about 40
miles, the pasta made by Ms. Mattiacci has at least six other names:
umbricelli, ciriole, anguilette, manfricoli, bigoli, picchiarelli. Not
only the names are different; from one hilltop to the next, recipes and
tastes can vary tremendously. “Whether you mince the garlic or cut it
into slivers, or what you use to marinate the chicken for cacciatora,
here it makes a big difference,” Ms. Mattiacci said.
Umbrian
cooks traditionally agree on one thing: Fresh pasta here should be made
of nothing more than flour and water. Women pride themselves on being
able to make tender, springy pasta without eggs, using a vigorous
full-body kneading motion they call “a culu mossu” (with a moving butt),
which looks something like dancing a samba. (For modern or modest
cooks, the constant movement of the food processor is a good
substitute.)
Umbria
is landlocked, and its native vegetables and fruits, both domesticated
and wild, have always formed the basis of its cuisine. “Everywhere you
find growing nettles, flowers, asparagus, fennel,” said Romana Ciubini, a
native Umbrian who is the chef at Civitella Ranieri, as she prepared
sambuca (elderflower) sprigs for deep-frying.
Ancient
and native strains of beans and pulses are being unearthed and
cultivated anew. Most of Umbria’s foods that carry the European Union’s D.O.P.
label (certifying that the product is characteristic of a specific
place and produced there to traditional standards) are in this humble
category: farro (wheat) from Spoleto, lentils from Castelluccio and
several kinds of broad beans.
Roveja,
a kind of pea that was cultivated for centuries in the Apennine
foothills on Umbria’s eastern border and later thought to be extinct,
was rediscovered in 1998, when a woman digging a basement found a buried
jar of them. Now they are carefully nurtured, sold at premium prices
and prized for their nutritional properties and earthy flavor.
“Those
were considered food for poor people, even for animals,” Ms. Ciubini
said. “And now they are served in the best restaurants.”
The
prettiest landscape in the province, the Valle Umbra, runs from
Perugia, the Umbrian capital in the north, to Spoleto in the south. It
still looks like what it was in antiquity: the bottom of a shallow lake
chain that was later drained by the Romans.
The
valley’s soft green hills, spreading views and famously fertile soil
all derive from this history. Today, the landscape is largely unchanged
from that painted in 15th-century frescoes by Giotto and Piero della
Francesca in the Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi. Francis, as depicted
in churches around the region, loved the Umbrian countryside so much,
he insisted on being carried from his grand church on the rocky mountain
to die on its grassy floor.
For
centuries, Umbrian farmers were small producers of diverse crops, fully
occupied by feeding their own families and supplying the local castles
and monasteries. (Both the Franciscan and the Benedictine orders were
founded here and lived rather grandly at times.)
In
the 20th century, agricultural and transportation technology inspired
many regions of Italy to move toward large-scale farming, planting acres
of tomatoes, olive trees and grapevines to meet international demand.
But Umbria mostly kept its polyculture family farms, and the province
fell behind others in culinary production, tourism and self-promotion.
Ramon
Rustici, a young farmer in the hills above Assisi, said that today, the
region is reaping the advantages of maintaining the old ways. “When
times became very hard for Italian farmers in between and after the
wars,” he said, “the families here sustained ourselves, instead of
losing our land.” Now, under the custodianship of three brothers, the
Fratelli Rustici pig farm embodies modern values of sustainability and
animal welfare.
Even
the earthquake has brought Umbria some welcome attention. Filippo
Gallinella, an Umbrian legislator, called last week on Italians to
support the region by choosing products like prosciutto di Norcia and
Castelluccio lentils for their cesti natalizi, baskets stuffed with
delicacies that are traditionally made and exchanged at Christmastime.
If
Umbria is truly famous for anything, it is for salumi, salt-cured pork
products that expertly use every bit of the animal. The attention is all
focused on this town: Norcia, so synonymous with sausages and salamis
that anywhere you see a restaurant dish labeled al norcino, or alla
norcina, you know it will be enriched with pork fat and flavor.
Umbria
is on about the same latitude as other places that produce magnificent,
naturally slow-cured hams: Virginia and Kentucky, the forests of
southern Spain where Iberico pigs prowl for acorns, and the breezy
Zhejiang province of China, where Jinhua ham is made.
Umbrian
prosciutto, which has a protected status similar to the famous hams of
Parma and San Daniele, tastes quite different from those. Prosciutto di
Norcia is aged for at least two years, not 12 to 18 months, allowing the
meat more time to cure, contract and concentrate its flavors.
Like
the best jamón Ibérico, it is red and meaty, not pink and limp. Gino
Migliosi, who cures prosciuttos for the Fratelli Rustici farm, said he
leaves them to cure for two and a half years in caves dug into the
hillsides outside Norcia — in the traditional way, relying on natural
temperature fluctuations, breezes and yeasts instead of the climate
control or convection fans that many modern producers use.
Umbrian
prosciutto and salumi are wonderful, but are prized in Italy, so very
little makes it beyond national borders. Local cooks like Ms. Ciubini
use small amounts of local prosciutto, guanciale (jowl) and pancetta
(belly) to add richness to traditional cucina povera, the cooking of the
poor. (In Italian, that phrase is not as patronizing as it sounds in
English; it is a respectful description of the art of thrifty cooking.)
Ms.
Ciubini, when faced with stale breadcrumbs, may create a classic
panzanella salad or thick tomato soup, but she can also make them into a
really luxurious dish, in which they are soaked in eggs, milk and
grated cheese, then squeezed out and pinched into gnocchi.
For
a simple sauce, any seasonal vegetables are braised with olive oil and
minced salumi while the gnocchi have a quick boil; the vegetable pot is
deglazed with white wine, the gnocchi drained, and all is tossed
together over low heat in a huge pot. At Civitella Ranieri, Ms. Ciubini
often makes this for the visiting painters, poets, sound artists and
graphic novelists — all of whom have a hot, handmade lunch delivered
daily to the studios where they work.
“Cooking everything from scratch takes a lot of time,” she said. “But it is the only kind of cooking that is worth the work.”
FOR THE FULL ARTICLE: http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/14/dining/umbria-italy-food-cooking.html?ref=dining&_r=0