This blog contains accounts of my travels in India and abroad. Some of the posts were created much later, the dates have been adjusted to give a sense of the real time.

Thursday, November 10, 2016

The islands of Venice

The vaporetto line 1 along the grand canal is scenic but long 
The Grand canal

The Grand canal 
San Giorgio island from San Marco

San Marco from the San Giorgio campanile
View from the San Giorgio Maggiore campanile - in the foreground is the church and in the background the Salute church
The colours of Burano

Burano Lace

View from the Campanile of Santa Maria Assunta Basillica at Torcello

Glass making at Murano

Finished samples, Murano

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Timeless Pizza!

I often tell people that I was introduced to Pizza by Michelangelo and Raphael. No, not the artists, the Ninja Turtles! Yes, growing up, our ‘heroes in a half shell’ were the latest crime fighting stars and pizza became the coolest food of the day! You won’t catch me narrating my early encounters with pizza to the Italians though. They take their art and food very seriously, and my statement would be nothing short of blasphemy!

But, my pizza experiences were limited largely to the Indian subcontinent, where the food is more commercial. So I was looking forward to the tasting the real stuff in Italy. My first journey took me to Naples – about 225 kms from Rome. It was a tour to Pompeii with City Wonders (https://citywonders.com/) that included a hike to Mt. Vesuvius and pizza at Naples.
Naples is the home of Pizza – at least the modern version, or so I’m told. If you think Italy’s history manifests in just stone buildings, you are in for a surprise. Pizza has its own history and it unfolds here in Naples.

The flatbread isn’t an Italian creation. It was consumed across the Mediterranean and Asia in different forms and was often eaten with different toppings. In the 1700s, Naples supported a large number of working poor (“Lazzaroni”) who found Pizza convenient – cheap and easy to consume. 
The Marinara and the Margherita are considered to be the ‘classics’. The first, is older and is named after ‘la marinara’ or the seaman’s wife who would prepare this food for husband when he returned from the Bay of Naples. The second has a more interesting story. After Italy’s unification in 1861, King Umberto I and his Queen visited Naples in 1889. The royal couple wanted to sample the local fare which of course consisted of Pizza. But there was a special variant that the Queen enjoyed – it resembled the Italian tri-colour with Basil, mozzarella and tomato. This was the first Margherita pizza, named after who else but the Queen, Margherita. The queen’s liking of a poor man’s food probably triggered the wide adoption of the food across the country which spilled over to other parts of the world when the Italians migrated.

Keep it rolling
The tour takes us to a restaurant in Naples for an original ‘Napoletana’. It’s fluffy and soft as compared to the ones in Rome which are thinner and have a crusty edge. As I sunk my teeth into a bit of history, I couldn’t help but compare the soft bread and the elastic mozzarella to the tandoori chicken pizza I got back home, or worse still, some chilli paneer version of it!

Next stop was a cooking class in Rome with InRome cooking (http://www.inromecooking.com/). Chef Max who is from Sicily quickly tells us the difference between Roman and Neapolitan pizza – similar to what I had heard on the tour 2 days earlier. But, we weren’t here for tales of Pizza’s history – we had to make our own Pizza. Max quickly gets into the method of making the perfect dough and somehow I wasn’t surprised to learn that a key part of the process was the time you leave the dough to rest – good things in life take time right! Longer the time, the lighter is the base. We add the tomato sauce and the toppings, shove it into an oven for about 5 mins and out comes a Pizza!

How in the world did this become a fast food – centuries to mature and at least a day to make!

The output
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