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Italian: we're doing it wrong :P

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  • Italian: we're doing it wrong :P

    http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/foo...-1226715929428

    So apparently the things we consider "Italian" are incorrect. The one about the coffee was surprising....
    The best professors are mad scientists! -Zoom

    Now queen of USSR-Land...

  • #2
    Quoth fireheart View Post
    So apparently the things we consider "Italian" are incorrect.
    That is a result of the immigration processes in the early 1900's. You see, Italy has many regions and each has their own different rules and traditions. The problem is with the homogenization during the immigration process at the time, they were all considered "italian", regardless of which region they left from. This has caused a lot of those traditions to either be modified or dropped entirely as a result. For example, spaghetti bolognese, aka spaghetti and meat sauce is not even "Italian", it's American in origin.

    As a result, even those rules don't particularly apply. For example, if you took rule 5 to Bologna, Italy, you would get at best laughed at. This is because bolognese, which had originated there, is actually a stew, not a sauce. Considering both are considered entrees, you would never order both, let alone mixed.
    I AM the evil bastard!
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    • #3
      And here I thought everything I needed to know about Italian food I learned from watching The Godfather trilogy . . .

      Boy was I ever wrong.
      Human Resources - the adult version of "I'm telling Mom." - Agent Anthony "Tony" DiNozzo (NCIS)

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      • #4
        Quoth lordlundar View Post
        As a result, even those rules don't particularly apply. For example, if you took rule 5 to Bologna, Italy, you would get at best laughed at. This is because bolognese, which had originated there, is actually a stew, not a sauce. Considering both are considered entrees, you would never order both, let alone mixed.
        Down in Aussieland, we had a huge wave of immigration in the 50's that consisted primarily of Italian and Greek migrants, along with a number of what came to be known as "Ten Pound Poms" (who came to Australia on an assisted migration scheme).

        So the comments about Italians applies over here too.
        The best professors are mad scientists! -Zoom

        Now queen of USSR-Land...

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        • #5
          Um, yeah, I got a couple issues with those.

          "No Italian dish combines pasta with chicken." Chicken cacciatore? I always see it served with pasta. Now maybe that's an American thing, I can accept that, maybe I'll give them that one.

          But no tomato sauce? Bologna! It's called "gravy", they serve it at my favorite Italian restaurant, and I dare anyone to go in there and tell the owners they're not serving Italian-style food.
          When you start at zero, everything's progress.

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          • #6
            Quoth MoonCat View Post
            Um, yeah, I got a couple issues with those.

            "No Italian dish combines pasta with chicken." Chicken cacciatore? I always see it served with pasta. Now maybe that's an American thing, I can accept that, maybe I'll give them that one.
            Most likely is an American thing, at least with the mixing with pasta. Though the dish did originate in Italy, I can find no mention of it actually being combined with pasta in the country. You have to remember, In just about every region in Italy, Pasta is considered a main dish in of itself, not a part of one and certainly not a side.

            Quoth MoonCat View Post
            But no tomato sauce? Bologna! It's called "gravy", they serve it at my favorite Italian restaurant, and I dare anyone to go in there and tell the owners they're not serving Italian-style food.
            *ahem*
            Quoth lordlundar View Post
            As a result, even those rules don't particularly apply. For example, if you took rule 5 to Bologna, Italy, you would get at best laughed at. This is because bolognese, which had originated there, is actually a stew, not a sauce. Considering both are considered entrees, you would never order both, let alone mixed.
            Now I can buy the "Italian-style" part, but that's mainly American perception of Italy. Here's the thing though, "Italian-style" is a far cry from "Italian", let alone it's regions like Sicilian, Tuscan, etc.
            I AM the evil bastard!
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            • #7
              Bah, just gimme my red sauce!
              When you start at zero, everything's progress.

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