Leonardo, Food and Wine
Our last day before traveling began, as usual, with the hotel’s extensive breakfast buffet. We didn’t realize what the day really held, so I had my umpteenth wonderful chocolate croissant, a bowl of fresh fruit, a nice helping of gorgonzola on a slice of fresh brown bread, a couple of slices of delicious Italian salami and two cups of coffee for breakfast. It turned out to be a mistake, as the entire day would be filled with food and wine.
We then drove up and up and up into the hills above the lake to La Rampolina, a restaurant perched on the mountainside with an astonishing view:
Our cooking demonstration
began with a talk on northern Italian cooking (rice and potato based) as
opposed to southern Italian cooking (pasta based). Amazingly, this area grows rice, and has the
water to do so. The wheat which is used
to make pasta is grown further south, primarily in Apulia, and so, until easy
transportation, northern Italian starch was primarily based on rice and
potatoes. Thus, gnocchi, the first
demonstration food, is a northern dish based, in this case, on potatoes.
We were taught how to boil
a potato—with the skin on so it doesn’t get soggy—and then mash it to begin the
gnocchi:
Flour, eggs, salt, etc. are added, and the mixture is kneaded and mixed:
It is then rolled out and cut:
After our lesson, we went
to the lovely terrace overlooking the lake for our appetizers and prosecco
(which was poured with generosity):
After enjoying the
wonderful pre-lunch reception with prosecco, we went into the restaurant for a
three-course lunch! First the gnocchi in
a crumbled beef red sauce, then grilled steak cooked to order, and finally the
tiramisu, all accompanied by freely poured red and white wine. Finally, back to the hotel, and those going
back to the USA tomorrow walked into town for their scheduled COVID tests. As we’re going to France tomorrow, we don’t
need to do anything.
La Bella Vita!
ReplyDeleteOmg. I’m full just reading this! Unreal…but also fabulous.
ReplyDeleteFly safe!