10 "Italian" Dishes that Aren't Actually Italian... OR ARE THEY?

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 18 чер 2024
  • Thanks to Masterworks for sponsoring this video! Skip the waitlist and invest in blue-chip art for the very first time by signing up for Masterworks: masterworks.art/pastagrammar
    Purchase shares in great masterpieces from artists like Pablo Picasso, Banksy, Andy Warhol, and more. 🎨
    Like me, you might have run into some lists of "Italian" food that isn't ACTUALLY Italian. After finding a particularly incorrect entry, I began to wonder how accurate these sources were. So I asked Eva to explain, and it turns out there's quite a bit that needs clearing up!
    In this video, Eva picks 10 "Italian" dishes and challenges me to guess if they're the real deal or not. Spoiler alert: I gave a lot of wrong answers... Play along and see if you fare better than I!
    --------
    EVA'S PIZZA DOUGH RECIPE - www.pastagrammar.com/post/how...
    --------
    00:00 - 10 "Italian" Dishes That Aren't Really Italian... OR ARE THEY?
    01:01 - Is Spaghetti and Meatballs Italian?
    03:14 - Is Spaghetti Bolognese Italian?
    04:55 - Is Chicken "Parm" Parmigiana Italian?
    06:56 - Is Fettuccini Alfredo Italian?
    09:22 - Is Garlic Bread Italian?
    12:09 - Is Italian Dressing Actually Italian?
    13:33 - Is Shrimp Scampi Italian?
    15:31 - Is Cioppino Italian?
    16:57 - Is Muffuletta Italian?
    18:17 - Is Marinara Sauce Italian?
    20:35 - The Real Italian "Marinara"
    *net returns refers to the annualized internal rate of return net of all fees and costs, calculated from the offering closing date to the date the sale is consummated. IRR may not be indicative of Masterworks paintings not yet sold and past performance is not indicative of future results. See important Reg A disclosures: Masterworks.com/cd"
    #italianfood #italian #italy

КОМЕНТАРІ • 901

  • @PastaGrammar
    @PastaGrammar  Рік тому +95

    Ciao, guys! A lot of these surprised me, how about you?

    • @frederickacerra7766
      @frederickacerra7766 Рік тому +8

      They did me as well . My Nona used to make what we called a "Tomato Pie " . She made it with Fresh tomato Parm and olive oil . I can taste it now . If i remember ( I am 68 so i am a bit foggy on some things ) I was 5 or 6 before I had a Pizza from a Pizzeria . So happy i discovered your channel

    • @blueyedmermaid1447
      @blueyedmermaid1447 Рік тому +3

      I Actually had Scampi in Italy. I never was fond of it. I have a suspicion that it was possibly because of the way it was prepared. You can get langostino shrimp in America. Which I highly suspect that Langostino is "scampi" in Italy. Langostino shrimp you can purchase seasonally here in America. Langostino shrimp is actually a Norwegian lobster but it is small. Langostino is similar to that of what we have here in the south as far as flavor would be crayfish aka crawdads as we call them. Although crayfish are much smaller than the langostinos or scampi. Harper since you're from Maine you should know what langostinos are. Show them to Eva. I'm unsure where Scampi were from in Italy.

    • @RDrakeSans1
      @RDrakeSans1 Рік тому +1

      @@blueyedmermaid1447 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Langostino There is a difference :)

    • @AMPProf
      @AMPProf Рік тому +1

      it's like the Famous quote "Once you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains , However improbable must be the truth" Sir Arthur Coan Doyal via Sherlock homes.
      Like American style pineapple pizza in Napoli.

    • @Rob-wl8dy
      @Rob-wl8dy Рік тому +2

      Scampi are from the northern Adriatic exclusively, mainly in Croatian sea. There is a variant in Norway, which might be known as Lagostinas. Must investigate. As far as I know this are the only two places were you can get this fish. Scampi have a pale red color, almost pinkish, and most importantly they have 2 Claws.

  • @tonydaddario4706
    @tonydaddario4706 Рік тому +353

    Eva's hair needs it's own channel.

    • @sonogabri1
      @sonogabri1 Рік тому

      For sure, or a pair of sharp scissors.

    • @Nighthawk799
      @Nighthawk799 Рік тому +18

      I totally agree.Absolutely gorgeous!!!🙂😁😁

    • @Kjell777Iverson
      @Kjell777Iverson Рік тому +11

      ngl I've often wondered how she keeps it so well.

    • @bullseyetag01
      @bullseyetag01 Рік тому +14

      It is so beautiful isn't it?🥰🥰🥰

    • @sonogabri1
      @sonogabri1 Рік тому +2

      @@bullseyetag01 Medusa comes to mind.

  • @brunogattolin9782
    @brunogattolin9782 Рік тому +151

    here in Italy, my dear Harper, we use to say "lo sanno anche le pietre" (that literally means "also the stones know that") when we say something that has been repeted sooooo many times that even the stones have learned that

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Рік тому +18

      We have a phrase in Ireland that means the same thing. “Even the dogs in the street know.”

    • @tridsonline
      @tridsonline Рік тому +12

      In South Africa, we have an expression, _"Even the stones cry out [or declare]"_ when referring to something that is common knowledge.
      Based on Luke 19:40 .. probably the same origin as the Italian.

    • @PurpleMayE
      @PurpleMayE Рік тому +4

      In Spain we say "lo saben hasta debajo de las piedras" which means "They know that even under the stones ". Kind of simmilar ^^

    • @grantsmith505
      @grantsmith505 Рік тому +6

      @@Dreyno
      In Australia, we say "no shit"

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Рік тому +7

      @@grantsmith505 A contraction of “No shit Sherlock”?
      Another way of saying “Thank you, Captain Obvious”?

  • @videovedo36
    @videovedo36 Рік тому +149

    I feel like the scoring in this one was quite unfair: Harper was not only particularly accurate and right in some of his answers, in a way most of us Italians, at times, wouldn't even be, but when he truly didn't know the answer his reasoning still made a lot of sense and reflected how much he has absorbed about Italian culture in all this time with Eva! Go Harper!! 👍😉

    • @PastaGrammar
      @PastaGrammar  Рік тому +18

      Grazie! 😊

    • @rakischmidt7032
      @rakischmidt7032 Рік тому +30

      Right! And after forcing Harper to answer with yes or no, Eva started her explanation with "It's complicated ...." 🤔🤣🤣🤣 poor Harper

    • @dorefish-bieler7330
      @dorefish-bieler7330 Рік тому +6

      It's always unfair lmao she never scores fairly

    • @Jeff_Lichtman
      @Jeff_Lichtman Рік тому +6

      It's their schtick. And no, that's not an Italian word.

    • @ry.the.stunner
      @ry.the.stunner Рік тому +5

      I agree. I wanted to see if I got full points for his marinara answer because his explanation was pretty much spot on.

  • @hiddentruth1982
    @hiddentruth1982 Рік тому +258

    20 years from now Harper will be saying something about Italian food and Eva will say " Well Arper that's not quite right. In Italy we...."

    • @yvonneanitakramer7536
      @yvonneanitakramer7536 Рік тому +12

      🤣😂🤣💯

    • @edzmuda6870
      @edzmuda6870 Рік тому +11

      R-Pear

    • @MottiShneor
      @MottiShneor Рік тому +4

      These tiny tinges of "Italian" or (put in any other nation's name) are things you absorb as a baby and an infant, and cannot be learned completely. Ever.
      In America you don't have that - because the U.S. is an immigrant nation, without ethnic ethos, without long-dialog of the kitchen with the nature of the place you live in. Everything is imported - including the thoughts, tastes, ideas, and food styles. They can never be "real". so what you say is truth - but not on the funny side...

    • @itsmederek1
      @itsmederek1 Рік тому +15

      @@MottiShneor There is tons of authentically American stuff. It is really short-sighted to imply that America can't have culture just because it is a younger country. Italy's culture comes from other places as well! Tomatoes are from the Americas for example so you could easily argue that anything with tomato is not Italian because the dish is only 100 years old. Noodles are from china. The Spritz in Aperol Spritz is Austrian. Catholic religion is derived from the Greek Orthodox religion. America has many regional foods that are unique to the country and the people, the fact that diverse cultures have come together to make it only makes it more meaningful.

    • @wordswithtaylorleigh
      @wordswithtaylorleigh Рік тому +4

      @@itsmederek1 for example just ask southerners about their stance on which mayo is the best...you will get VERY fervent answers!

  • @lairbox
    @lairbox Рік тому +46

    As an Italian I give Harper 10/10... all questions were soo difficult even for Italians!!!

    • @adrianonicolaci4040
      @adrianonicolaci4040 11 місяців тому +1

      Totally agree. Harper answered well at every questions 💪✌️💪

  • @RodHelvete
    @RodHelvete Рік тому +8

    I appreciate that the "Italian Harper" is growing up by the fact that when he doesnt know the answer he speaks and gesticulates a lot and basically doesnt answer at all. That's really a thing of us. Kudos!

  • @notyourorphan
    @notyourorphan Рік тому +30

    I made Eva's biscotti recipe last week and they're all gone 😶. First time making biscotti. Even my mother who is a picky eater made this face 🤤. Thanks for sharing your recipes online!

  • @bacigalumompala5794
    @bacigalumompala5794 Рік тому +20

    Here in Piedmont it's quite common soma d'aj (roughly translates as garlic on top), toasted bread, olive oil and then rubbed with garlic.

  • @Nuno1137
    @Nuno1137 Рік тому +18

    Marinara here in Naples usually is similar to your pizza but without anchovies. Like you said, sometimes pizzerias will include anchovies, olives and it is usually called "Napoletana".

    • @mayorc
      @mayorc Рік тому

      Si, ma infatti è in Sicilia che la chiamiamo marinara la pizza in questo modo. Probabilmente col tempo i termini si sono differenziati, ma non la sostanza.

  • @ieily
    @ieily Рік тому +16

    Watching this while I have your Sicilian orange cake in the oven 🤩 You’re the best!!

  • @bobon123
    @bobon123 Рік тому +13

    There was a very important point that was brushed upon I believe. Some Italians often get angry in the comments on cooking videos claiming that this is just not how it is done in Italy, and referring to it as a "wisdom of the ancient" kind of thing. I am Italian too, but I realize that it is kind of the opposite: many "mistakes" in American cuisine represents the old ways, due to immigrants that never evolved their cuisine. Spaghetti and meatballs, or carbonara done with cream or garlic, are all things that were _very_ common in Italy up to 50 years ago. It is not an issue of "it was never done in that way, stop heretic!", but more an issue of "it was done in that way, but now we have found a better way". Innovation, not holding on to traditions.

    • @DenUitvreter
      @DenUitvreter Рік тому +1

      Isn't also a bit like 'any other way than grandma is wrong'? Carbonara isn't even much older than 50 years, it's hard to get a good spicy (garlicky) guanciale in many places and to get the egg yokes creamy is quite a technique. I have got a not very pretentious Italian restaurant here that makes a lovely carbonara with garlic and cream.
      I've learned about Ragu Bolognes a long time ago, but does that mean there are no Italians who make spaghetti with a tomato and mince meat sauce? If that is the case, why not? I do agree that foreigners have a tendency to keep adding things vaguely Italian to make it more Italian, as long as it seems Italian and usually doesn't get better from that, but the authenticity is sometimes also a bit of fetish for people who lack a strong opinion about the taste itself, non Italians that is.
      A lot of that authenticity also has to do with availability. Parmegiano and Pecorino are not the only taste enhancing cheeses of the world. Meat, fish and vegetables don't taste the same everywhere, different breeds, different soils and different seas, and might be optimized with slightly different recipes. And if white pepper had been more available traditonally, it would probably be in more recipes.

    • @MsJavaWolf
      @MsJavaWolf Рік тому

      @@DenUitvreter I was thinking about the guanciale thing. I was wondering if maybe, if you have to use pancetta, adding more flavours actually just mimics the taste of guanciale.

  • @giuseppelogiurato5718
    @giuseppelogiurato5718 Рік тому +7

    My family (Basilicata) always served the meatballs/sausage/whatever with some bread and maybe some sauteed peppers/green beans/whatever, AFTER the pasta, which was served with the ragu's juice/sauce/gravy/whatever, or maybe just oil and garlic and cheese, if it was something skinny like cappellini... My Grandma never put the meatballs on TOP of the pasta, but she did cook meatballs and pasta, but they weren't served together, unless we were eating leftovers, in which case we'd throw everything together in a pan and call it lunch...
    "Bolognese", only for lasagne
    Chicken Parm... Not really, but we did have chicken cutlets that we called "Milanese", and sometimes we'd put sauce and cheese on top, so kind of...
    Alfredo... Never, but oil/butter and cheese? Yes, but not called Alfredo, n
    o cream.
    Garlic bread... No, but like she said, we had little toasts with a garlic rubbed on it, sometimes with tomatoes, caponata, etc...
    Italian dressing... No. Again, like she said...
    "Shrimp scampi"? Never. We ate shellfish on Christmas Eve, but not like that...
    Cioppino, yes, but we knew it was from San Francisco
    Muffletto? No... Never heard of it.
    Marinara? Not a chance... It simply wasn't done. Extremely foreign to us... If I served it to my grandma, she'd say "no thanks, i don't like Chinese food, it gives me agita".✌️

  • @lazios
    @lazios Рік тому +54

    Sei stata severa sui punteggi Eva 😄 se un americano qualsiasi sapesse 1/10 di quello che Harper sa, la nostra cucina sarebbe salva.🍺

  • @roseconklin5392
    @roseconklin5392 Рік тому +4

    Thank you so much Harper and Eva for this interesting discussion! I am excited to try the Pizza Marinara!

  • @fatherofchickens7951
    @fatherofchickens7951 Рік тому +14

    The Thanksgiving episode is what got me hooked on your channel. And I’ve made the cranberry sauce for every Thanksgiving and Christmas since 😊

  • @roccosisto8196
    @roccosisto8196 Рік тому +30

    Loved this episode as I do all of them. Interesting note, my wife who’s all American worked in a pizzeria, Gargano’s in Madison Wisconsin, and the secret to their pizza which was beloved by all was a dribble of anchovy oil added to the pizza sauce. Of course, no one was told that since most American college students would say they absolutely hate anchovies. 😂

    • @tizioincognito5731
      @tizioincognito5731 Рік тому +4

      How can you not love anchovies? Barbarians... 🤣

    • @jamesbael6255
      @jamesbael6255 Рік тому

      That's a good way to get sued out of business.

    • @kfl611
      @kfl611 Рік тому

      I found sometimes just a touch of Anchovie paste in dishes really enhances the flavor and does not make the dish taste fishy, just flavorful and a little more salty.

    • @binder098
      @binder098 Рік тому

      @@kfl611 Umami...it's full of it, like putting a tablespoon of peanut butter in curry...OMG, jump one level up!

    • @DenUitvreter
      @DenUitvreter Рік тому

      An Egyptian shoarma place here for the after drinks crowd here serves a pizza napolitana with anchovis and olives, but also with a bit less tomato sauce and thinly sliced raw tomato. They have a proper pizza oven, and it's absolutely great. Those anchovis and hardly cooked tomato are a marriage from heaven, I'd really like a proper Italian pizzeria to copy that.

  • @dustyoldhat
    @dustyoldhat Рік тому +13

    Americans change every international cuisine. My Japanese friends trip out on "sushi" in the US because they've never seen anything like it in Japan. (Rolls smothered in sweet sauces and stuffed to an extreme with ingredients that don't go together lol)

  • @spl744
    @spl744 Рік тому +3

    "I don't know if they roll or not" was the funniest thing I have ever heard. Keep it up guys!

  • @tridoc99
    @tridoc99 Рік тому +13

    Their interactions are very cute, I feel like it’s time for Harper to start trying to pronounce Italian words correctly, considering he has access to hear the correct pronunciation whenever.

  • @fabienneapril3478
    @fabienneapril3478 Рік тому +6

    My very first dish in Italy as a kid was... Spaghetti bolognese. The menu said so, at least, I remember it vividly as it was so wonderful and I wanted my mom to prepare at home once we were back in Paris (she never did). Now, it was right on the other side of the French border (near Ventimiglia), so maybe influenced by what the French thought was an Italian dish? That was 40-some years ago. As to the dressing, I had Italian friends visit and I made a vinaigrette moutardée with shallots, they loved it and said they would add it to their répertoire, stating that they usually just used vinegar and oil at the table. And tonight, I am in Montreal visiting my son, and since we were served the unitalian Pasta primavera at Corneli on Boulevard Saint Laurent this summer and our son loved it, this is what I am making for dinner. Thank you for all the education you are providing, this has proven most helpful. I secured guanciale back in the US and will be trying it with spaghetti carbonara, once I return. It appears to have juniper berries as a seasoning, so I'm unsure how authentic it is, that is all I could find. I was at the Milano grocery store in Montreal's Little Italy on Monday, and none of their guanciale appeared to have juniper berries.

    • @thetayoung3066
      @thetayoung3066 Рік тому +1

      Mine too about 10 years ago so I am really confused.

  • @joelciardella6080
    @joelciardella6080 Рік тому +14

    Eva should do a local cooking class! I’m up in phoenix, but would definitely make the drive to Tucson for that!

  • @bonogiamboni4830
    @bonogiamboni4830 Рік тому +16

    Interestingly here in emilia romagna (and i'm guessing plenty of other regions outside of campania) you can get the pizza alla marinara in plenty of pizzerias even outside of naples, but usually it's just the basic version with tomato and origano and stuff like that, while the one eva made with anchovies would be called a napoli (aka naples). The napoli is my mom's favourite pizza, too.

    • @dariofortino168
      @dariofortino168 Рік тому

      In Salerno, Campania too, marinara has no anchovies!

    • @branc2658
      @branc2658 Рік тому +3

      Here in the Marche region a "pizza alla marinara" is with tomato sauce, garlic and origano.
      When you add anchovies, the pizza will be called "pizza alla napoletana". Or " pizza Napoli".

    • @giuseppesmirne5578
      @giuseppesmirne5578 Рік тому +1

      Pizza Napoli or napoletana would have the anchovies, true, but in my experience it normally has cheese too.
      I would agree with Eva on the marinara certainly having no cheese and normally garlic and oregano. Beyond that, the addition to the marinara of other ingredients such as anchovies, or olives, or capers I wouldn’t be surprised if it varied from place to place, even pizzeria to pizzeria.

    • @ElibelDublin
      @ElibelDublin Рік тому +1

      All across the north ‘marinara’ is plain tomato and garlic, ‘Napoli’ is tomato and anchovy

    • @cosettapessa6417
      @cosettapessa6417 Рік тому

      @@branc2658 same in piedmont

  • @italiano120
    @italiano120 Рік тому +5

    During my University years in Rome, I had a flatmate from Scalea in Calabria who brought many frozen jars of meatballs made by his grandma to be used for pasta (normal pasta, not egg pasta). They were bigger then the teramane ones, around 1/1,5 cm in diameter.

  • @bakerzermatt
    @bakerzermatt Рік тому +4

    I had my first pizza marinara in Genova by accident!
    There was a menu listing the ingredients for each pizza, and I ordered the marinara because it also gad garlic. I was expecting a pizza margherita with garlic, and only realised there was no mozzarella once it arrived at my table.
    It had tomato, garlic and origano (no anchovies). Great light, tangy pizza, perfect for the summer!

  • @mrkiplingreallywasanexceed8311

    About 5 seconds before Harper mentioned the link for Eva's pizza dough I thought I MUST get that recipe!!!!!😆❤❤

  • @maryeliason1504
    @maryeliason1504 Рік тому +7

    The oil & vinegar separate are how I've experienced it in Italian homes here in U. S. One of my favorites. No extra mystery ingredients. I like your hair like that Harper. Happy Thanksgiving day.

  • @kibaanazuka332
    @kibaanazuka332 Рік тому +3

    I think my favorite lost in translation Italian dish is the wedding soup. Wedding soup being a mistranslation of minestra maritata or "married soup" of the meat & greens together in one dish and is a homestyle soup of Lazio and Campania families. But became popularized in Italian American restaurants under the name Wedding Soup. I still remember one of my teachers in Italy being confused about what I was talking about till mentioning minestra maritata and then it clicked for them.

  • @aldodrossi5303
    @aldodrossi5303 Рік тому +9

    Great show as always! I have always been fascinated by the differences between Italian and Italian American dishes. As students in Italy, we would buy "panini" from little stands and carts on the street; they are literally "little breads" with just a slice of cheese or salami. No condiments, etc. They were 1200 lire each (pre-EU days, that's how old I am), about 90 cents at the time. We lived on them for lunch. In America "panini" are more Cuban than Italian, something completely different...I wonder how that happened...

    • @ZakhadWOW
      @ZakhadWOW Рік тому

      hey I was stationed in western Napoli (Agnano) 1987-1991 and one of the major sources of monthly drama for active duty americans was what would the Lire exchange rate be when we got our monthly pay. I remember 50000 lire notes and such.

  • @andrearigano9238
    @andrearigano9238 Рік тому +15

    I'm sorry Eva, but Harper is right about chicken parm, my grandmother made fried cutlet (chicken, pork or veal) with tomato sauce, cheese and peas with butter. It's not one of those maybe traditional recipes from cookbooks, but it exists. Obviously without pasta, we're not criminals.

    • @tizioincognito5731
      @tizioincognito5731 Рік тому +5

      Quindi se mia madre cucinasse il pollo con l'uvetta e le acciughe sarebbe una ricetta italiana?

    • @andrearigano9238
      @andrearigano9238 Рік тому +5

      @@tizioincognito5731 capisco quello che intendi, ma non è una ricetta che ha inventato mia nonna, ma una variazione di tante ricette tradizionali che esistono in Italia. Se ci pensiamo esistono tante ricette che si basano su questa mentalità, cotoletta alla bolognese, cotoletta valdostana, cotoletta alla pizzaiola e tante altre.

    • @FrankieHeat
      @FrankieHeat Рік тому +1

      @@tizioincognito5731 La cotoletta alla pizzaiola è molto simile alla chicken parm americana. Ovviamente non servita sulla pasta.

    • @RosideaLuna
      @RosideaLuna Рік тому

      In my family (Tuscany. Florence/Prato) we currently eat quite often chicken (not fried tho) with tomato sauce and cheese.
      But had the fried version in at least a couple of restaurants. 🤔

  • @-MacCat-
    @-MacCat- Рік тому +1

    Harper, you have solely ..... well, not solely as Eva must get a heap of the credit ..... raised the level of respect I have for Americans who "think" they know about Italian food.
    You and Eva are a real joy to watch. Thank you both immensely for all your great work.

  • @efibasdra6328
    @efibasdra6328 Рік тому +1

    Hi guys! I can’t even begin to tell you how much I enjoy your videos. I am Greek and I find many similarities between the two cuisines, though mostly in the materials and less the way we use them. I ve been to Italy many times and I also visited Calabria, so I have a request: could you prepare something from the “griko” speaking areas, like Amendolea, Galiciano etc. I was very impressed that after so many centuries I could understand their language. So I am intrigued by their culture. Thank you anyway and keep up the good work 😘

  • @Will2000
    @Will2000 Рік тому +10

    Cioppino looks like it has some roots in common with cacciucco alla livornese. That could be a good recipe for Eva to try out? Also, great looking marinara pizza! That and the humble margherita are personal faves of mine (though I can also highly recommend pizza with 'nduja and gorgonzola).

    • @ZakhadWOW
      @ZakhadWOW Рік тому +1

      that entire litoral region of Livorno around to San Remo probably has many such things in common, even if the *regional* (political) boundaries differ

  • @gregmuon
    @gregmuon Рік тому +33

    Definitely a couple surprises. Starting with my childhood favorite dish, cioppino. I knew there was a similar seafood stew from Liguria, and other parts of Italy, but always presumed the San Francisco version was an amalgamation with a made up name. Perhaps the biggest surprise is that Eva's own Dad remembers spaghetti and meatballs! One thing I've learned since watching this show is that many Italian American traditions come from things they used to do in Italy a long time ago, but stopped.

    • @gorgonzolapalustre
      @gorgonzolapalustre Рік тому +10

      Those traditions haven't stopped, they're just a small niche in the vastness of Italian cuisine. Also, the Italian immigrants were mostly very poor, and when they came to the US where prestigious foods like meat were much cheaper than in Italy, they modified the original recipes to feature those ingredients a lot more. Hence, the meatballs became much bigger.

    • @gregmuon
      @gregmuon Рік тому +5

      @@gorgonzolapalustre I think some have stopped. I grew up with a pitcher of wine and a pitcher of water on the table at dinner. 'Pure' wine was only drunk on holidays and maybe Sundays. I know this is still done in France, but in Italy, it seems the tradition of wine and water is forgotten.

    • @dinosilone7613
      @dinosilone7613 Рік тому +3

      @@gregmuon That’s interesting. As recently as the 1980s, wine and water was still common in Italy (at least where my family lived). But what’s interesting is that I haven’t seen it recently. The other major trend I’ve noticed is that, particularly for millennials and younger people, wine drinking seems to have diminished, replaced by beer.

    • @tinalettieri
      @tinalettieri Рік тому +3

      @@dinosilone7613 When I was there 2 years ago after many years absence, I wanted a small salad AFTER my main course. The restaurant, in Catania, seemed totally flustered by this but I know it was normal 50 years ago and always in my family. I think I wound up with a large salad and a to go box. And I speak Italian and look like a native but I think I picked a place that was a bit too touristy. When I had guests one evening I served marinated alice, then a small portion of risotto followed by a baked fish. No one wanted salad as I recall. That to me is a typical meal. I did notice the wine and water thing too. Years ago, when I stayed in a pensione alone, I ordered a bottle of wine then they would keep it for subsequent meals since one glass was enough.
      I'm going to Salerno in a few months. It will be interesting to see what the locals are doing in restaurants although I have a flat where I can cook. I was in Napoli last year but I didn't eat out.

    • @tinalettieri
      @tinalettieri Рік тому +1

      I was thinking Eva's dad (hansome man, does he have a brother? haha) was remembering how some of the nonne probably made spaghetti and meatballs for the Italian American G.I.'s during the war and even after who were homesick. My first visit to Italy as a kid was in 1958 and more people actually spoke English than do now.

  • @binder098
    @binder098 Рік тому

    For me, you guys consistently nail it. Grazie!

  • @lindawills291
    @lindawills291 Рік тому

    I am so enjoying this video. You guys are great

  • @Javislaterlp
    @Javislaterlp Рік тому +8

    It´s weird, that being italian, she didn´t mention that chicken parm actually comes from parmigiana di melanzane (eggplant). It is mostly the same dish but instead of fried chicken, with eggplant in the oven. Nice video anyway!

  • @FedericoSpada13
    @FedericoSpada13 Рік тому +10

    Harper loves everything Eva cooks... I would like to suggest the video idea "5 Italian dishes Harper doesn't like"!

    • @PastaGrammar
      @PastaGrammar  Рік тому +3

      Not always! It’s rare but sometimes I’m not a fan and I say so. One notable instance was when she made squid ink pasta for me in a Halloween video we made a while back

    • @FedericoSpada13
      @FedericoSpada13 Рік тому

      @@PastaGrammar Yeah, sure it happened, but I can't take your judgement too much seriously... How can I fully trust someone who likes everything?

    • @canisinumbra
      @canisinumbra Рік тому

      @@FedericoSpada13 I like everything including the squid ink pasta.

    • @gregmuon
      @gregmuon Рік тому

      Squid ink tastes like squid barf, which it kind of is. There's very few foods I don't like, but that's one of them... Maybe I haven't tried the good squid barf yet. 🤣🦑

    • @b.giovanni4824
      @b.giovanni4824 Рік тому

      1. Sushi alla Bolognese

  • @coco805
    @coco805 Рік тому

    This episode was so much fun! I enjoyed it.

  • @twinoakscottage
    @twinoakscottage 11 місяців тому

    This final pizza brought me back to being a small child! My great grandmother (from Palermo) lived with my grandmother. My grandmother would make this pizza at her request! Wow! I haven’t seen this specific pizza in 40 years!
    Thank you for sharing!!! Brought back wonderful memories!!! 💖

  • @phantasmex
    @phantasmex Рік тому +4

    Oof, that was some harsh scoring. I would've given Harper credit on the spaghetti & meatballs, chicken parm, and ciopinno. But thanks both for the fun educational video.

  • @KarynHill
    @KarynHill Рік тому +8

    What qualifies as a correct answer from Harper changes from question to question! 😆

  • @kngiht84
    @kngiht84 Рік тому

    I watched you guys’ videos too many times now that I can immediately recall which episodes the answers come from! 😂

  • @Maggies87
    @Maggies87 Рік тому +1

    Sundays since Pasta Grammar came into the world are so, so much better.

  • @Buio0209
    @Buio0209 Рік тому +5

    Mah.... io sono siciliano, ho superato i 40 anni e in tutta la mia vita, non ho mai trovato da nessuna parte "spaghetti con le polpette". Non lo definirei un piatto della tradizione del Sud Italia. Forse è più che altro un piatto della cultura culinaria "locale", del posto in cui abitava Eva.... ma a livello nazionale, non esiste. Solo di recente alcuni ristoranti turistici delle grandi città, hanno cominciato a proporli, ma più che altro perchè c'è la richiesta dei turisti stranieri, che immaginano questo piatto come tipico italiano, e se lo aspettano quando arrivano nel nostro paese!
    P.S. Eva è sempre Bellissima!!!

    • @bellissima78
      @bellissima78 Рік тому +3

      Yes, even between Calabrian towns and families it's different. My ex is from Cosenza and he never grew up with gli spaghetti con le polpette. I have Sicilian and Pugliesi friends who don't know it, either. Boh

    • @tizioincognito5731
      @tizioincognito5731 Рік тому

      È sicuramente un piatto "di ritorno". La gente lo ha visto fare nei film, o ne ha sentito parlare da parenti italoamericani. E lo ha copiato.
      Ma col piffero che in Italia è tradizione mangiare polpette con la pasta.

  • @huntress_9441
    @huntress_9441 Рік тому +3

    In Australia we call it a parma but I've never seen spaghetti involved

  • @20rvd02
    @20rvd02 Рік тому

    I’ve been away for a while so I wasn’t exactly prepared for Eva’s hair! Wow! Magnificent!

  • @lindab7384
    @lindab7384 Рік тому +1

    Eva, I was just thinking of you......For lunch I had a delicious Mortadella Sandwich....my favorite and I understand that it is yours too! Yummy! My Italian grandmother had a list of cheeses she used all the time: Pecorino, Caciocavallo, Ragusano, Ricotta, Sweet Sheep Ricotta, Gogonzola .... And she loved Scampi, yes a fish, with Lemon, AND she would eat it with Bread toasted with Olive Oil and topped with chopped olives, mushrooms, tomatoes, and Gorgonzola !!! Also, She told me that her mother made Pasta with Meatballs sprinkled with Pecorino and she would love when her mother put eggplant or peas in the sauce ! And, she never ate a round pizza, they were always rectangular and wonderfully thick. It is interesting to hear what Italians from different families had for meals.

  • @Pamela3728
    @Pamela3728 Рік тому +28

    Eva is a food encyclopedia. How can she always be so right?

    • @mariwho1590
      @mariwho1590 Рік тому +6

      Because Italian women are Always RIGHT!! LOL

    • @corpsefoot758
      @corpsefoot758 Рік тому +3

      I think Harper mentioned she used to be a tour guide back when her in-laws became some of her regular customers, so it’s kinda like her old job at this point :P

    • @MsJavaWolf
      @MsJavaWolf 11 місяців тому +2

      @@corpsefoot758 I think she was a language teacher, that's why the channel is called Pasta Grammar.

    • @adrianonicolaci4040
      @adrianonicolaci4040 11 місяців тому

      Because cooking in Italy is pure art. We never cook only for hungry, and every time we cook we put a piece of Heart together ❤😂❤

    • @adrianonicolaci4040
      @adrianonicolaci4040 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@corpsefoot758I am Italian. Harper answered properly and very good with clever observation and questions better than a medium level Italian student. They teached something to meet too. Nice work ✌️

  • @apollojakenwill
    @apollojakenwill Рік тому +3

    I would love to see Eva try Alton Browns good eats brined& roasted turkey. I think she would love it

  • @billbirkett7166
    @billbirkett7166 Рік тому

    You guys are the nicest, funniest couple and you have a great show.

  • @elinakangas571
    @elinakangas571 Рік тому +1

    When I visited Spain in one restaurant spaghetti bolognese was spaghetti with tomato puree. In Finland spaghetti bolognese is understood as spaghetti with ground meat/minced meat sauce.

  • @AussieAngeS
    @AussieAngeS Рік тому +3

    I’m very impressed with myself because as an Italian I nearly got them all correct 😊 I love your videos guys

  • @MD-ef7nl
    @MD-ef7nl Рік тому +3

    Love your channel and love Eva's hair. A marinara pizza in Australia is a seafood pizza with tomato and occasionally with cheese. We also have spaghetti marinara with or without tomato.

    • @tizioincognito5731
      @tizioincognito5731 Рік тому +2

      Seafood and cheese? Yuk...

    • @grantsmith505
      @grantsmith505 Рік тому

      @@tizioincognito5731
      Fish goes together with cheese commonly in French cooking
      Not sure about your taste

    • @tizioincognito5731
      @tizioincognito5731 Рік тому

      @@grantsmith505 yuk.

    • @grantsmith505
      @grantsmith505 Рік тому

      @@tizioincognito5731
      If you have poor taste, or an undeveloped palate so what?,

    • @tizioincognito5731
      @tizioincognito5731 Рік тому

      @@grantsmith505 🤣🤣🤣

  • @VerhoevenSimon
    @VerhoevenSimon Рік тому +2

    Another interesting episode, the Cioppino one surprised me the most.

  • @wordswithtaylorleigh
    @wordswithtaylorleigh Рік тому

    Great video as always! Quick question: if I only want to use 2 of the pizza doughs (recipe says it makes 4) is there a way to freeze the other two? Or would you recommend just cutting the recipe in half and always making it fresh?

  • @MrMikkyn
    @MrMikkyn Рік тому +4

    I find Italian cuisine quite minimalist, which I like. Pasta with peas, risotto with radicchio, pasta with tomato. Simplicity. It does however get slightly complicated with when you make meat ragus, bakes or layered dishes. Lasagne for example will have bechamel layer, ragu layer, cheese layer, etc. And each of those layers have a list of ingredients. Its not heavy load of spices or anything, but it would take a while to prep. Also bolognese has two or three meats mixed in. I find it interesting that Italians mix pork and veal, its normal for non-Italins to do this with meatballs now. But I’ve always find it intriguing why Italians mix meat together when making meatballs or ragus.

    • @gregmuon
      @gregmuon Рік тому +1

      Mixing meats is to balance flavor and texture.

    • @SandBoy408
      @SandBoy408 Рік тому +2

      We mix together because pork meat has more fat than beef. Otherwise will result in a very dry minced meat. this is the reason why you can put pancetta if u don´t have ground pork meat.

  • @ptrinch
    @ptrinch Рік тому +8

    Biology lesson:
    Scampo is a specific species (Nephrops norvegicus), also known as the Dublin Bay Prawn or Norway Lobster, which despite its North Atlantic name, is also native to the Adriatic Sea.
    Gambero, on the other hand, is more generic term for shrimp. Some common species found in Italian cuisine are the 'gambero grigio' (Crangon crangon / Grey Shrimp), 'gambero rosso' (Aristaeomorpha foliacea / Giant Red Shrimp), "gamberetto" (Palaemon elegans / Rockpool Shrimp), 'gamberone' (Metapenaeus intermedius / MIddle Shrimp), and several others.
    The more you know

    • @Rob-wl8dy
      @Rob-wl8dy Рік тому

      Must save this post ... 😉

  • @hopsiepike
    @hopsiepike Рік тому

    Eva is such a good cook, never wielding any knife bigger than a paring knife. I would have cut my thumbs off by now trying that!

  • @lilianalepore5342
    @lilianalepore5342 Рік тому

    Ciao Harper and Eva. I love your channel. Harper don't be discouraged...I've been living in Italy for years and I got the answers wrong, too! By the way, I saw your dad, Maxwell, on Master chef Italia and he's really good! He's so creative and talented. Complimenti! Looking forward to your next video, guys. Saluti da Salerno

  • @killianmmmoore
    @killianmmmoore Рік тому +4

    The vinegar on the tables in Italy is balsamic vinegar and not malt/clear vinegar?

    • @albertoclocchiatti1510
      @albertoclocchiatti1510 Рік тому +1

      The real Balsamic vinegar from Modena is pretty expensive. So, you'll usally see apple cider vinegar or wine vinegar. I personally never used or heard about malt vinegar here in italy

    • @killianmmmoore
      @killianmmmoore Рік тому

      @@albertoclocchiatti1510 malt vinegar (or sometimes white) is what we in Ireland and the uk put on french fries

  • @marroosh9771
    @marroosh9771 Рік тому +6

    Scampi is langoustine I think, which is pricey yes. I knew, by watching your channel about most dishes whether they were or were not Italian😁

    • @fusadiluna
      @fusadiluna Рік тому +1

      I think you're right because we also call them langoustine

  • @dianekirvan9906
    @dianekirvan9906 4 місяці тому

    My Italian grandfather who was born and raised in Campania (Presenzano) made a sauce he called Marinara. Started it by making an aglio e olio (garlic and oil) then added tomatoes then finished it with fresh basil. A quick sauce. It was always delicious. My first generation Italian mother would make a quick Marinara on Fridays using the aglio e olio and added anchovies and capers. I absolutely loved that dish. She always served it in thin spaghetti

  • @aris1956
    @aris1956 Рік тому +7

    7:06. Harper evidently still does not know the Italian saying that says..... “anche le pietre lo sanno” (even the stones know it). To say that practically everyone knows this. 😊
    PS: ed Eva che dice….. io non so se le pietre rotolano o meno…. comunque le pietre là fuori. 😅

  • @xnonsuchx
    @xnonsuchx Рік тому +3

    It makes sense from what I’ve heard that her father remembered having spaghetti & meatballs as a kid. I often heard it wasn’t a common dish, but something made for kids…and that even a few restaurants would have it on a kids menu.

    • @ClaudeMagicbox
      @ClaudeMagicbox Рік тому

      No, there is no such things as "kid's menu" in 90% of Italian restaurants here in Italy.
      Only in large cities like Milano, Roma or Napoli it's something some places have started to put on their menus for tourists but if you go just a few Km out of these cities the "kid's menu" disappears.... because we have the tradition of "MEZZA PORZIONE" (half portion): if you bring your 7yo kid to a restaurant you simply order any item on the menu and tell the waiter "mezza porzione per lui" (half portion for him) and the waiter will bring a smaller portion at half price for you son. 🤗
      Italy as any place is in continuous evolution specially in large touristy cities so many traditions have been "watered down" a bit or even radically changed but if you go to smaller towns be it in the mountains, countryside, seaside or else you see these things disappear and find real traditions which vary greatly from Region to Region but are consolidated and well know both to locals and to most Italians. ☺️

  • @Suite_annamite
    @Suite_annamite Рік тому +2

    *@**9:25**: "Is garlic bread Italian?"*
    Since even French food has garlic bread (chapon, préfou), I assumed that there must be a continuum for something similar back in Italy. It must've been a thing during the Roman Empire.

  • @gillieography
    @gillieography Рік тому +1

    The scissors on the pizza cracks me up every time!!

  • @gabriellaveneroni8651
    @gabriellaveneroni8651 Рік тому +4

    ciao io vivo in lombardia e la pizza marinara ha solo pomodoro aglio e origano, invece pomodoro acciughe e origano la chiamano napoli

  • @FTumas
    @FTumas Рік тому

    Great show!

  • @andk9999
    @andk9999 Рік тому +1

    Minor tips for pizza making at home worth a try - Eva might like these:
    1)
    Get two pizza steels
    Put them on different racks
    Bake normally on one
    And then for the last minute or so put it on the (so far) untouched one
    The heat of the steel will bake the floor of the dough better
    2)
    If you have a gas oven use the open flame broiler for a minute
    This gives great charring and open flame taste
    (for some reason in my oven this was below the actual oven)

  • @keyos1955
    @keyos1955 Рік тому +30

    Finally someone who know that Spaghetti with meatballs is 100% an Italian dish from the south of Italy and not an American variation. We have to be proud of our culture and not diminish it because it changed a bit over some decades

    • @nerofl89
      @nerofl89 Рік тому +10

      You say that and yet most Italians I've met hold their noses up at their American cousins. They are the first ones to tear down others, just because an Italian is in another country doesn't make their food less Italian, otherwise Italians should just disown all the dishes with tomatoes in it because tomatoes are from the Americas.

    • @wholewheatcracker3561
      @wholewheatcracker3561 Рік тому +5

      I mean from how I’ve seen Northern Italians speak about Southern Italians it might just be because Italian Americans and their food for the most part originate from the South of Italy. So if you’re from Milan or something I guess it’s not that unusual to be disgusted by a regional variation of the dreaded cuisine of the inferior southerners that is eaten in a country you dislike because of geopolitics

    • @jamesbael6255
      @jamesbael6255 Рік тому

      @@nerofl89 Italy has no pre columbian food history...founded in 1861...there were always tomatoes in Italy...during it's ENTIRE existence.

    • @nerofl89
      @nerofl89 Рік тому

      @@jamesbael6255 Please tell me you are stupid, because at least then I can somewhat accept your retarded comment. The Italic peoples have been around long before the unification occurred, we still call the peoples of ancient Greece Greeks even though they were different city states similar to the peoples of the Italic peninsula, or are you going to do mental gymnastics to further dig yourself in the hole.

    • @sharonstrickland6421
      @sharonstrickland6421 Рік тому

      @@nerofl89 love it!

  • @70soperator16
    @70soperator16 Рік тому +3

    OMG......." you said everything and nothing".....sounded exactly like my Nona......she was from Roma.....and used to laugh at americanized recipes, mumbling "atsa no a real".....LOL......thanks for yet more great content....Ciao

  • @oliviabrooks8719
    @oliviabrooks8719 Рік тому +1

    When we lived in Bari we bought kilos of scampi every Sunday .. Couldn’t get enough 😊Aren’t crayfish scampi ? More or less ? Love this channel !

    • @logarithmic7
      @logarithmic7 Рік тому

      Do scampi taste like lobsters?

    • @fusadiluna
      @fusadiluna Рік тому +2

      @@logarithmic7 yes, they do taste more like lobsters, their meat is softer but still compact.

  • @susanwickiser5960
    @susanwickiser5960 Рік тому

    I grew up eating my grandma’s pizza that had anchovies in the sauce. So good!!! ❤

  • @cmj5281
    @cmj5281 Рік тому +4

    I love your show! Our Creator made so many delicious foods that Ava cooks so well I can almost smell it through my phone. ❤

  • @lauragiuliano
    @lauragiuliano Рік тому +4

    La faccia di Eva parlando di chicken parm🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @jeanneamato8278
    @jeanneamato8278 Рік тому

    Some surprised me, some not, but dear Eva was very strict. Definitely trying the pizza dough recipe. Happy Day of Thanks. I’m certainly thankful for both of you.

  • @rickblaver4525
    @rickblaver4525 Рік тому

    Good to know Cioppino might have some homeland roots! GreatGrandpa loved a good chickpea recipe too.

  • @ayidas
    @ayidas Рік тому +10

    Holy crap I think Eva needs to start a hair care channel 😍

  • @saratemp790
    @saratemp790 Рік тому +4

    I would like to see Eva cook some American Italian dishes, and see her take on it.

  • @marck8950
    @marck8950 Рік тому +1

    right, bolognese dont mean ragu and the are many many ragu´s in Italy! ;) My Favorit is "ragu di salsiccia with Gnocchi sardi". Meetballs with Pasta or Pasta con le polpette, this meal is common in our family (born in Cagliari, live in Germany). Great Channel!

  • @RNS_Aurelius
    @RNS_Aurelius Рік тому +2

    Italian food kind of got the same treatment as Chinese food. The most popular dishes are inspired by actual italian food but a lot of them are a bit different and we use a lot more garlic in italian food than italians.

  • @paolocarasso5281
    @paolocarasso5281 Рік тому +4

    La Marinara non ha acciughe,solo pomodoro,aglio e prezzemolo.
    Poi c’è la pizza alla Marescialla,che piaceva a Badoglio,che ha in più tanto parmigiano.

    • @aris1956
      @aris1956 Рік тому

      Prezzemolo ? Io ho sempre sentito parlare di origano.

    • @paolocarasso5281
      @paolocarasso5281 Рік тому

      Anche,il prezzemolo è molto usato a Roma,per la marinara.

  • @paolocarasso5281
    @paolocarasso5281 Рік тому +3

    Pasta burro e parmigiano è chiamata la pasta del cornuto,perché la moglie,avendo altro da fare,prepara il piatto in 3 minuti.
    La fettuccina Alfredo è quel piatto ma in più c’è la mantecatura,che lo rende cremoso.

  • @prueba9348
    @prueba9348 4 місяці тому

    Hi! I really enjoy your videos! Here in Argentina (where almost everyone has an Italian surname and, therefore Italian ancestors), we have at least three dishes which are definitely not Italian (since they we're invented here) but with a really strong Italian influence: sorrentinos, milanesa a la napolitana (invented in a restaurant called 'Napoli', hence the name) and pizza canchera (a cheeseless pizza eaten during football matches at the stadiums) and also (dish number four) the fugazzeta rellena (a thick pizza with an oozy mozzarella filling and an onion topping).
    Have you tried any of these?

  • @thomasfolio7931
    @thomasfolio7931 Рік тому +2

    I've seen videos in which fresh pasta is being made. When I was first taught to make home made pasta, I was told to let the pasta dough rest before rolling it out, either by hand or in a crank pasta roller. I don't see that step in the videos. Do you let your pasta dough rest or is it dependent on what kind of pasta you are making?

  • @cdoyle801
    @cdoyle801 Рік тому +3

    It's interesting how what you grew up with impacts your preference. Not having access to true authentic Italian food, I am fond of Italian-American food. What I enjoy would probably be consider heresy in Italy. I like my pastas over sauced - a 2-1 ratio of sauce to pasta (too many carbs in pasta). I like my pasta with fennel sausage, a meat sauce, or even "gasp" chicken parmesan. I like herbs mixed in a vinaigrette, rather than a simple olive oil and vinegar. Oh, and oregano and thyme in additional to basil tastes really good in tomato sauce, especially if cook it with sausages or minced pork....

    • @randomcole619
      @randomcole619 11 місяців тому

      My mom has a more delicate palate, and when you look at these recipes, the Italians obviously have a delicate palate… I though like to over season my foods, just a plan over easy egg I like to have sooo much black pepper🤤🤤 when I make tomato sauces I add a ton of oregano, Italian blends(rosemary, thyme, parsley), lots of salt and pepper… I haven’t gotten to try any of these recipes but I’m curious if I’d like them, the bones, yes, but I may add more spice🤗 oh, and most dishes start with celery, carrot, and onion, it’s soo cool to see where your family cooking comes from🤗

  • @johnandrez
    @johnandrez Рік тому +3

    Eva's expression with the stones knowing the truth has a really interesting history! It comes from the expression in Luke 19:40, right in the middle of events commemorated on Palm Sunday. While entering Jerusalem on a donkey and being acclaimed with palm branches, many people were shouting messianic acclamations which prompted the Pharisees to ask Jesus to discourage his disciples from making these messianic acclamations. In response, he says that even the stones would cry out if the people were silent. So, this expression has entered into many languages as a proverbial expression to describe an obvious truth that even the stones, inanimate objects, recognize such truth. Eva was saying that fettucine alfredo is so obviously not Italian, that even the stones know this to be true. 😉😂

  • @arleneriley2524
    @arleneriley2524 Рік тому

    I can’t get enough of watching the two of you! Harper -1 LOL!

  • @mala3isity
    @mala3isity Рік тому +2

    9:20 This is a cheap dish to make and tastes amazing. Noodles, butter, parmesan. That's it. I can remember being at a friend's house and he was low on groceries but he had those three ingredients. He loved it and asked me what it was. Even though I used spaghetti I told him fettucine alfredo. He probably still loves that dish.

    • @corpsefoot758
      @corpsefoot758 Рік тому +1

      You are an unintentional cooking genius because the original Alfredo is made the SAME exact way, check it out. No “Alfredo sauce”, not even any cream, nothing:
      ua-cam.com/video/Sk9HCxfIREo/v-deo.html
      The only things I would say are non-negotiable: 1) make sure your pasta is “bronze-drawn” so it absorbs the sauce well, 2) you CANNOT skimp on Parmigiano Reggiano by substituting with any of the cheap stuff, and 3) the butter I would recommend is unsalted “Kerry Gold” grassfed brand, which you can find stocking the shelves of your local grocery store
      Oh, and make sure to salt the pasta water before boiling them, so the noodles themselves aren’t bland. Enjoy! ☺️

    • @mala3isity
      @mala3isity Рік тому +1

      @@corpsefoot758 Thank you so much for the compliment and the tips. When we have Kerry in the house, it's "the good butter." I've always salted my pasta and potato waters but the amounts Eva uses astounds me. I've only recently learned about bronze-drawn and haven't tried it yet. Something else I found is by adding a little milk for creaminess, you can use block chesses for the cheddar lovers in the house.

  • @henryslager9406
    @henryslager9406 Рік тому +6

    I thought the american chicken parm is originally derived from melanzana alla parmigiana, though they changed about everything.

    • @nicholasweidman991
      @nicholasweidman991 Рік тому +1

      I thought I’d read that somewhere, too…that Italian immigrants to the UK (originally) couldn’t find eggplant so went with the next best thing to serve “parmigiana style”…

    • @apuz13
      @apuz13 Рік тому

      I grew up in New York and every Italian restaurant served Chicken Parmigiana and in just about every place it was served with a side of spaghetti. I haven't been in New York for over 20 years so I'm not sure what they do now.

    • @bellissima78
      @bellissima78 Рік тому +1

      @@apuz13 It's still a typical Italian American dish in restaurants there.

  • @andreagibson7355
    @andreagibson7355 Рік тому +1

    You guys make me sooo hungry!

  • @Drew-Dastardly
    @Drew-Dastardly Рік тому

    My favourite pizza topping has for a long time been anchovy and black olives.
    Best meal in Sorrento was Ragu frutti di mare. Freshly caught seafood including baby octupus'. Delicious!

  • @PhoticSneezeOne
    @PhoticSneezeOne Рік тому +3

    Another fun fact: Lasagna originally wasn´t "italian" This Dish dates back to ancient greece where it was called Laganon. Later the Romans named it "Lasanon"

  • @JimIBobIJones
    @JimIBobIJones Рік тому +5

    Traditionally, most Italians meals consisted of separate courses with separate spaghetti course and a separate meat course.
    So whilst you don't have "Spaghetti and Meatballs" as a dish, it was (and is) very common to see a Spaghetti dish followed by a meatball dish.
    It was probably Italian American immigrants who started simplifying the course structures that led to the combined dish.

    • @michaeldimartino5389
      @michaeldimartino5389 Рік тому +1

      Traditionally in an Italian American home (NYC), "Spaghetti and Meatballs" is not served with the meat piled on top of the pasta. Instead, the pasta is served in a large bowl with sauced mixed in, and the Meat, consisting of meatballs and cuts of beef a pork is served on a large platter along side the pasta. And yes it is a VERY ITALIAN dish regardless of what predominantly what northern Italians will tell you.

  • @ivoxy0
    @ivoxy0 Рік тому

    I love the way she speaks english! great work with this video!

  • @Chefboyerb
    @Chefboyerb 2 місяці тому

    “…No Harper” is shirt worthy. Love the content.

  • @kylesalmon31
    @kylesalmon31 Рік тому +3

    I saw Clara on Clara’s kitchen make garlic bread the way you showed.

    • @cristinalivi-harris3267
      @cristinalivi-harris3267 Рік тому +1

      I've also read Clara's book, there are lots of interesting stories and many more recipes of Italian tradition. Beautiful photos too.

    • @kylesalmon31
      @kylesalmon31 Рік тому +1

      @@cristinalivi-harris3267 I bought the book also! It’s always a go to for me.

  • @toddstropicals
    @toddstropicals Рік тому +4

    Kind of the same with American Chinese dishes, they do have their origins in China and I guess it's somewhat the same with Italian American cuisine.

    • @fasullodavvero
      @fasullodavvero Рік тому

      @Todd's Tropicals Hai ragione,anche in italia la cucina "cinese" è molto lontana da quella originale,sia per la difficoltà di reperire gli ingredienti,sia per adattarsi al gusto degli italiani...
      Faccio solo un nome involtini primavera,sono certo che non sono quelli originali.

    • @kylesalmon31
      @kylesalmon31 Рік тому +1

      I’m pretty sure Vincenzo puts the sofrito in his posada,but I don’t think he calls it a marinara sauce.

  • @MichiFreddy35
    @MichiFreddy35 Рік тому +1

    the Marinara was always confusing for me, until now.
    also for the Spaghetti alla bolognese, all my life was a lie, the real deal is made with tuna fish 😅, but that sounds delicious because I love tuna fish!