Reflections of a Husky Italian

  • Danny V.

    Rank #309 of 1949

    Votes: 50

    About my essay:

    Reflections of a Husky Italian: why it's important not to overthink and under-respect your food.

As I sit at my desk nursing a cheap Chianti hangover through squinty swollen eyes, listening to my brain swoosh to and fro inside my skull, I find myself blurrily deep in thought.  Last night I made spaghetti aglio olio – cheap, quick, and easy.  But damn it was good, and I got to thinking why my favorite dishes were always the ones that were easiest to make and required the least ingredients.

When pondering what it means to cook well my mind takes me to the scene from the movie Castaway where Tom Hanks, after much travail, was able to make fire school using only friction and dry grass.  He then proceeds to maniacally dance around his now mammoth bonfire while grunting The Doors’ Light My Fire.  I had the same feeling when I made my first cheese omelet for my father at the tender age of 9, standing in front of the stove on a Dellwood milk crate that he had brought home from work.  I had created food, amazed that by using only simple commodities like butter, eggs, and cheese I was able to put a smile on someone’s face.

It was at that moment I knew that cooking was my calling.  That Christmas Eve I was allowed to help prepare the feast which, as any Italian-American knows, is no small feat.  There was mussels marinara, giardiniera, frutta di mare, clams oreganata, fried cauliflower, rice balls, and, oh dear God, the crab sauce (wipe tear).       

 To me, food should evoke emotion and nostalgia.  As a chubby Italian kid (or as my mother would say – husky) nothing was better than Sundays.  Sunday mornings were synonymous with intoxicating wafts of meatballs and sausages frying in the same cast-iron skillet that my grandfather had brought from Avellino in 1909.  It was the smell of espresso made in the family maganette, sweetened not with sugar but with the gut-warming goodness of sambuca, to be sipped around a table tended by my uncles as they talked about whom from the neighborhood had died or who went away.

More importantly, however, to cook well is to not get too fancy, to realize that most of the dishes you order today at your favorite restaurants have staunchly peasant roots.  Do you think my ancestors from their tiny coastal fishing villages really gave a shit if their branzino was cooked au papierVa’ fa’ in culo, they’d likely say.  Fish, olive oil, herbs, salt, fire….done and done! 

 Don’t get me wrong; I enjoy a colorful overly elaborate foo-foo celebrity-chef-concocted hot dog just as much as the next guy.  I am, after all, a lover of all things food.  But the beauty, nay, the pure magic of fine cuisine to this humble foodie is found in its simplicity, its focus on the ingredients, and the respect of its origin.  Chefs of today are modern-day storytellers nurturing a long tradition of creativity born out of necessity, availability, and flat-out balls.  Here’s to them…   

 

 

comments

Anthony B.:

I think I had a Dellwood milk crate too. And I can see the author at age 9, making that omelet. Smelled, I'm sure, like victory.  Also this essay made me hungry for Italian.

July 9, 2010 Report Abuse
Mary O.:

I can still picture 9 year old you! and your old man and even the milk crate. ahhh, the food this poor Irish girl got to eat when she spent time at your house! it has not been forgotten.......

July 10, 2010 Report Abuse
Sara K.:

This definitely appeals to the Italian in me :)  Good job!

July 10, 2010 Report Abuse
Rick I.:

Dellwood Milk! Haven't had that brand in years!

July 10, 2010 Report Abuse
Stephanie W.:

Wow....simply fantastic!  I hope you win!  ...love the DELLWOOD!  ...And no...they didn't give a sh*t if their branzino was cooked au papier!!  Great!

July 11, 2010 Report Abuse
Jeanine D.:

Brings me back to Sundays at Nonna's house.... Good luck hope u win.

July 11, 2010 Report Abuse
Danny V.:
NOTE FROM AUTHOR: line reading "...was able to make fire school using..." SHOULD READ "...was able to make fire the old school way using...". I guess cheap Chianti and editing skills don't mix! July 11, 2010 Report Abuse
Stephanie W.:

MARY O'REILLY!!!!!  It's STEPH    I remember eating at your house too!!!!!!  Listening to the Smiths and hanging out with your fam!  How are your brothers and Brig????????  Mamadukes????  Please email me!!!!  My new last name is White...(hence Stephanie W.".)....my email address is stephieboots@hotmail.com Where are you living?  I'm positive you're somewhere exciting!!!  How great to see you commenting on my bro's essay...I think it's just great!!  I hope he wins!  Miss you Mary!!! ..Steph

July 12, 2010 Report Abuse
Jose M.:

Boring!

July 15, 2010 Report Abuse
Juliet F.:

I wonder if we're related. You see, you've described my Brooklyn Italian family. And Christmas Eve!!! Ooo the Christmas Eves we've spent crowded like sardines (packed in olive oil, no less) into my great aunt's Bensonhurst house. and the preparations done days and days in advance.

AND we both share a love for the fundamental spaghetti aglio olio (although i prefer linguine). 

bravo, cugino.

August 7, 2010 Report Abuse