Showing posts with label agriturismi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label agriturismi. Show all posts

Sunday, November 6, 2016

Travel Diary - Indian Summer Tour 2016, Part 5, Berardino Lombardo, Agriturismo Il Contandino, Caianello (Ce)

After a long week of school, work, various appointments here and there, Sundays are reserved to stare in famiglia/be with your family.  In terms of Sunday lunch, a grande agriturismo is one of the best ways to spend a long afternoon together. 
Agriturismo? 
 Definition: Agriturismo - a combination of the words for "agriculture" and "tourism" in Italian - is a style of vacationing in farm house resorts codified into Italian law in 1985......
An Italian agriturismo will usually serve foods to guests prepared from raw materials produced on the farm or at least locally. (Source, About Travel )

 I chose Berardino Lombardo’s Agriturismo IlContandino in Caianello for my last stop on my Indian Summer Tour.



Travel Diary October 16, 2016

The weather was perfect!  Perfect for a day of good food, good wine, and great company.  My son and I arrived just in time to get a giant bear hug from Berardino as he led us to the aperitif table.  

Berardino Lombardo



Aperitif country style starring newly pressed extra virgin olive oil and crunchy toasted bread.
A great kick off to what would be an afternoon of local food, local recipes, and fun fun fun.

Example – with truffle season in progress, it just makes sense to make a simple fresh salad with lettuce, thinly sliced mushrooms, truffles, and a splash of olive oil.


 I could have eaten a kilo or so!
Next came an onslaught of appetizers complete with a quick explanation of the ingredients along with tips for me so that I could prepare each item at home. 




Panzariello: day old bread, tomatoes, onions, olives, zucchini, ad origano alltossed with olive oil.

Melanzane poverelle; eggplant marinated in extra virgin olive oil, vinegar, and oregano then baked in the oven for about 20 minutes.  Simple but spectacular!



Pane cotto e broccoli.  Once again, day old bread is not tossed away, but fried with wild broccoli greens!


 Cicoria e fagioli.  Cannelloni beans and  wild chicory soup.



Uovo a susciello.  Another simple and tasty dish using staple ingredients such as tomatoes, broth, sausage, and eggs (cooked directly in the broth! )


A glass or two of Lombardo’s Aglianicone wine….



Sunday?  Can’t miss out on a Campania classic.  Pasta with Ragu sauce!



Second course – Roasted pork with a side of oven roasted potatoes...



Dessert!


Before leaving, a quick stop in the agriturismo’s bottega.  A little shop which features some of the local products produced by Lombardo and friends.  




Products that one can take home and reproduce the flavors and feelings of a spectacular sunny Sunday afternoon.




Monday, July 20, 2015

Agriturismo Le Campestre's Conciato Romano - A Cheese with a Humble Past and a Glorious Future, Castel di Sasso (Ce)


Conciato romano cheese and Agriturismo Le Campestre.  I was introduced to both examples of Campania quality for the first  back in March of 2011.  Conciato romano is a pickled cheese- dating back to the Samnite civilization.    It's produced in Alto Casertano, home to Agritursimo Le Campestre and the Lombardi family who has nearly single handedly brought this cheese back to life by promoting it on a national level and helping it to become a Slow Food Presidia.  Le Campestre's web site describes this particular cheese like this...

Vorremmo raccontare il Conciato Romano ma non è facile farne una semplice descrizione in quanto non è solo un formaggio ma una vera esperienza antropologica.
E’ quell’insieme di sensazioni che investe il palato, travolge i sensi, rievoca trascorsi imprimendo il ricordo...


We would like to talk about Conciato Romano but it isn't easy to give a simple description since it isn't just a cheese but a real anthropological experience.  Together with the sensations that invest the palate,overwhelms the senses, and evokes after impressing memories...

Manuel Lombardi

I've seen Manuel Lombardi many times since that lazy afternoon in 2011 and I am proud to say that we have become friends.  His cheese  has found its way on menus in top restaurants and pizzerias throughout Campania and Italy as well.   Sitting  down with Lombardi and family as he opened up a terracotta amphora with that strong intense aroma was moving.  It was as if, after a year of ageing, he was presenting it to the world for the first time.  A proud papa', so to speak...
A proud papa' who is serious about this particular product that requires care, dedication, and amore to produce.  That same care, dedication, and amore is also required when pairing as well.
Signora Lilliana Lombardi
So what was the pairing of the day?  It required something sweet, dolce, Lombardi told me.  So that particular afternoon, with a warm summer breeze, the Lombardi family took me on a trip through time...
Beginning with baked pears. ( Pere volpine - fox pears - a forgotten fruit that has an interesting history as well) These pears were baked with another historical Alto Casertano treasure - a sparkling wine known as Asprinio  D'Aversa produced by a nearby winery- I Borboni, and sugar.



All this sweetness, dolcezza, went perfectly with carefully sliced chunks of conciato romano cheese...



A cheese that I have tried on pizzas, in dishes in several Campania restaurants.
But honestly?
I enjoyed it this way.  On a summer afternoon. With the Lombardi family.
At Le Campestre.

Learn more about this specialty here...

Saturday, July 11, 2015

On the Road to Dubai - via Alto Casertano


I first heard about Road to Dubai thanks to a Facebook post in mid June.  Road to Dubai, A road trip  described as an unprecedented gastronomic tour of Italy. A group of chefs, journalists, food distributors and foodies travel in 3 campers from North to South Italy It sounded pretty cool, but I wanted to learn more.  I sent a message to Chef Francesco Guarracino, leader of the pack.    


Chef Francesco Guarracino

Guarracino, originally from Sorrento, has been the executive chef at Bice Mare Italian Restaurant in downtown Dubai for about four years.


The chat went something like this...

Ciao, Francesco, come stai?  Bene?? Allora,  will you be coming to Campania during your tour? 

Yes - for two days.  Would you like to join us?

Gee, I don't know maybe for one day of course I would!!!


Fast forward to the Fourth of July.  Instead of celebrating Independence day at a barbeque in the park complete with fireworks, I headed towards the small town of Caiazzo in Alto Caertano to  Pepe in Grani.  At about 1140 the camper caravan arrived after spending the previous day on the Sorrento Peninsula.
I was there, along with Franco Pepe (Pepe in Grani) and Manuel Lombardi (Agriturismo Le Campestre) to welcome the crew of chefs, journalists and food lovers...headed by Guarancino.
Campers parked, we headed down the narrow cobblestone road towards one of the top pizza meccas in Campania, wait, in Italy. Pepe in Grani.  


Franco Pepe welcomed the crew with a little history of his way of pizza making.  He showed the laboratory where he does what he has been doing best for oh, such a long time.  Preparing pizza dough by hand.  I've known Pepe for years, am a grande admirerer of his work and his pizza, so I stepped back to watch the reaction of the group.  As Pepe worked the dough, cameras snapped, questions were asked and answered...in other words - in my opinion, the group was fascinated.


Franco Pepe


After a tour of the pizzeria which includes an amazing terrace as well as   three guest rooms with breathtaking views of the territory, the troupe was ready to taste a few pizzas.

 Pepe explained the wood burning stove concept as he put together his first pizza for the degustazione/tasting.  A simple pizza with simple ingredients.  Garlic, olive oil, red chili, and anchovies.  



The next pizza was a twist on the classic pizza margherita.  Pepe calls it his Margherita Sbagliata.  Sbagliata means wrong, incorrect.  So what did he mean? Well, it meant that he added the tomato sauce after he cooked the pizza, not before.  A tomato sauce made with pomodoro riccio.  Even the basil was made into a sauce, and squeezed on top.



During a brief pause, I was asked which Franco Pepe was my favorite by my new travelling companions.  A tough question..but as I began to answer, the next pizza came out of the oven and headed straight to our table. La Riccio Nero ripiegata. Ripiegata means foled over-not like a calzone, but folded over after it comes out of the oven.  The pizza included escarole salad, scamorza and fior di latte cheese, and black pork salami. Which by the way, is one of my favorite ingredients...



Last but not least, a pizza that gave us an introduction to our next stop.  Pepe's pizza with sugna, figs from Cilento - fresh and jam version, as well as a sprinkling of Manuel Lombardi's conciato romano cheese.



On that note, we said our goodbyes to Caiazzo and headed towards nearby Castel di Sasso about 15 minutes away.  Here we entered into a peaceful sanctuary known as Agriturismo Le Campestre.  


Nearly 5 years had passed since my last visit but I instantly felt at home.  It was here where we would have our lunch and relax a bit on the terrace.  Lombardi shared his family's southern hospitality with the crew from Dubai.  A spread of products from the farm such as ....

fresh ricotta cheese

purple potatoes stuffed with pancetta bacon

primo sale cheese with tomatoes

fried cheese
Other appetizers included olives with marinated apples, buffalo milk mozzarella cheese, a chick pea soup with thick crusty toasted bread, and a delicious salami tray.



A first course pasta dish which I wrote about here.  Chef Guarracino helped out in the kitchen as well, and even plated up for us.

Scialatiello ai Profumi delle Campestre



Last but certainly not least, special dish that highlighted the family's production of the ancient conciato romano/pickled cheese.  Pears baked in sparkling  Asprinio d'Aversa wine and sugar were the perfect accompaniament which I will write about in a future post.

Manuel Lombardi



Lunch was over...maybe  too soon for me, since I would be leaving the group at this point. 
But before I left, I chatted with Guarracino for awhile.  It was hard not to get caught up in his enthusiasm, like when he bit into a piece of buffalo milk mozzarella that Mimmo La Vecchia of Il Casolare shared with all of us that afternoon.  Or when he paused in front of the anfora of conciato romano - an ingredient which he knows well.  We talked about the challenges of getting products in Dubai that he wanted to put on his menu...products that would allow the chef to stay true to his Italian roots and please an international clientele back in Dubai.

Yes, I left the group, but continued to be with them in spirit as they headed to Terre del Principe to learn about Casavecchia, and Pallagrello Nero and Bianco - ancient grapes found only in Alto Caertano.  Later, the headed to Le Colonne Restaurant and Michelin star Chef Rosanna Marziale who gave them another taste of the territory.

The group continued on to Puglia, and then,  a trip that began in Milan on the 29th of June ended in Sicily on the 8th of July. Just part of a bigger package that will feauture a summit held in Dubai in October.

A little far from home for me, but ...well, who knows? In the meantime, I'll follow the hashtag #roadtodubai...


Monday, July 6, 2015

Fantastic Firsts - Scialatiello ai Profumi delle Campestre - Agriturismo Le Campestre, Castel di Sasso (Ce)


Scialatiello ai profumi delle Campestre

Saturday afternoon, 1500 ish, Agriturismo Le Campestre, Castel di Sasso (Ce)  Here's a question..,
What do you serve a group of journalists and chefs who are in town from Dubai?  Journalists who are used to dining in 5 star restaurants, chef who are used to preparing for an international crowd?  
The answer was easy!  You show 'em what you got! And Manuel Lombardi along with his family did just that.  Particularly with this dish -Scialatiello ai profumi delle Campestre,  homemade scialatielli pasta with aromas from Le Campestre  .  This pasta hit close to home, subtly showing off what Campania and particularly Le Campestre in Alto Casertano has to offer.  The pasta, Lombardi explained, was made by hand using the family's whole wheat grain brought to the local mill and ground into flour.  Scialatelli pasta is a long pasta, made by hand and  created in the 60s by Chef Enrico Consentino.  

Le Campestre's version used simple ingredients from the family farm.  Oregano, salad tomatoes, extra virgin olive oil, pecorino cheese...and an interesting touch - a particular type of basil which had a lemon flavor which gave a fantastic freshness to this dish regardless of the 95 degree F weather that hit the region that afternoon.



Another reason why pasta is a girl's best friend...

Exploring the Treasures of Naples - Discovering the City's Magnificent Museums

There is a saying: “See Naples, and then die.” This phrase, coined by the German poet Goethe during his visit, reflects his deep admiration ...