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Venetian cuisine

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Cuisine of Veneto or Venetian cuisine (from the city of Venice[1] or more widely in the region of Veneto, Italy) has a centuries-long history, and it is significantly different from the other cuisines of North Italy as well as neighbouring Austria and Slavic countries, despite having something in common with all these.

Food and drink have played an important role in Venetian culture for centuries. This image shows a 16th-century fresco in the Villa Caldogno, where some noblemen and noblewomen enjoy merenda, or a mid-afternoon snack, eating bussoli, or typical sweets from Vicenza.

Overview

Cuisine in Veneto may be divided into three main categories, based on geography: the coastal areas, the plains, and the mountains. Each one (especially the plains) can have many local cuisines, each city with its own dishes.

The most common dish is polenta, which is cooked in various ways within the local cuisines of Veneto. Polenta once was the universal staple food of the poorer classes, who could afford little else.

Typical of many coastal areas, communities along the coast of the Laguna Veneta serve mainly seafood dishes.

In the plains it is very popular to serve grilled meat (often by a barbecue, and in a mix of pork, beef and chicken meat) together with grilled polenta, potatoes or vegetables. Other popular dishes include risotto, rice cooked with many different kinds of food, from vegetables, mushrooms, pumpkin or radicchio to seafood, pork meat or chicken livers. Bigoli (a typical Venetian fresh pasta, similar to Udon), fettuccine (hand-made noodles), ravioli and the similar tortelli (filled with meat, cheese, vegetables or pumpkin) and gnocchi (potatoes-made fresh pasta), are fresh and often hand-made pasta dishes (made of eggs and wheat flour), served together with meat sauce (ragù) often made with duck meat, sometimes together with mushrooms or peas, or simply with melted butter.[2]

Cuisine from the mountain areas is mainly made of pork or game meat, with polenta, as well as mushrooms or cheeses (made by cow milk), and some dish from Austrian or Tyrolese tradition, such as canederli or strudel. A typical dish is casunziei, hand-made fresh pasta similar to ravioli.

Among the typical seasoning of Venetian cuisine, you can find butter, olive oil, sunflower oil, vinegar, kren, senape, mostarda, salsa verde.

The following are dishes typical of the three subregions of the Veneto. The page for Venetian language provides additional information on writing and pronouncing the dishes' names.

Venice and the lagoon

Venetan liver, or fegato alla veneziana in Italian, served with potatoes and polenta.
Sarde in saòr.
  • Bigołi in salsa: bigoli pasta served with an anchovy and onion sauce.
  • Fegato ała venesiana: a high-class Venetian plate of liver, chopped and cooked together with chopped onions.
  • Mołeche: small green species crabs (Carcinus maenas), when they arrived at the peak of phase changes and then soft, they are fried. The mołeche are very valuable because the process of changing the water brackish lagoons lasts a few hours, the armor back hard and immediately return to be called maxenete.
  • Pasta e faxioi: bean soup with noodles (typically long pasta rough).
  • Połenta e schie: small shrimp from the lagoon (gray mud, gray-brown from boiled), fried and perched on a bed of very soft, white polenta.
  • Rixi e bixi: a poor but tasty dish consisting of a simple risotto with pancetta and peas cooked in a broth.
  • Rixoto de gò: rice prepared with goby (of the Gobius ophiocephalus species), also known as , typical fish of the Venetian Lagoon.
  • Sarde in saor: fried sardines, dipped in partially fried onion in the same oil in which the sardines are fried, raisins and pine nuts (traditionally only by winter to increase the calories), other spices and sprinkled with plenty of vinegar. One leaves everything to marinate at least one night.
  • Sepe al nero: cuttlefish cooked with their ink lagoon.

Among the many Venetian desserts, the most well-known are:

Verona

Pastissada de caval.
Tortellini di Valeggio.
  • Brasato all'Amarone: braised beef meat cooked with Amarone wine, often served together with polenta.
  • Gnocchi. It is tradition to eat homemade potato gnocchi on Venerdì Gnocolar, the last Friday of Carnival.
  • Lesso e pearà. Lesso is the bollito misto popular across entire northern Italy, that in Verona is uniquely served with pearà: a thick, slow cooking sauce made from the boiled meats' stock, grated stale bread, ox marrow and abundant ground black pepper. Some recipes also add olive oil, grated Parmigiano Reggiano or butter. The sauce's name comes from pear, dialect for pepper; hence pearà, "peppered". In the past this was a lavish meal for the majority of the populace and therefore served on major festivities like Christmas.
  • Pastissada de caval: an ancient horse meat stew dating back to the Middle-Age. It's prepared with laurel, nutmeg, cloves, salt, pepper, vegetables, and beef stock and slow cooked until the meat melts; it's served with polenta.
  • Polenta e renga: polenta accompanied by typical oil preserved herrings. Salted herrings (renga) are boiled or grilled, then cleaned, cut into pieces, and pickled in olive oil with garlic, parsley and capers; after 40 days of maturation the herrings are ready to be served or put into jars for preservation. This dish originated in the Parona neighbourhood of Verona (and more broadly or the whole city) and is traditionally eaten on Ash Wednesday.
  • Riso Vialone Nano: a rice variety typical of southern Veronese lowlands (Bassa Veronese). It lends itself best to the preparation of excellent risottos, and used as such throughout Veneto and Italy.
  • Risotto all'Amarone: risotto with the local Amarone red wine. It is typical of the Valpolicella wine region.
  • Rixoto col tastasal: risotto made with the same seasoned ground pork used in salame and sausages; traditionally this dish was a mean of tasting the mix before making sausages (hence the name tastasal, "to taste salt").
  • Tortellini di Valeggio: hand-made fresh pasta of tortellini kind, stuffed with a mix of beef, pork meats and vegetables, usually served with melted butter and sage. They are typical of the town of Valeggio sul Mincio, southwest of Verona.

Desserts

  • Mandorlato: typical hard torrone, made in the town of Cologna Veneta.
  • Nadalin: an ancient predecessor of the Pandoro. It has a flatter shape and firmer texture than its more famous counterpart.
  • Pandoro: the traditional Christmas sweet yeast bread, now well-known and eaten all over Italy.

Vicenza

A vineyard near Vicenza. Veneto is one of the premiere winemaking regions in Italy.

Vicenza, along with Venice, has one of the most distinctive cuisines in the Veneto. Previously, the Vicentians were often referred to as the magnagati or mangiagatti (meaning "cat eaters") due to the alleged presence of cats in their cuisine (caused from poverty in the past and during World War II), though the cooking of cats is now illegal in Italy. Typical plates of the city and the surrounding area include:

Other provinces and regional dishes

Tiramisu, a well-known dessert from the Veneto region.
  • Bigołi co'ł'arna: bigoli pasta served together with a duck meat sauce.
  • Bixàto (or Anguilla): eel; a typical dish of south-eastern Veneto, in the delta of river Po, it can be roasted or fried.
  • Carpaccio.
  • Casunziei.
  • Frittura di pesce: fried seafood served together with polenta; typical dish of the coast of Adriatic Sea.
  • Galletto alla brace: grilled cockerel.
  • Gallina alla canèvera: a dish from a very old Padua or Vicenza tradition, dating back to the Middle-Age, in which hen meat is boiled together with mixed vegetables inside a pork bladder.
  • Gran bollito veneto (or bollito misto alla veneta): mixed boiled meats, beef, hen, beef tongue, cotechino, cooked together.
  • Grigliata mista: mixed grilled meats, as pork ribs, pork sausages, pork chops, chicken breasts, bacon strips, beef ribs, always served together with sliced, grilled polenta.
  • Maiale al latte: braised pork meat, cooked in milk.
  • Oca in onto: a goose marinated for some days in salt or herbs and under its own fat, and later cooked. Typical of the area of Padua.
  • Pasta e faxioi ała veneta: a soup made by pasta, beans and bacon.
  • Pastìn: a typical food from Belluno, consists of mixed pork and beef meat, cut anyhow. Spices may be added in it, and this food is often eaten along with polenta.
  • Patata mericana: sweet potato; a typical fall dish, it can be served boiled or roasted.
  • Połenta bianca: a variety of polenta made from whitebiancoperla corn, it is typical of the plain areas but above all of the territories of Padua and Venice.
  • Połenta e oxełi: spit roasted small game birds like larks, thrushes, house sparrows and quails, served together with polenta. Under the Republic of Venice this dish spread to eastern Lombardy territories, and in Bergamo a cake took the same name (polenta e osei).
  • Porchetta trevigiana: often stuffed inside a panino.
  • Radicchio alla griglia: a Trevisan-based plate of grilled endive leaves.
  • Sfilacci di cavallo: frayed dried horse meat, typical of Padua and its province, it can be traditionally used to dress a bigoli dish or eaten alone, but in modern years it is popular also to dress a pizza.
  • Soppressa: typical soft salami, traditionally contaning garlic.
  • Spezzatino di musso: donkey stew, served with polenta.
  • Tripe ała veneta: tripe cooked with vegetables, butter and olive oil, then to be served dressed with grated grana cheese.

Desserts

  • Fugasa: an Easter sweet bread.
  • Galani (or crostoli).
  • Tiramisu: one of the most popular desserts in Italy and Europe, it is made with fresh eggs, mascarpone, Marsala and dark-coffee-dipped savoiardi (ladyfinger biscuits).

Drinks and alcoholic beverages

A bottle and glass of Prosecco, which can be spumante (the more expensive extra fizzy) or frizzante (the cheaper fizzy).
  • Prosecco: a popular sparkling wine, which is often secco, which is dry, or amabile, which gives it a relatively sweet taste.
  • Pinot grigio: one of the most common and prestigious wines of the region.
  • Bianco di Custoza: also one of the best wines of the region, it is cultivated in the Custoza region near lake Garda.
  • Spritz.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Venetian cuisine". veneziaSi, Italy. Retrieved August 26, 2011. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ http://www.veneziasi.it/en/cuisine-venice-tradition/venetian-cuisine.html