Slow Food FairHome >> Experiences
Text-only version printed fromhttp://FXcuisine.com/default.asp?Display=225 My visit of the largest traditional food fair in the world in Torino, Italy. Last week-end I drove across the Alps down to Torino, Italy, for the annual Slow Food pow-wow, that meeting of people passionate about traditional artisan foods from all over the world. Three hours later, I parked my car in front of the lingotto, the giant automobile factory as long as five Manhattan city blocks. I spend the next three days around this building, sleeping at the Lingotto hotel, talking and eating slow food at the Salone del Gusto merged with Terra Madre, the annual convention of all things Slow Food. I was one of 180,000 people who visited the fair. As soon as you step in, the visitor is sucked into a whirwind of earthly delights, only to be spit out five hours later replete and with eyes dreaming of cows and fields and farmers. A separate pavillion is devoted to Terra Madre, the annual convention of Slow Food delegates from all over the world. The part accessible to the public had rows and rows of booths each devoted to one presidi (plural: presidi). This is the name given by the Slow Food Foundation to the local initiatives to protect small producers and safeguard artisan quality. They issue brochures that explain to city folks like myself how a typical sausage or type of bean is made, its history and traditional culinary uses. A disciplinario, code of standard practices for producers, is often written to ensure that only traditional methods of good standing are used. The Sicilian district of the fair was hugely popular, with traditional folk bands playing and singing and a free portions of the most delicious pannettone I have ever had, carved out from a barrel-sized cake. Incredible. Even Bar Alba, one of the best pastry-shop traiteur and ice cream maker in Palermo, had a full booth. I am really glad to see that Sicilians know how to show the great culinary wealth that is theirs. Food wise, this is probably my favorite region in Italy, along with Campania and Emilia-Romagna and Südtyrol. These gentlemen have united their destiny to the Badda bean, a traditional bean grown in the Madonie National Park at Polizzi Generosa, Sicily. The fagiolo badda owes to its trademark two-colors its own Slow Food Presidio. A cultivar of Phaseolus Vulgaris L., it comes in beige-white and black-and-white varieties. Sicilians cook it with wild fennel and serve it on homemade papardelle. As in the Sopranos, you don't want to disrespect the Badda bean. Husband and wife team who grow small wild field peas called roveja (pisum arvense) in Umbria. They are dried on the plant and cooked like beans or ground into a dark polenta. This lady is one of the few farmers who grow Fagioli di Sorana in fields recovered from water-sogged land on both sides of the Pescia river. I asked her if these were the beans that used to be cooked in empty chianti flasks placed in wood-fired bread oven after the bread was baked so they could simmer gently overnight in the residual heat. Yes, absolutely, how do you know that? she answered. We even make a modern flask with a flat base, she said, showing me one that I immediately bought. Just place spring water - not too hard - in the flask with my beans, a sage leaf, a clove of garlic and bake. Right before serving add white pepper and olive oil, she explained, giving me a spoonful. Delicious. These I cooked them in earthenware, it works fine too, she concluded.. The Presidio is called «Fagioli di Sorana». The lady above is one of three traditional regional garlic producers I met, from the Aglio di Vessalico Presidio, who encourages the production of this special type of garlic in Vessaglio, a small village in Liguria. We gather the garlic in June and July, then let it dry for 3 weeks. After that you can keep it until the following April, she explained. These guys were really proud of their garlic. This Romanian gentleman and his colorful wife produce a most intriguing cheese called Brânzä de Burduf and is made from sheep milk in Transylvania under the protection of a Slow Food Presidio. One of the most famous cheeses in Romania, it is stored in a cylinder of fir bark first boiled in whey. I taste the cheese and can only describe it as full fat with a touch of pigsty juice, an acquired taste but most decidedly authentic. They were exchanging charged glances with the garlic producers just opposite. I've been searching for this cheese for years, after having read about it in a few books. Caciocavallo Podolico is one of 1200 cheeses currently made in Italy, and it is totally unknown outside of tiny pockets of Puglia, Molise and Basilicata. How many times have I asked about it in cheese shops and received a snappy 'Non lo mai sentito nemeno menzionare' - I have never ever even heard it mentioned, with this air of finality some people have when they don't know about something. This caciocavallo is a cousin of mozzarella with two main differences. First it is aged a year or more, whereas mozzarella is eaten fresh. Second, it is made from the milk of podolic cows, an old breed that has come out of favor with dairy farms because of its low yield. But now that the Age of the Dry Cow has begun, and with the help of the fine people at Slow Food, podolico cows know a revival and I could buy my first caciocavallo podolico. I found three booths at Terra Madre that sold Caciocavallo Podolico. Although my books mention it can be aged as long as 9 years, the oldest I found was 3 years old. The man banged the cheese on the table to show how hard it is. Older than this and you'll be eating a canonball, he said. Caciocavallo produced from the milk of grazing cattle gets a yellowish color because of the betacarotene and riboflavine present in the grass. At the Molise booth a lady had me taste manteca, a caciocavallo-like cheese filled with soft butter. While I was tasting, she inadvertently let a piece of butter fall on my pants. I was immediately invited into the Molise stand where a little restaurant had been set up for special guests. They sat me a table with three other foodies, from Torino, and the dishes started to arrive. A soup made from beans and grains forgotten in the granary and garnished with a little olive oil. Farro, cicerchia, porcini, fave, olio, ricotta stagionata, tartuffo e orzo, explained the chef. A pure delight of slowness. Highly typical salumi of various types. A sort of canederlo made from stale bread, eggs and pecorino and served in a light tomato sauce. Biscuits. Wine. Bobo, the colorful and noted Molise chef, came out between each dish to explain us what it was and how he made it. He is the chef-owner of Ribo Restaurant in Molise - warmly recommended. The whole meal was cucina povera and slow food. Traditional local cuisine made with cheap but high quality localy produce. Molise is a right-wing province, the chef said, smiling, and I make a left-wing cuisine. Finally when I asked for the bill they looked offended - But you are invited of course!. I had much fun with this Spanish producer of 1000-year-old-tree olive oil and her colleague. Ended up chatting for half and hour and left with three bottle of their Millenario oil. This one is protected by the Olio extravergine di ulivi millenari del Maestrat presidio, between Barcelona and Valencia on the Spanish coast. Call me a snob but I really like the idea of eating oil made from tree that have been in business for a thousand years. Much better than the so-called 100-year-eggs. Calabrese confectionery If you have a serious camera there is nothing this lady from the fake eggs booth will not do to oblige the photographer. Very kind and energetic, she posed with a string of chocolate-and-hazelnut sausages.... ... while here colleague was slicing some chocolate. They served me a chocolate cup filled with liquid chocolate with hot pepper flakes, a refreshing drink if it were. A giant «STREET FOOD» sign brought me to the Lazio booth, where 3 euros paid to this lady ... ... got me the most delicious mozzarella in carrozza, ... ... a piece of mozzarella with some mustard and anchovies stuff a bread slice folded in half. Everything is covered in breadcrumbs and egg and deep-fried until the cheese melts. Pure coronary heaven. A fitting tribute to traditional Italian street food, nothing like the plastic-wrapped panini filled with processed mozarella one is usually presented with at Italian trade shows. I must have a good-looking camera (a Nikon D300) for this gentleman from the Slow Fever Bar ran after me to ask if could email me his picture. No problem. Do I look like a person who buys ready-made pasta? Well, if I did I might stop at Anna Boni's in Mantova for one of her colorful concoctions. This gentleman makes cheese in the Gascogne, between Bordeaux and the Pyrénées. Do you buy milk or does it come from your own herd, I asked, like I do to all cheesemakers. He smiled. We are very traditional and in full vertical integration. Me and my wife we have a herd and milk and make the cheese and sell it. All by ourselves. I asked him to grab a basket, for the picture, and wondered about the grayish color of his cheeses. We have a special strand of mold in our wooden trays. As soon as we put the fresh cheese in, the mold starts covering it, and within days it makes for a protective layer that preventy any harmful microorganism from contaminating our cheese. I bought a really old and mouldy cheese, 3 years old, for my father who loves such things. A really intriguing product that would probably struggle to find a market were it not for Slow Food enthusiasts like myself and the 100,000 people who visited the fair. The second part is not for vegetarians! Slow Food is not a vegetarian movement, and there was a world of pigs at the fair I bought a salama da sugo from this gentleman who comes from Ferrara. Not at all like those fresh sausages Italian mamas buy to crumble in their tomato sauces to make a quick ragù. Instead, this rock-hard sausage must be soaked in water for two hours and then boiled for five more hours before being emptied onto potato purée. I can either cook you some or tell you what's in it, but probably not both as I just shampooed the carpet. It is a sausage of impeccable lineage first mentioned in the 14th century. This gentleman spent the week end slicing one stuffed pig after the other and serving it to queuing foodies! This gentleman makes hams that don't hide where they are coming from ... ... and prove popular with people of the shaved head persuasion. He'll be glad to have you taste one. Nduja is spreadable hyper-spicy salami, it is a trademark food of Calabria. The more you hear what it contains, the less hungry you feel. But have you asked what's in your beloved Frankfurters, Mortadella and corned beef? How many piggy heads to fill one like this? Disgusted? How many have you already eaten in your hot dogs? A typical Italian salumeria, those mom and pop shops where you go buy seasoned meats and sausages ... ... and where you can always taste a slice of sausage. This ham bar was so busy that staffers could not slice fast enough... ... to feed the discerning foodies flocking the bar. I dragged myself back to the hotel for a night of sound sleep and sweet dreams. I am not sure if in the future they will again host both Terra Madre (the Slow Food convention) and Salone del Gusto (the artisan food fair) at the same time in Torino, but this was a mighty fine idea. Same types of products and you could taste, talk and buy at every single booth. I'll be back for more! If you missed this, don't cry and wait for my Eataly Slow Food Supermarket article next week - this one is open 7 days a week.
How 'Slow' Is FX?
Most of my articles speak about traditional food specialties that speak as much about history and identity as they appeal to our palates. I have have every single book Slow Food Editore has ever published. I cook everything from scratch using mostly fresh produce bought from local farmers. Does this make me a Slow Food person? Well, although I love what 'Slow Food' does to protect dying historical food specialties, I don't share all of their political views. While I am not often seen under Mac Donald's golden arches, I don't condone the yahoos who go and trash fast food joints in the name of slowness. I like the idea of fostering the eating of dishes cooked from scratch using fresh local ingredients, but I don't see the point in disparaging the way of life of people who don't have the opportunity of spending much time to cook. While I love to buy vegetables from a local mama and turn them into slow-cooked traditional dishes, I don't like opportunistic yokels who summon the press to see them ransack a field of genetically modified plants, featuring themselves as modern-day Christ scourging the seed merchants under the Temple of Nature, or like Attila the Hun trampling the Heathen Grass until nothing will grow back. These people do their cause a great disservice. And when finally supermarket chains start buying the very same products Slow Food is protecting, I really don't have much understanding for those who claim this is an alliance with the devil. So, if I was a badge-totting teenager in need of belonging, I'd already have placed a Slow Food Snail on my banner long ago. Why wouldn't I - after all I approve most of what this association does. But I don't need a badge to tell me who I am and can't carry the weight of ideas that are not my own. So I'll just carry on sharing my love of traditional foods without being a member. Please do as you must - to each its own. 511969 views |
77 Comments
- #1
- Comment by Felix Alvarez
This is awesome!!! Thank you for sharing this with us..- #3
- Comment by Jason Sandeman
A nice, informative post. I almost fell off my chair when I looked up the cost for your camera here in Canada. I am officially jealous! As for the fair, it looks like a person would come away with a great appreciation of cuisine. I recently got my hands on some iberico ham, and I am still in awe of it.As for the political side, I am saddened today to see people rush out to a McArches, but I understand why. How can a local producer compete with da-da-da! I'm lovin it!? To top it off, we have "fast food" that basically does it all for us. I should not complain though, as now we live in a culture that idolizes "chefs" for doing what our grandmothers used to do as a matter of course. That could be my future.
This is why I like your blog. Not only is there food related articles, but you really get down to the soul of the food. That is what counts.
If you ever get time, I would like to correspond with you offline (by email) about some of your settings for your blog. (A sharing of the minds, if you will.)
Finally, I would love a resource to the 1000 year old olive oil tree.
Thank you again,
WelldoneChef!
About my camera is good and not the cheapest, that's for sure, but you can take great pictures with the Nikon D90, which is half the price and even better than the D80 I used to shoot half the pictures on my blog. No need to be jealous of my camera, you'll lose all your hair thinking like this.
If you read Italian I recomend you get some of the regional cookbooks from Slow Food Editore, definitely much money in them for a restaurateur with an eye for good food cooked to a high order using affordable produce.
- #5
- Comment by Laura
Fantastic pictures, I envy you!Last spring I spent a day at the Feria del Artiggianato (sp?) in Firenze, too bad I discovered the floor dedicated to food when it was about to close, so many delicious things! I wish I had a local market like that.
- #7
- Comment by Daniel Eliasson
Wow, just... wow. And here I'm sitting right on the other side of the Alps, missing it all. The only consolation is that it's an annual thing, I _need_ to go next year. Those beans, hams and salamis are whispering my name. Thank you for yet another great reportage with excellent photos!- #9
- Comment by Stephan Hofer
Guten tag FXich habe ihre seite vor circa 1 monat entdeckt, ich wollte ihnen mit diesem feedback vermitteln wie sehr ich ihre seite schätze und nutzen aus ihr ziehe. die fotos sind einfach traumhaft und motivieren immer wieder auf ein neues.
zu meiner person ich bin 25 jahre alt, gelernter jedoch durch die branche delusionierter koch, der nicht mehr auf dem beruf arbeiten will/kann. viel freude bereitet es mir jedoch für meine freunde, bekannten und verwandten ein schönes aus frischen zutaten bestehendes essen zu bereiten.
vielen dank für ihre arbeit ich weiss dies zu schätzen und werde ihre seite weiterempfehlen.
mit freundlichen gruessen aus zürich
stephan hofer
- #11
- Comment by rodney
To be entirely honest, I mostly read this to see if you ran into my local charcutier, Chris Eley, from Indianapolis, Indiana. He's at Terra Madre this week. I imagine there are a ton of people out there so I'm not surprised you didn't.I am very jealous of all of the amazing examples of slow food available in Italy. Thanks for all the wonderful pictures.
- #13
- Comment by Stefan
Great article!About the "branza de burduf"...it is not always stored in a cilinder of bark (this is the traditional way of storing it in Transilvania, mostly Sibiu, Brasov, Arges). This kind of cheese is made throughout Romania. People also use large wooden pots, cleaned and dryed sheep's stomachs or, cleand and dryed pig's bladders.
This salty and fatty cheese has nothing fancy about it, but is damn good :)
...great stuff comes from our beloved country... :)
- #15
- Comment by candace
FX, I've been reading your food blog ever since someone sent me a link to your entry about making paneer. It always puts a smile on my face when I get an email that you've updated your blog. This entry was amazing! I live in a very small town in Texas, with the only grocery store being a Walmart. I can't get a lot of the stuff you show on your blog but I love seeing the world through your eyes. Keep up the good work!- #17
- Comment by Shu
Thanks for the great write-up. Very informative!The slow food culture sounds so fascinating. All those exotic foods, yet to the locals it's what they've been eating for generations. I'm also very much a fan of cooking at home using simple but quality ingredients. Its one of the things I enjoy doing after a busy week at work.
Too bad it's still very much of a fast food mentality over here in Malaysia, though I sometimes (seldom!) see an article in the papers about the slow food movement in Europe. When I ask my friends what they know about slow food, they say, "Bad service at the restaurant?"
You're so lucky to be able to get all those wonderful hams and cheeses and oils there. I've despaired over the poor fare we have here for a very long time where the average Joe only knows processed ham blocks, plastic cheese slices and the best oil I've ever found was a truffle oil containing '1% truffle flavoring'. Yuck!
- #19
- Comment by Bianca Peccioli
Absolutely amazing...However if someone is disgusted by how many pigs head you need to make salami or even saudages, should re-think concepts. These things are being made for very long and better knowing what's in it than eating a load of carcinogenic preservatives used in food. I once visited a very famous (here in Brazil) factory of frozen food ... everything is separated in containers that describe: Mixture: Pasta Flavour; Mixture: Sauce Flavour; Mixture: Meat flavour. I asked the guy (that was leading me through the tour) what that meant and he's answer was simple. Mixtures come ready to turn into similar texture and taste of the real thing, BUT IT ISN'T THE REAL THING...THAT IS DEFINETELY SCARY (AND DISGUSTING)
- #21
- Comment by HazelStone
F-I urge you to not judge all of Slow Food (or really any political movement) by a few yahoos. I strongly agree with the people who ransack GMO fields, except when it comes to illegal actions like that. GMO is an irresponsible, ecologically unsound practice. It is right to stand against it. But for every idiot who takes an action like that, there are 1000 people who hold the same views but proceed civilly.
As ever ardent admmiration,
Hazel
Professional environmentalist
- #23
- Comment by Pietro Basile
My compliments, as usual, and please also accept my total support on the " political" final comments. I was for one year a member of slow food..I concluded that it was just another propaganda and marketing operation when I saw the mayor of a small town being sold the concept of becoming a "slow town".Let's be clear, we love genuine food but we also can afford it. What about the others who simply can't? In the world context, ours is an elitistic approach that smacks of snobbery to the millions of people who can hardly afford some food on their tables. Should the rest of the world starve so that some hyperprotected European ( especially French) farmer can live a comfortable life?
My son only discovered the positive social function of cheap food when in University one professor pointed out that without the big food chains lots of people could not afford that amount of proteins and calories. And that was in the States not in a third world country.
Now,I'm not saying that fast food is good and should be the norm but it's not bad either. It depends on who you are and how you use it.
And I believe we should all be a bit more compassionate.
There would be a lot to say how this European search for everything " organic" is being just transformed into just another burocratic scheme of paperwork to increase prices...I know a bit about the wine business as I made organic wine back in the '80 and can attest as it really now it's just about paperwork...Best regards
- #25
- Comment by Cristian
You're welcome anytime in Romania, just let me know in order to give you some specific details about what to see and what to do in terms of real food and habits, because some Romanians will only tell you about "sarmale" and "mici", but there is so, so much more....Thanks for the pictures!
- #27
- Comment by Stefan
Cristian is so right...you should see Romania from a Romanian point of view."the Russian point of view" trashed our image...Anthony Bourdain did this and I was so disappointed too see this great country in a greyish with everything revolving around Dracula...it's just so wrong...there are so many things to see and experience...
----
Our cuisine may not be that classy or fancy, but it will blow your mind with it's simplicity.
- #29
- Comment by Cristian
Well, the young people in Romania are speaking quite well English, this is for sure.......Many still thinks that Romanians speak a lot of French or Italian, due to the latinity factor, but, as I told, English is wide spoken among the people between 15-35, maybe 40 yrs. Not to be worried:)But, speaking of cheese and "brânză de burduf", it will be great if you'll se the process of making the real "bulz" in the South of Carpathians style - very hot polenta balls (like tennis balls, in terms of size) with brânză de burduf inside, grated on the hot iron oven.....oh My God!!!! The Transylvanian style of "bulz" is quite different, but ok too.
Anyway, just send me an email when you want to go to Romania, and I'll do my best to provide some excellent foodies for your trip, in Transylvania or wherever.
Good luck!
- #31
- Comment by Stefan
Officially French is the first most spoken foreign language in Romania, but Cristian is right, almost every young man or woman can speak English. But, after reading your "about" page, you should have no problem :)---
Hehe...that "bulz" is great. You should also see how they make this thing called "balmos" in Bucovina. A mix of corn flower mixed with some kind of yogurt and cheese. This is a traditional meal made by the shepherds. It is all mixed together and slowly cooked over a fire. This mixture is surrounded by very hot oil that is never brought to a boil. A very simple meal that is not that easily made.
It goes great with a lamb stu, near some friends, sitting down on the ground and enjoying the great views from Bucovina.
- #33
- Comment by Rosa
Thanks for sharing those great pictures as well as your views with us! A wonderful report! All that food makes me drool and dream...Cheers,
Rosa
- #35
- Comment by Keight
Oh, just wonderful! I am so impressed with the goods on offer. The food shows here - NZ - are lovely but this one seems so much more "real" - and bigger. Although I don't have a shaved head, I would have definitely spent time at that one admiring the piggies.Love all your articles, so inspiring. My favourites are cheese, use of animals (whole boar, rabbits head pasta - Wow!), slow foods and experiences. Keep up the brilliant work - it's a pleasure read that I can't miss.
- #37
- Comment by parshu
A lovely and enriching fx photo essay which even made the piggery products look appetizing; I suspect that the Nduja is heavily spiced to hide the not so delicious core flavours of the body-parts used :-). What I loved was the way in which you have captured the texture of the characters of the farmers and artisanal producers. You're a unique combination of expert foodie and expert photographer and there may not be more than a handful of people like that in the world.- #39
- Comment by François-Xavier CREMEL
Hello FX,Thanks so much for making us travelling europe through your report with excellent quality pictures. This time your visit at the food Torino fair looks so attractive that we can smell from here (in Lorraine) the fine taste of all these ingredients.
All the best.
Fx Cremel.
- #41
- Comment by Nicole
A wonderful article. You definitely made me want to go. Some day perhaps. You also intrigued me with the "Age of the Dry Cow." What is that? Are you referring to a movement back to "land races" (does one use that term for animals?) and away from the highest yielding breeds? I have only recently found out that some of the French AOC cheeses require milk from specific breeds of cow -something I had never known despite my love of cheese and my cousins being farmers. The thought of an Age of the Dry Cow is intriguing.- #43
- Comment by Chiffonade
What a feast for all the senses! Your opening photos of the beans were enough to send my heart pitter pattering. Few foods are as inexpensive, malleable, accessible and nutritionally packed as beans. Slow fooders and Peasants alike revel in their goodness.I like to do beans with smoked turkey meat and of course, smoked ham hocks. Whenever I serve a whole baked ham, I make sure I have a 2 lb. bag of Great Northern beans in the house and the hambone with scraps attached goes right into the bean pot.
The cheeses look amazing!
I can only hope the US will really grab on to the slow-food movement. It's so much healthier than the likes of instafood prepared by such culinary hacks as Sandra Lee with her chemicals and "look how quick" instead of "look how good" attitude.
My parents are of Italian descent so you know I'm enjoying lots of slow-cooked braises of inexpensive meats and lots of beans!! Thanks again for another great culinary voyage :D.
I was blasted by the concept of the semi-homemade, what a fraud, but funny!
- #45
- Comment by Bart
What a glorious and fantastic article! I am green with envy at your experience and sitting slackjawed at the exposition. I would love to attend an event just like this one, where the stars of the show are the small-town expert of an esoteric art, that art being the making of something delicious.I used to be a member of Slow Food, as I was attracted to the idea of doing things "the long and difficult way" for the sake of greater flavor. Then I received the Slow Food-produced magazine called "Slow". I thumbed through it, and, horrified, declared, "This is a cult!" So I think you and I see eye-to-eye on both the good parts and the bad parts of the Slow Food movement. I don't like the hatred and I don't like the elitism, both of which are spawned by an exclusive and "pure" movement like Slow Food.
- #47
- Comment by Andy Basile
Bravo FX - Thanks for the wonderful and informative post. The pictures are superb, so very clear. I am a big supporter of the slow food movement - here in America it is also a slow moving movement because of all of our fast and mass produced food. While I read many of the posters comments I am struck by Piero Basile's (interesting surname) because it is a catch 22 situation. Unfortunately it becomes expensive to do the very thing that farmers and families have done naturally for years. While there is definitely a lot of hype, marketing, and politics that are now attached to these products it is undeniable that without the increase in awareness and the price through these measures it would be impossible to make products like this. These products and a whole way of life would disappear. There has to be room for both fast and slow in the world. Now my favorite idea was the Ham Bar - there should be one on every corner. Thanks again and I am looking forward to the next post.- #49
- Comment by Eclaire
Thank you, thank you for taking us to the fair! You and your camera,the people and the food -- tutti bellissimo (imi?)!
- #51
- Comment by Ouroboros
Awesome, as always FX.I especially liked the semi-rant at the end. I wholeheartedly agree with you.
While those of the Slow Food movement are to be commended for their dedication and hard work, there is no place for snobbery and elitism in the culinary world. The whole point of cooking, in my opinion, is to create great tastes that satisfy the belly and the palate, and in the case of the cook, the mind. While being able to produce traditional foods and ingredients of the highest quality and inherent flavor is noble and deserves the utmost respect, I find the greatest satisfaction from taking the most nasty, tough, unflavorful cut of meat or veggie and turning it into something that people will ask me for the recipe for. Culinary alchemy, so to speak. If one just sticks to the highest-end ingredients and turns their nose up at 'lower quality' foods for the sake of elitism, they are losing the whole point of being a cook...the creation of a dish that satisfies the mental and physical hunger of the diners. Sometimes that hunger can only be sated by a Kobe beef filet with organic veggies, sometimes only by a (formerly) tough-as-hell rump roast with grocery store potatoes and carrots out of my slow cooker, and sometimes only by a Big Mac and fries from the Arches. And if I'm not mistaken, all three can be ruined by having the chef/home cook/patty flipper handling the meal. As a matter of fact, my love of cooking started while I worked at McD's as a teenager when I noticed that I was trying to assemble the burgers to look exactly like they did in the advertisements. Pride in the results of my work, regardless of the initial conditions...that pride continues to this day, some 15 or so years later. I'll start with what I start with, and in the end, you'll love what I make out of it. That's the fun of it. That's cooking. No snobbery necessary.
Anyway, sorry about the rant, but I hope you all understand what I'm saying. Give me a perfectly marbled 1" thick porterhouse steak or give me a can of SPAM...after I'm done with it, you'll (hopefully) ask for the recipe.
O
Thanks Monsieur FX for another wonderful visual treat (not to forget your excellent commentary either)!
I have been relishing your articles on a regular basis for the past several weeks. Your blog is simply the best food blog in existence !
Keep up the good work!
Best wishes ,
Shiladitya
- #55
- Comment by juliet
Wow. You must be having so much fun! Thanks for sharing all the lovely pictures. Gives me a taste of what it might be like to travel there.- #57
- Comment by Lord Best
Dear God, please let events like this come to Australia. Or me go to them, whichever works.The meat section was sublime. I am not one of those people who eat meat and live in ignorance of what it actually is. I love it. When I was at school we were taken to an abbatoir to witness the suffering or poor animals by one of our stranger teachers. Many kids vomited, halfa dozen became vegetarians on the pspot. I had an hour long chat with the small goods chap and got a free ham to take home.
I agree with your opinions on Slow Food also. I nearly joined some years ago, but decided I really did not need to. Then I started hearing about 'fundamentalist Slow Foodlings" (I do not abide the word foodie) and while I do not hold the organisation responsble for such counter productive actions, I do not want to be in the same movement as they. Similar ilk to the vegans who poison shipments of live sheep goingto the middle east. Yes, you have a point to make, but how does contaminating thousands of sheeps feed help them or you?
Keep up the good work FX, sorry about the long post.
- #59
- Comment by chef4cook
I am a firm believer in the slow food movement and have been for many years. If you don't know your past how can you move forward? When cooking you have to understand the traditions in order to be innovative.- #61
- Comment by Tia O'Connor
what happened to my comment???- #63
- Comment by jensenly
Thanks for being candid with regard to the Slow Food's not-so-nice side. I had contemplated joining several months ago, but after reviewing the website I became a bit suspicious. Why does every organized group have to have some secondary cause not associated with the original intent? I just want to get together with people who truly love all aspects of food without having an underlying agenda associated with it.Great field reporting and love all those good looking people with their meat!
- #65
- Comment by celso
Hi, fx, this fair may be amazing... but I,m from Brazil and I got quite disappointed to see a bottle of "Velho Barreiro" in the Slow Fever bar. This one is one of the worse, high-scale produced brands of cachaça... stay away from it, or you will never bound drinking cachaça again.- #67
- Comment by Laura D.
This is going to be a long one, but you've touched on a subject I can't let pass without having my say.I was happy to see your political statement on the Slow Food movement. I agree with you almost entirely. Slow Food should--I say it should, and I'm right! ;)--limit itself to promoting traditional agriculture and food preparation. It will gain more respect and a wider range of supporters through positive means than by destruction and elitism. It's all fine for rich people to be able to buy organic, sustainable, local, slow food for every meal, but when they start destroying crops in the name of reform, they are taking food out of the mouths of the poor and money out of the pockets of the farmer. One point on which I agree a bit with them is the suspicion of deals between slow food producers and supermarket chains. It's not necessarily a bad thing in theory; however, in practice, what often happens is that the supermarkets put pressure on the producers to supply an ever greater quantity of goods. The producers are then stuck between increasing production at the expense of quality, or risking being dropped by the supermarket chain altogether. Sometimes, the producer will then have to scramble to find another buyer for the excess goods that the supermarket had contracted to buy. I'm not saying it has to happen that way, only that it often does.
Politics and marketing are inextricably intertwined with agriculture in America, and we export both our attitude toward food and our farming methods around the world. I have read that without chemical fertilizers, the earth would be unable to support its current population (see Michael Pollan, The Omnivore's Dilemma, for more on that and other agriculture-related information--he's very readable).
In response to several other comments on this page:
I agree with jensenly who said, "I just want to get together with people who truly love all aspects of food without having an underlying agenda associated with it." Everyone has got an agenda (even me!)--I just don't want anyone forcing his agenda down my throat. I'd rather have a nice goat cheese forced down my throat... Which is why I love your blog; it's just about food and the love of it.
The accusation of elitism does, I believe, apply to Slow Food. I hate to tag them that way, because I do like a lot of what they do, but once you start eating expensive, difficult-to-obtain foods and saying they're better than common food, you can no longer lay claim to loving food as an idea. The true test of a cook is being able to take the humblest ingredients and make something exquisite from them. Anyone can slice an artisanal prosciutto or open a tin of Iranian caviar, lay it on the plate, and have something spectacular to eat. But what can you do with an egg or a potato?
As for the "semi-homemade" phenomenon, I regret to inform you and your readers that, for a lot of Americans, if they put together a meal at home, even if it uses all packaged and processed foods, it's homemade (because they didn't pick it up at a restaurant already heated). I despair of getting many of my coworkers to even try some of the (real) homemade food I bring in for my own meals because it may have ingredients they're not familiar with. Some of them won't even put out the effort to make lunches for their children to eat at school. This is truly unacceptable in my mind (especially since I know how bad school lunches are in America).
And a disclaimer: While I would love to cook every meal I eat from scratch at home, this is simply not possible (unless I forego sleep entirely). I admit to using convenience foods once in a while and even, yes, eating at McDonald's on occasion. I don't like it, but I have to eat--and feed my son and a husband who has a horror of kitchen-related activities, though he loves the dining room-related ones--and time is at a premium.
Whew. OK, I'm done...for now.
- #69
- Comment by Cynthia
This was a thrill and an education. Thanks for the trip Francois.- #71
- Comment by Geoff Ball
Great article. I lived about 80 km away from there for a year.I was surprised not to see any Horse or Donkey/Ass meat.
One day I'll get back there :)
- #73
- Comment by quinn
This article was like a day spent at the fair - only without the sore feet! Thank you so much for the lovely images and mouth-watering desriptions. I was reminded several times of Portugal.In a follow-up to Geoff Ball's comment and your response, I personally think it is better not to exclude such things only on the basis of possible offense. It is reality for many people and cultures, and it's good for other people and cultures to be aware of this, whether they agree or not.
I hope YOU are not offended that I'm sharing my opinion, Francois! And of course I know it is not my emailbox that could be deluged with negative comments from readers! ;)
- #75
- Comment by Leonidas
I know I'm really late commenting, but I couldn't help myself. I really enjoy your recipes but this article was something altogether different. I liked the first part but the meaty second part was where it got interesting! I don't feel disgusted at all, I did feel really jealous when I saw the headcheese. I make my own sometimes, after my own country's tradition ( I'm from Cyprus) but not as often as I'd like, because it takes me a full day to make and two days to set ( using gelatine gets you banned from the kitchen forever )All in all, wonderful coverage of a very interesting event!
- #76
- Comment by nieves
Me han encantado tus fotos y la fina ironía de tus comentarios.Tb tu punto de vista ausente de todo fundamentalismo. (algo raro de encontrar)
Soy diseñadora grafica, pero me encanta todo lo que tiene que ver con la comida y me gustaria ir a Turin este octubre 2012
tu articulo es de 2008, han pasado cuatro años espero que no haya cambiado mucho!
gracias y un saludo
Nieves