Tony Soprano's Own Neapolitan Ragų (page 2 of 2)Home >> Experiences
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Fry in a saucepan until the onion has lost its water and the bacon rendered its fat. You will obtain a beige fatty puddle with the most delicate porky smell. Add your ragų with a ladle. Only use ragų you will eat tonight.
Add some of the pasta cooking water to the ragų to thin it down a bit and mix (photo). Spoon the ragų lardiato ('baconed meat sauce') over the hot pasta... ... sprinkle with grated Parmesan or Caciocavallo and decorate with a basil leaf. Pascuale was happy and I managed to have my media room fixed in 2 days instead of 2 weeks, thanks to the timeless ragų napoletano. The Sopranos is a mafia fiction invented by psycholanalyed screenwriters with jewish mothers to project their fantasies. But they did a fair amount of gastronomic research into the Neapolitan origins of their characters who would very much enjoy this ragų napoletano. But who would have them for dinner?. 335238 views Did you like this article? Leave me a comment or see my most popular articles. Related Articles Priest-stranglers in Neapolitan Meat Sauce *** Pasta for the Sopranos *** Neapolitan Genovese Pasta Sauce ** Sicilian Chocolate Lasagna ** FXcuisine's Ragų Finto ** Copyright FXcuisine 2024 - all rights reserved. |
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9 Comments
- #1
- Comment by kel @ Green Olive Tree
Stumbled upon your site. Amazing details you've got here.. How did you get all the inspiration and energy to take all these photographs everytime you make something? I sorta fell out of that at the moment... Love your intro about typical blogs written by women - spot on :)- #2
- Comment by Evan
"The Sopranos is a mafia fiction invented by psycholanalyed screenwriters with jewish mothers to project their fantasies."David Chase, born David DeCesare. DeCesare...funny, he doesn't sound Jewish...Or in the immortal words of Mel Brooks: "Funny, she doesn't LOOK Druish..."- #3
- Answered by fx
Indeed Evan, but if you look at the full list of all screenwriters who worked on the Sopranos, the picture is slightly different: David Chase (86 episodes, 1999-2007)Terence Winter (25 episodes, 2000-2007)
Mitchell Burgess (22 episodes, 1999-2006)
Robin Green (22 episodes, 1999-2006)
Matthew Weiner (12 episodes, 2004-2007)
Frank Renzulli (9 episodes, 1999-2001)
Michael Imperioli (5 episodes, 2000-2004)
Todd A. Kessler (4 episodes, 2000-2001)
Diane Frolov (4 episodes, 2006-2007)
Andrew Schneider (4 episodes, 2006-2007)
Jason Cahill (3 episodes, 1999-2000)
Lawrence Konner (3 episodes, 2001-2002)You mention one of the screenwriters with an Italian surname as a rebuttal of my remark about "New York screenwriters with Jewish mothers". How about Mr Rudolph Giuliani, mayor of New York with a Jewish mother himself? I think there might be some truth in my observation after all. I might add that Jewish screenwriters are probably the best in the business and my remark should not be construed as a critic but just a cultural observation!
- #4
- Comment by Evan
Giuliani's mom was Jewish?? Are you sure? As a native New Yorker, I'm a bit skeptical. Wikipedia says her name was Helen C. D'Avanzo, certainly a Catholic name, but I'm willing to suspend my disbelief--where did you hear that she was Jewish? 'Cause a Google search didn't find anything. Although it did lead me to an interesting Village Voice profile of his family.- #5
- Answered by fx
My bad - I checked my facts and it was not Giuliani's mom, but Fiorello La Guardia's mom who had an Italian name but was Jewish. Nothing wrong with being Jewish of course, but it sure is compatible with being Italian!- #6
- Comment by James
Absolutely delightful and hilarious!- #8
- Comment by Gary Evancho
Although time consuming allow patience you'll see and taste the difference I enjoyed this culinary process as well as my guests.Tell me what you think!
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