Friends
of The Awaiting Table Cookery School in Lecce:
These are the people in our neighbourhood.
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"Specialising
in small, intimate hands-on classes based on
personalised instruction and individual attention."
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No
one really knows if it’s true or not, but tradition
says that some journalist once asked the pope, ‘How
many people actually work in the Vatican’?
‘It’s hard to say,’ the pope said, ‘but my guess is that
it’s less than half’.
Well, Lecce is sort of like that, only the opposite. How many culinary instructors
will you have during your time in Lecce? The answer is just about everyone you
meet. The
man that sells us flowers never lets us leave without scratching out a recipe
for us.
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Cesare,
the man that delivers our bottled-water through
the window of our library thinks nothing of chit-chatting
ten minutes about his new favourite vineyard.
The old geezers in the barber’s
chairs are not talking sports. Not even about
politics.
Sauce!
Lecce is a food town, and here are the people you’ll meet.
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This
is Chris Butler and he knows olives. Don’t
let the name fool you- Chris is an Italian citizen and has
been working with, teaching about, writing about, tasting and
teaching the tasting of high-quality olive oil for longer than
anyone else we know. Our olive program, ‘The Contadino,
The Cook and The Extra Virgin, is actually a joint venture
between Chris’s olive consultation services, and our
school here in Lecce, the program growing from a series of
talks that Chris and Silvestro gave around The Awaiting Table’s
dinner table. And Chris really knows olives, as we’ve
said. But aside from his vast knowledge base, what really makes
Chris stand out among ‘Flying oil makers’ (Chris
works in Italy, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand and North
America) is his grass roots approach to improving olive oil
quality. ‘Educate the consumer’, he says, ‘and
everything else falls right into place’.
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This
is
Elena,
who
owns
and
runs
the
best
Bed
and
Breakfast
here
in
Lecce. ‘We
in
Italy
call
it
a
Bed
and
Breakfast’ but
only
because
we
don’t
have
another
name
for
it.
Imagine
staying
in
a
private
house,
you
know,
with
antiques
and
nice
things,
but
where
you
have
a
normal
person
there
to
see
that
you’re
happy.
We
do
have
little
kitchens
in
each
room
but
those
that
come
to
Silvestro’s
school
always
eat
breakfast
with
the
other
students
each
morning,
in
Antonio’s
cafe.
You
know,
un
cappuccino
and
a
pasticiotto.
It’s
the
best
way
to
start
the
day,
just
like
we
do
here
in
Italy.
My
mouth
waters
if
I
think
about
it
too
much’,
she
says,
laughing.
She
comes
to
dinner
often
and
we
tend
to
grill
our
fresh
sausages
out
on
her
4th
story
garden
terrace
come
Wednesday
nights.
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This
is Nancy Harmon Jenkins, perhaps the most plugged in
food
person in the world right now:
she simply knows everyone and
everything going on in the culinary
world today. To most of the
Anglophonic world, she’s just ‘ Nancy ’, the way Child
was just ‘Julia’, or David was just ‘ Elizabeth ’.
She’s also written the book on the food of Puglia , literally,
which just has been reissued here in Italy . (She also has
a Southern Italian book coming out in 2007 called, Cucina del
Sole, look for it online). If you are interested in the local
food, she’s the one to seek out. She’ll likely
be coming by the school in 2008 as well. |
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This
is
Antonio,
our
cab driver,
although
we
all tend
to call
him Iper
Fighetto
(something
approaching, ‘Superstud’).
His father
also drives
a cab and
loves to
discuss his
last meal
with those
of us that
work at the
school, even
when he doesn’t
have time
to stop.
If while
in Lecce
you hear
someone yelling, ‘Ieri
sera….Brodo’ (‘Last
night, Broth ’ [and
elaborate
meal of beef
bones and
vegetables,
similar to
Pot au Feu]
) from a
passing cab
window, it’s
no doubt
Franco, Iper
Fighetto’s
father.
Both
come
to
dinner
at
the
school
whenever
they can. |
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This
is Simona, our
artistic guide and something
of a local celebrity.
She has been proudly
introducing Lecce
to the non-leccesi for
longer than she’d
ever care to admit. ‘Most
of what I do is
explaining a place
through its architecture. ‘What
was life like here
in Lecce when x
was built’,
that sort of thing.
Of course this
is nothing knew,
even if many from
New World countries
find this a radical
approach to learning,
if only because
they don’t
have the buildings
around them on
a daily basis to
study. But I think
the general public
is starting to
look at food like
that now too. ‘What
does a dish mean?’ Why
did this group
of people eat this
or that? Sure,
you can say, ‘because
they were poor’,
but this is the
Mediterranean ,
everyone used to
be very, very poor,
often until very
recently. Sicilians
were just as poor
but their food
is very different.
Northern Pugliesi
were poor too,
but their food
is very different.
Why? Food can be
more than just
delicious and nutritious.
It can be fascinating,
anthropologically.
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This
is Gracious Antonio, likely the sweetest man you’ll
ever meet. He owns and run our café where we meet
for coffee every morning. He also happens to make what
is likely the best cappuccino you’ll ever have, the
best hot chocolate and the best granita too. He simply
wouldn’t do something if he wasn’t excellent
at it. Take his espresso: he actually keeps the cups under
boiling water, grinds the beans fresh once an hour and
even listens to your conversation, anticipating a natural
pause before he starts his machine, ensuring that you’ll
have a perfect cup of coffee in front of you, every time. ‘I
can always tell the cooking students right away’,
he says, his bar towel in constant motion. ‘They’re
always just delighted to see me and they know my name,
something I don’t get even from my own wife’,
he says, laughing. ‘It’s strange to think that
on the other side of the world right now there are people
who already know me from something called ‘a web
site’. But sure enough, in walks Silvestro and a
few students and the first thing they say is, ‘Antonio’.
The world is a pretty magical place’.
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This
is Big Show, although many call him Andrea (apparently
Big Show is a professional wrestler, a reference to his
gargantuan size). He and his father, Mimmino, sell salumi,
which is another way of saying, Things Preserved Through
Drying. Big Show sells capers, olives, anchovies, cheese,
salami (not the same thing as above) and salt cod, all
ingredients that are still preserved in salt, long after
the advent of refrigeration. Salting draws out the moisture,
stopping any bacterial activity, which always needs water
to thrive, (which, if you think about it, is not too different
from why scientists always are searching for water on other
planets).
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This
is Mauro, who comes to the school for dinner often.
Mauro is insane about two things, his home town of
Salerno, and the mozzarella produced there, which he
brings with him after each trip back to visit his family. ‘Why would
I go out to eat? I come to Silvestro’s’, he
says. ‘I’m still not very good at making fresh
pasta but I really excel at eating them’. He’s
working on his English and likes to sit next to those working
on their Italian. Especially if they’re female.
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This
is Fabio Nocco. He and his brother, Alessio, sell
us the majority of our wine that we consume at the
school and indeed we tend to visit their shop during
most weeks, just to chit-chat and see if there is anything
new to try. The story of the changes in wine making
in the Salento can be told in their shop, and not just
in the wines themselves, but in the division of labour.
Pippi, their father, sells cheap beer and bulk wine
by the glass out front of the shop, which caters mostly
to construction workers and college students. His
sons sell high-quality, truly world—class
wines in back. They read voraciously, meet with
vendors and constantly taste towards keeping themselves
informed: the boys simply are the local authorities.
That this change came in a single generation tells you
a different story than the one perceived outside of Italy-
that Italy has always been a consumer of high-quality
wine.
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This
is Sandro the butcher, who is absolutely fascinated
by our school, and how we work hard to revive recipes
on the verge of becoming lost. Roast a whole lamb?
Sandro wants to know about it, know what you roasted
it over, and how far away was the flame. Roast a whole
pig? He wants your stuffing recipe (mostly chopped
pancetta, raw fennel and lots and lots of black pepper).
Not long ago we asked for some ground mutton for a sauce
to dress our orecchiette. We noticed as we were telling
him the recipe that he was grinding twice as much
as we asked for. The next day we compared tasting notes. ‘Superb’, he said,
smacking his lips in remembrance. ‘Those are flavours
I haven’t tasted since I was a little boy’.
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This
is Chuck, who doesn’t spend as much time at the school
as he would like. ‘I’ve known Silvestro for
pushing 20 years and have visited him in, what, five different
Italian cities over the years. Lecce is still my favourite.
I recently turned the big 4-0 and even decided to celebrate
my birthday here at the school, and further south at the
castle. From what I remember, I think we all had a great
time, and anyway, liver damage is treatable anyhow. The
thing about this part of Italy , is that no matter where
I go in Italy , Italians are always impressed that I spend
so much time in Puglia . Apparently it’s the really
cool region now days. You can’t open a food
magazine anymore without reading about Puglia .
Yeah, me. Hip and trendy. Who knew?’
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This
is Ermanno, who keeps us in both excellent, high-quality,
free-range chickens and the local rabbits, which
are justifiably famous for the flavour they acquire
from a life-long diet of savoury Mediterranean herbs. ‘My very first job
when I was a teenager was slaughtering rabbits. Now I still
sell the same ones, from the same farm. I always ask my
wife to cook more rabbit- I love it so much- but she always
puts her foot down and says that once a day is enough.
She’s from two towns over’, he says, as if
that explains it all. He’s also brothers
with Sandro the butcher, and the son of Giovanni
the other butcher. Those still needing a diagram
of their family tree will be provided one on request.
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This
is Romana, who just may be the sassiest and sexiest
fish-monger in the entire world (how many fishmongers
do you know that can gut fish while in heels, fallen
spaghetti-straps and skin-tight Capri pants, while
bantering with customers, bossing around her all-male
staff and stopping a box of live octopuses from escaping?!) ‘ Lecce is perhaps
the best strategically-situated city in all of Italy ,
fish-wise. Yes, it’s not on the coast, that’s
true. But better than that, it’s between two. And
historically it’s always been an aristocratic city.
It’s the best of both worlds. Historically we’ve
always had well-trained cooks, and two different seas to
pull from. Really, even before something even decides to
wiggle underwater, you have some cook somewhere in Lecce
planning how to cook it’, she says, in a howl.
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This
is Luca, who sells us our bread, but sometimes
too, flour for our fresh pasta. ‘Monday is my favourite day
of the week, especially if Silvestro’s students are
coming in. They’ll never have seen a loaf of bread
so big. I don’t really speak English too well but
I always understand the same when they always say, ‘Surfboard,
Surfboard’.
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This
is Pina, whom everyone always loves. Pina has the
local habit of asking your intended use for everything
when ordering from her market stall, which can be off-putting
to those that don’t know better. ‘A kilo of peppers’,
you’ll say.’ ‘For what’, she’ll
ask. ‘For making la peperonata’, you say’. ‘Ah,
then you definitely want these, say, over these. They’d
be much better. Cost less too’. Yep, everyone loves
Pina. And no, you can’t take her home with you.
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This
is Annalisa, who makes our sfuso, a thick, black Primitivo
that tastes like cinnamon, cloves and dried fruits. At
15% alcohol, it sloshes in the glass almost as think
as motor oil. Her family also makes barrel-aged high-end
wines but it’s her sfuso, or ‘bulk’, or unbottled,
wine that we buy the most of from her for the school. The
Salento does make excellent, modern wines based on autochthonous
grapes that you don’t find anywhere else, and we
buy the best ones and you’ll have those during your
week at the school. But it’s Annalisa’s sfuso
that solicits the most email from former students, ‘where
can I find that wine?’ Wine makers simply don’t
want to make wine like this anymore, anymore than a professional
baker would like to sell you raw apples. Annalisa didn’t
want to either until we kept ordering it in small batches
and she started to see how guests at the school responded
to it. We kept commissioning more and more each year until
her wine-making colleges started to scratch their heads
at it all. ‘But that’s how wine used to taste’,
they said. It’s the way the house wine still does
at our little school in Lecce . |
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