Italia Mia
83
Digital Curation Blog about Italy. Great Resources online discovered for you. Feed your corporate blog or your social media presence with our contents. Be sure to find daily updates and the best of the net related to everything is ITALY. Travel, food, fashion, news, culture and much more.
Follow
Scooped by Mariano Pallottini onto Italia Mia
Scoop.it!

Carbonara, a new theory for its origins and name

Carbonara, a new theory for its origins and name | Italia Mia | Scoop.it

Premise - Perhaps more than any other recipe in the Italian gastronomic canon, spaghetti alla carbonara and its origins have perplexed and eluded gastronomers for more than five decades.

Most food historians group the currently and popularly accepted theories of the etymon into three groups: the origin of the dish can be ascribed to

  1. Coal miners;
  2. American soldiers who mixed “bacon and eggs” and pasta after occupying Italy in the post-war era...
  3. Ippolito Cavalcanti, the highly influential nineteenth-century Neapolitan cookery book author, whose landmark 1839 Cucina Teorico-Pratica included a recipe for pasta with eggs and cheese...
  4. Theory that points to the restaurant La Carbonara, opened in 1912 in Rome. According to its website, it was launched by “coal seller” Federico Salomone. But the authors of site do not lay claim to the invention of carbonara nor do they address the linguistic affinity (even though they mention that their carbonara was included in a top-ten classification by the Gambero Rosso).

[Read More...]

Carbonara, a new theory of its origin

In the course of my research to date, the earliest description of carbonara that I have identified is found in Eating in Italy; a pocket guide to Italian food and restaurants by Richard Hammond, published by Scribner in 1957.

In it, he includes carbonara...  [read more...]

No comment yet.
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Mariano Pallottini
Scoop.it!

Mazzanti Presents New Evantra with a 701HP V8

Mazzanti Presents New Evantra with a 701HP V8 | Italia Mia | Scoop.it

The most important difference, though, is that the flat-six of the first Evantra has been replaced by a 7.0-liter V8 with 701HP and 625 lb-ft (846 Nm) of torque that are good enough for a 0-62 mph (0-100 km/h) time of 3.2 seconds.


Read More

Tom George's curator insight, December 27, 2012 3:05 PM

0-62 mph in 3.2 seconds is my kind of car.