Sunday 20 January 2008

Monica Donnelly's writings....about Italy

On my website, one of the People featured is Monica Donnelly, along with Mon's famous pavlova recipe. Monica has already written one book, an autobiography about her younger years, and is currently in the process of writing her second. She has sent me 2 preview chapters from her new book, which will hopefully be published and available round the end of this year.

Being extremely interested in food and wine, her writings, I have found, generally have leanings in this direction - which we love! So here, below, is one of the chapters she has given me permission to publish on my blog, so you can have a sneak peek at the book. I can promise you the other chapter I have read is equally interesting, being about the history of our much-beloved Hill St Grocers.

NB - the 'Peter' Monica refers to is her son Peter, with whom she lives.


CUCINA ITALIANO

A home cooked Italian meal with a glass of wine tops the menu for Tasmanian households according to a recent survey. The survey also says that beer is no longer the most favoured drink for men. Women were the wine drinkers, now the men are joining them in quaffing wine, and not only with meals! Italian migrants are a big influence here.

Years ago an Italian neighbour would pick our elderberries and make a wine which my late husband would try, and describe as horrible. Our ideas about wine have changed a lot since then. Our current good neighbour, Roberto Carnevale, who has a small vineyard at Brighton, presented Peter last week with a bottle of his latest pinot noir which he is looking forward to enjoying with friends. He is holding onto a couple of bottles of a lovely riesling from good friend Anne Tucceri’s vineyard “Antipodes” at Cambridge. He is feeling sentimental about this wine as it will be the last, Anne having recently sold her property. Like many Hobartians, we were acquainted with Anne’s late husband Bertie. Peter will keep one bottle in memory of him.

Back to Italian cuisine! We were very fortunate on our last visit to Italy to undertake a cooking course in beautiful Tuscany. Italian cooking is much more than “spaghetti bolognaise” and “pizza”. It varies so much, with, for example, polenta and rice dishes favoured in the north and pasta in the south of the country. In Tuscany, local produce includes beans (fagioli), wild boar, huge T-bone steaks, and their famous sweet Chianti wine, vinsanto (holy wine). We avoided the beef at the time of our visit because of the”mad cow” disease scare.

We spent four wonderful days at the Villa Pitiana, south east of Florence. At the cooking class, we learnt how to prepare some of the local specialties – wild boar ragout, home made pasta, spelt (bean) and vegetable soup, and almond biscotti. There were other meat dishes and a beautiful gelati flavoured with vinsanto. Back home, Peter bought a pasta machine and has made fresh pasta for the family on several occasions, most recently on Good Friday this year.

There is no comparison between fresh home made pasta and the dry packet variety. At Christmas a couple of years ago, he prepared one of the more exotic dishes from our cooking class- terrine of rabbit with crayfish and vinsanto sauce. The recipe called for 12 crayfish! We were relieved to find that due to a slightly inaccurate translation, they had meant what we call prawns!
Monica Donnelly
30/4/06
Posted on by Rita
21 comments

21 comments:

Anonymous said...

What a beautifully written piece of "foodie heaven" I would be interested in getting Monica's book and after having met her a couple of weeks ago would love to sit and chat some more!! Also wanted to let everyone know what a genuine person you really are Rita!! Helping my mum organise my suprise birthday cake from interstate was beyond the call of niceness!!(Is that a word...I wonder!!who cares)
from Danie Ross(divinge cafe in Cygnet)

Rita said...

Hey Danie - thanks for that. Helping your mum was a pleasure - and if you can't put yourself out for others, you can't expect others to do the same for you!

It must be my customer service focus!

Re Monica's book - yes - I'm going to write about it on the blog here once she has had it published, so keep an eye out. The chapter about Hill St Grocers was really interesting, to me anyway.

Anonymous said...

I must say, though, I get fed up reading about Italian food in the Age and Sydney Morning Herald.
They are as bad there with italian food obsession as the brits are with curry.
A good move it was that the french thought them how to cook.

Anonymous said...

The french TAUGHT the italians to cook but the repertoire is a lot less than the french manage. Cheese and pasta, pasta and cheese.
Boring.

Anonymous said...

sounds slightly autistic anon 4.33. as is your view of the REGIONAL foods of the italian peninsula.

you can't seriously state that any european cuisine is boring..........there's a lot to know.

Anonymous said...

Lasagne: Pasta.
Spaghetti Bol: Pasta.
Ravioli: Pasta.
Macaroni: Pasta.
Sauce: cheese and/or tomatoes. Fine, but when you see italians eat the stuff every day, you've got to say...come on, try something different. Okay pizza. Hang on that's still just dough with cheese and tomatoes.
The italians and French are so obsessed with their own cuisine it's hard over there to get something different. Oh for some asian food to break it all up.

Anonymous said...

zampone and lentils - no pasta
bollito misto - no pasta
fava beans and parmasan - no pasta, some cheese

i could go on,but you get the point. where are you using as a reference? asia is a big place too, they basically eat the same food as well, but they as the europeans have an extensive selection of authentic regional dishes. and they are even more obsessive than the french and italians. you won't find a close to authentic italian restaurant in jakarta or singapore, but you will find a vietnamese that's damn good in toulouse or verona.

it's an argument not worth having, eat what you like, if you can't find it in a restaurant, buy books and do it yourself!

Anonymous said...

Great vegetable and seafood dishes, superb fruits and olive oils, wonderful sausages and preserved meats - prociutto and melon - yes, many dishes with pasta (brought to Italy from China by Marco Polo!), some with rice, some with polenta. Yes, it gets boring after a while, as does chops and mash, crepes suzette, or even, I imagine, Tetsuya's Confit of Ocean Trout. We are so lucky to have such choice, especially in Australia. It is true that in regional Italy, as is true of Europe generally, it is hard to get the sheer variety of food that we enjoy. A small price to pay when travelling in such wonderful places!
Anon2

Anonymous said...

Yes these things are available, but mostly it is just pasta and cheese and tomatoes, day in, day out.
I suppose the same fine things could be said of any place...Scotland: best beef, seafood, dairy, berries, world's best bacon, butter, etc.
In truth the average diet, like the rest of britain was dreary when I last ate there.
People romanticise cuisines, the truth lies in the day-to-day fare.
Not five-star dining. So, for italy, it is pasta, cheese and tomatoes.
China, rice or noodles with meat and veg. Lots of soy. America: junk.
Australia: meat pies and chips, plus all the other junk.

Anonymous said...

I saw an SBS program about an Italian family who had a winery.
Every day they ate a huge pasta meal with cheese and tomato sauce, plus bread.
Every day, they said. They were all rather large too.

Anonymous said...

Anybody like to eat a Napoli pizza at the moment?
The news showed pictures of huge piles of garbage on the streets.
Some sort of collection meltdown.

Anonymous said...

Yeah! I love my pasta, tomato and spinach sauce and shaved parmesan -with bread - every other week- and a nice glass of red! I'm rather large too. Isn't life great!
Anon2

Anonymous said...

Anon 2...just read The Age's epicure food section. Stephanie Alexander got a two-page spread on italian bread.
Gues what? Rustici was with cheese and tomato. Also, the other recipe was for Friselle...with cheese and tomato.
I mean....come on...same old

Anonymous said...

So? I know they write a lot about it. That's because it's good. I mean, Italian bread is tops! As for cheese and tomato, it's a theme in Italian cooking, like stir fry and rice in much Asian food. We were once used to eating bangers and mash with boring regularity. We wouldn't want to eat this food every day, but, at its best it's still bloody good tucker. Stephanie knows what she's talking about. Try reading other food columns for a while. Many of us love these foods as part of a varied and balanced diet.
Cheers
Anon2

Anonymous said...

Hey, anon 2, I've got bangers and mash for me tea tonight.
Plenty butter in the mash and decent snags too. From wursthaus.
Not a fan of Stephanie though.....
I remember she had a big fat cook's companion book out a few years back.
Cost a fortune and was lauded to the hills.
There was a news piece about it selling out on the mainland. I had to chuckle. Down here in Tassie, you could see piles of 'em rotting away.
Angus & Robertson and Fullers had loads of them still.
I was proud of our state that day. Wouldn't fork out for an overwrought tome.

Anonymous said...

Hi Sir Grump.
Nothing wrong with good bangers and mash now and then - lovely!- as is good pasta, tomato and cheese, now and then.
Don't know about the big fat tome, but enjoyed her's and Maggie Beer's Tuscan cookbook, and, made up some great dishes from it - mainly pasta again!! She also referred me to her Richmond Hill Larder in Melbourne which I have visited several times and had good meals. Especially love that great cheese room! I'm not sure whether she's still running it herself.
Anon2

Anonymous said...

Does Raw still have it's cheese room. I am partial to a nice bit of cheese, grommit.
But I don't like vast expensive tomes that cost around a ton.
I have a pal who think stephanie and maggie beer are the beez knees. That person knows the biz, too, so they must be worth their salt. I'll stop winding people up on this.
Promise.

Anonymous said...

No! No! Keep winding Wallace, but do try to serve the cheese at the correct temperature!
Anon2

Anonymous said...

Yes, ice cold king island cheddar tends to give you toothache and broken crackers.
I love my cheese on those Walkers Scottish oatcakes...wow. Scots TV chef Nick Nairn brought out a range of oatcakes too...but Walkers are the bizness.
Fresh and EVEN Coles have those oatcakes. Best platform for cheese ever.

Anonymous said...

Have you tried the oatcakes from "Phillipa's"? range of buscuits available from Hill Street Grocer. They're pretty yummy too!
Anon2

Anonymous said...

I'll try to track these down, Anon 2, cheers.