Archive for December, 2008

30
Dec

Pinocchio Goes Gladiator

Pinocchio Goes Gladiator in Rome, Italy

Over the course of the past few years, the number of stores selling cheesy souvenirs in Rome has doubled, then tripled, then quadrupled.  They’re everywhere and they’re full of sweatshirts, caps, puzzles, Ferrari toys, and the like.

Mostly we ignore those places as we walk but and spend our time thinking wistfully about the trattorie, cafes, and family-run shops they’ve replaced in Rome’s streetscape.

But there’s one store near the Pantheon that recently caught our eye.  We were charmed to see that they’d creatively dressed a child-size Pinocchio in the plastic gladiator armor that’s so popular amongst young tourists.  Granted, there’s a few problems with his helmet, but otherwise he looks worthy of a spin around the arena.

The Pinocchio Store

28
Dec

An All-Natural Christmas

Broccoli Romano as Christmas Tree

The crazy looking broccolo romano becomes a Christmas tree on the window of a fabric store facing onto the archaeological site at Largo Argentina.

Sometimes called minaret because of it’s unusual shape, broccolo romano is actually a variety of cauliflower.  You’ll find it in every market in Rome.  Here at the eCool compound, we like to sautee it with olive oil, garlic, pepperoncino, and sometimes a splash of white wine.  We’ll admit that we never thought of using it as a Christmas tree, however.

26
Dec

Photo Friday: Pulcinella in Naples

Pulcinella in Napoli

On this Photo Friday (and the feast of Santo Stefano — a holiday in Rome), photographer Susan Sanders brings us a wonderful photo from Naples.

Shot on San Gregorio Armeno, the Neapolitan street lined with stores and stalls selling Christmas creche figures, the photo depicts a Pulcinella figurine sitting amongst boxes and boxes of Christmas ornaments.

Who is Pulcinella?  Called Punch in English, he’s a character in the Renaissance Commedia dell’Arte, a form of improvisational theater in which performances were unscripted, held outside, used few props, and were given by a troupe of ten people: eight men and two women.

Still performed today, conventional plot lines are written on themes of adultery, jealousy, old age, and love. Many of the basic plot elements can be traced back to the Roman comedies of Plautus and Terence, though they can be easily adapted to satirize local scandals, current events, or regional tastes, while still using old jokes and punch lines.

In the Commedia, Pulcinella is portrayed as pitiable, helpless, and often physically disfigured. He usually has a hump, a distinct limp, or some other obvious physical deformity and wears a mask.  In some portrayals he cannot speak, and expresses himself in squeaks or other strange sounds. His personality can be foolish or sly and shrewd.

For more photos by Susan, visit her photo blog: Rome With A View.  And check out the 2009 Rome With A View calendars she’s created if you want to enjoy the Eterna every single day in 2009.

24
Dec

In Holiday Style

Reindeer in Naples.  A Photo by Susan Sanders.

It’s Christmas Eve here in Rome and things are slowing down.  While it’s business as usual until mid-afternoon, most shops and offices will start to pull down their shutters by 4 or 5pm as people head off to prepare for an evening with the family.

On this holiday eve, eCool photographer Susan Sanders has a present for all you faithful readers.  In case you’re wondering what to wear to Christmas celebrations this year, she suggests you study closely the photograph above.  You’ll see that down coats and reindeer antlers are de rigueur in Naples this year!

Happy Holidays!

22
Dec

Music Gift Guide: The Roma Eterna Playlist

Roma Eterna Playlist

Time’s getting short!  If you’re still looking for the perfect gift for someone who loves Rome, we suggest you click on over to iTunes and buy the following songs.  Burn them onto a CD, call it the Roma Eterna Playlist, and you’ll have the perfect gift–without even leaving the house!

Some of the songs on the list are old classics, others are newer releases, but all are chosen for their ability to evoke some aspect of the Eternal City.  Happy Listening!

1)  Abba, Mamma Mia

We know, we know.  They’re Swedish, not Italian, and the song’s about almost nothing.  But you couldn’t ask for a catchier rendition of that emphatic expression one hears all over the streets of Rome.

2)   Morcheeba, Rome Wasn’t Built in a Day

A mellow contemporary tune by a British band that mixes influences from trip hop, rock, rhythm and blues and pop.

3)  Bruno Martini,  Bella Roma

Quanto sei bella Roma!  Ciao Roma.

4)  Ruth Wallis, Pizza

“I marry a nice young handsome fella, he don’t care much for moozzarella, he likes a little pizza every night.”  We fall on the floor with laughter every time we hear this song from Wallis’s album, Boobs.

5)  Bianca Morales, The Heart of Rome (Trastevere)

Jazz vocalist Morales is half Finnish and half Afro-Cuban but she obviously loves Rome like we do.

6)   Pink Martini, Aspettami

A lovely little ballad from the “little orchestra” from Portland, Oregon.  heir music has often been described as “vintage music”, a descriptive which reflects the content, style and period inspiring many of their songs.

7) Marilyn Rucker, Last Day of Pompeii

“On the Last Day of Pompeii, thought I heard some poor boy say, ‘Oh wow man, if I knew then what I know now’….Now Vesuvio’s come to call.  Arrivederci.  I had a ball.”

8)  Pink Martini, Una Notte a Napoli.

More from the always wonderful Pink Martini.  We love the little story told in this catchy tune.

9)  Bella Ciao, Pasta Song

Dare you to get this one out of your head:  “I think it’s nearly supper time.  I’m gonna pour myself some wine.  And sit down to a big plate of pasta tonight.  It doesn’t matter what it costs.  I gotta get some pesto sauce.  To put on my big plate of pasta tonight.”  You’ll be listening over and over!

10)  Rosemary Clooney, Botch-a-Me

Originally written in 1941 by Riccardo Morbelli and Luigi Astore. English lyrics were written by Eddie Stanley. But it was Rosemary Clooney who really made it popular in 1952.

11)  The Nelsonics, The Ruins of Rome

In 2005, The Nelsonics, Milwaukee’s foremost purveyors of surf and soul music, decided to get a little crazy and try something new–they added words to their songs and this was the result.

12)  Bella Ciao, Blue Italian Skies

A little accordian, a fabulous female lead, and a hit album called Legends of the Italian Lounge.  That’s Bella Ciao and we love ‘em.

13)  Dean Martin, Volare

What what a Rome mix be without blu dipinto da blu?

14) Bella Ciao, Bella Ciao

Get radical.  In World War II, Bella Ciao was sung by the left anti-fascist resistance movement in Italy comprised of anarchists, communists, socialists and other anti-fascist partisans.

15)  Rosemary Clooney, Mambo Italiano

Rosemary Clooney, hit the carts with this in 1954 in the United States and reached number one in the UK Singles Chart early in 1955.

16)  Castellina-Pasi, In Trattoria

‘Nuff said.  Who would want to be anywhere else but in a trattoria?

17)  Dean Martin, Arrivederci Roma

The song Pizza (number 4 above) may leave us rolling on the ground laughing, but this one leaves us in tears, every time.

21
Dec

A Colosseum Full of Candy

A Colosseum Full of Candy in Rome's Piazza Navona

A recent stroll through the Piazza Navona Christmas Fair left us giggling when we saw that one candy stand had filled a model Colosseum with their wares.

Though we loved the idea of a Colosseum full of candy, we liked even more the little pink candy pigs that are sticking out of the second-story arches where statues of Roman gods and heroes would have stood in antiquity.

19
Dec

Santa Goes South

Santa in Naples.  A Photo by Susan Sanders.

While traditionally Italians have let La Befana (read her story here) bring holiday gifts on the feast of Epiphany, January 6th, Santa Claus has recently become popular.

On this Photo Friday, Susan Sanders shows us how the Santa craze has manifested itself in Naples.  Taken on San Gregorio Armeno, the street lined with stores and stalls selling creche figures, this the photo shows an orchestra of Santas playing merrily while the shopkeeper to whom they belong has his own fun playing games on his cell phone.

For more of Susan’s photos, visit her photo blog, Rome With A View.  And be sure to get yourself one of her 2009 Rome With A View calendars before the New Year gets underway.

18
Dec

The Roman Holiday Shopping List

Roman Holiday Shopping List

We’ve put a little guide together that will help you celebrate your holiday Roman style.  Each of the items shown above is crucial to celebrating an Italian holiday season.  Working our way through from Christmas to Epiphany, here’s how to do as the Romans do:

1)  Begin by putting up a nativity scene–the more elaborate the better.

Some believe that the tradition of creating Nativity scenes originated with St. Francis of Assisi in 1223, when he constructed a nativity scene out of straw in a cave in Greccio in central Italy and used the scene as the site of his Christmas Eve mass.

Carving figurines for Italian nativity scenes started in the 13th century and it’s an art that’s still popular, especially in Naples, where presepe aren’t limited to the usual cast of characters, but include such everyday figures as pizza-makers, watermelon-sellers, fish mongers, blacksmiths, and even Roman soldiers.

2) Buy yourself some eel.

As with most Italian holidays, eating is a very important part of Christmas.  Traditionally, the Catholic Church asked Christmas Eve be kept as a day of fasting and abstinence (the Code of Canon Law eliminated this fast in 1983) and thus the traditional Christmas Eve meal in Rome is one of fish rather than meat. The prized Christmas Eve seafood treat is a capitone or eel. Shoppers in the know search for a big female eel and serve it roasted, baked, or fried (it’s also preferable to purchase it alive and and conveniently kill it in your own kitchen sink in order to insure freshness).

3)  Get a red tablecloth.

That’s the traditional color for table linen at the Christmas Eve meal.  We’re going with this one from Williams-Sonoma.

4)  Break out the tombola set.

Tombola is a game like bingo that’s popular with all ages.  In Italy, it’s traditionally played on Christmas eve before going to midnight mass.  Sometimes tombola boards are simply numbered, but each number also has a nickname, thus  boards are sometimes illustrated with images representing the nicknames–number 77, for example, is “legs of old women.”

Get yourself a tombola here.

5)  Buy a panettone (or make one).

Panettone is a typical bread of Milan, usually prepared and enjoyed for Christmas and New Year.  Distinctively fluffy, panettone usually  contains candied orange, citron and lemon zest, as well as raisins, though many other variations are available such as plain or with chocolate . It is served in slices, vertically cut, accompanied with sweet hot beverages or a sweet wine, such as Asti or Moscato.

You can get a panettone at Williams-Sonoma too.

6)  When New Year’s rolls around, put on some red underwear:

At New Year’s, the color red is of great importance is the color red, for it’s a symbol of life and prosperity, and therefore the luckiest of all colors.  Across the Italian peninsula, New Year’s Eve tables are set with red decorations, red napkins, and red place markers. And though less immediately apparent, it’s worth knowing that many of those sitting around New Year’s Eve tables will be sporting red undergarments! Meant to insure love in the new year, red underwear and red lingerie adorn store windows in the week between Christmas and New Year’s.

Of course, Victoria’s Secret is just a starting point in the quest for the perfect red underwear. (Guys, you’ve got to get some too.)

7)  Uncork the prosecco:

That’s what you should be drinking when the bell chimes midnight.   If you need a sip or two even before midnight, we’re OK with that.

If you need some prosecco, click here.

8)  Shoot off fireworks:

Nope, they’re not safe but everyone’s doing it.  Fireworks  light up Rome’s sky on New Year’s Eve as they’re set off from every rooftop, bridge, and piazza (this in addition to the city-sponsored firework extravaganza). But along with such explosive “Roman candles” it’s absolutely necessary that your New Year’s table be lit with candlelight, for the use of candles insures a bright future. And because the New Year’s holiday falls in the very chilliest and darkest days of winter, there’s yet another light-producing tradition that survives in Italy – the burning of a Yule log during the twelve long nights between Christmas and Epiphany.

We’re not telling you where to get fireworks; you’ll have to figure that out yourself.

9 & 10)  Eat some lentils and zampone:

Since we are what we eat, the Italians also have traditional foods that are eaten on New Year’s Eve. Legend suggests that the eating of lentils will insure prosperity, perhaps because of their suggestive coin shape. In Rome, long and elaborate New Year’s meals end with a serving of lentils that is accompanied by boiled zampone (stuffed pig’s foot). It’s also a good practice to eat a pomegranate on New Year’s Eve as the hundreds of seeds inside the fruit means an association with fertility and abundance – a symbol that is often seen in Renaissance painting.  Buy a zampone here and get some fabulous lentils from Castellucio here.

11)  Be good for Befana:

After New Year’s, the next big holiday is Epiphany on January 6th.  Epiphany, of course, is celebrated as the day that the Three Wise Men visited the Baby Jesus, bestowing upon him gifts such as frankincense, gold, and myrrh. Thus, Italians have traditionally given one another gifts on Epiphany rather than on Christmas Day (though that practice is changing).

Just as American children are taught that they must behave in order to insure a visit from Santa Claus on Christmas Day, Italian children have traditionally been told that they must comport themselves nicely in order that Befana, the grandmotherly house frau who failed to accompany the Wise Men to Bethlehem (click here to read her story), might distribute gifts at their house on the feast of Epiphany.

What does Befana bring to children who haven’t been good? She brings Carbone Dolce (sweet coal), a type of black candy that looks ominous but is sugary and sweet like rock candy and delights children by leaving teeth and tongue a frightening shade of black.

Sometimes Befana figures are really ugly but we’re digging these cute ones from 9 Mile Schoolhouse.  Get yours now.

12) Make Rome a part of your life every single day in 2009:

You can do that with a Rome With A View calendar featuring photographs by Susan Sanders, of eCool Photo Friday fame.  There are three different calendars to choose from.  Get one now or get them all.

17
Dec

Santina at the Stove

Santina at the Stove.  A Photo by Susan Sanders.

Susan Sanders recently spotted this fabulous holiday shop window in which a sexy Mrs. Santa’s gone domestic.

If you’re in town cruise by for a look.  It’s the window of the oh-so-stylish Fattorini on the corner of the Lungotevere and the Via Arenula.

16
Dec

Gifts for the Italian Foodie: The eCool Guide

eCool's Italian Food Gift Guide

Still looking for gifts for the Italophiles in your life?  Wondering what to get the Roman foodie in your life?  We’ve got a few suggestions that might tickle their tastebuds:

1)  If the foodie in your life has a green thumb or is on a budget, stuff their stocking with arugula seeds.  They’ll be savoring one of the quintessential tastes of Rome for months and won’t have to buy that expensive supermarket arugula!

2)   If, however, your foodie is a movie buff with a sense of humor, you’d better go for the Godfather Spaghetti Measuring Device.  It’s hard to imagine a pasta lover who wouldn’t want want of these!  Designed by David-Louis and shaped like a knuckleduster, the Godfather S.M.D. has holes to measure child-sized portions, adult portions and dinner party portions of spaghetti.

3)  If you and your foodie love the Italian custom of stopping in a bar for a quick panino and wish you could replicate the experience at home, then Tiffany Collins’ 200 Best Panini Recipes is the cookbook for you.  And if you’re feeling like a big spender, you might want to throw in #9 as well–the panino grill.

4)  Does your foodie disdain that pre-grated Parmesean Cheese that comes in a green can?  (Who could blame them?)  Then nothing will win them over like iGourmet’s three Parm collection. They’ll smile and say cheese as they nibble on three varieties of parmiginao, noting how both age and the uniqueness of individual farms alter the cheese flavor.

5)  It’s the ultimate Italian junkfood and we’ve discovered that even people who purport to hate the stuff secretly dip their fingers in the jar when they think that no one’s looking.  So, if your Italian foodie is in need of a chocolate-hazelnut fix (or you want to test their willpower) order up a 5 pack of 13oz jars of Nutella.  If you have Amazon prime, the shipping’s free. Woohoo!

6)  Your foodie’s a reader too?  Then they’re probably dying to get their hands on Marcella Hazan’s new memoir, Amarcord: Marcella Remembers.  Hazan wrote and published The Classic Italian Cookbook in 1973 and her memoir is a terrific history of the expansive, postwar period when Americans were still learning the difference between linguine and Lambrusco, and an engaging chronicle of professional perseverance, chance and culinary destiny.

7)  Looking for something really unique?  Nudo, an olive grove in Italy’s Le Marche region, allows you the unique opportunity to adopt an olive tree for a year and thereby to enjoy the fruits of the Italian harvest while supporting small scale farming.  By means of the Nudo website, would-be adopters pay a virtual visit to each of the 7 olive groves on the estate, deciding which one suits their fancy, and then paying to support the needs of a tree for a year.  And, when you adopt a tree in the name of someone you love (that could include yourself) you’ll enjoy the fruits of the harvest as Nudo will send you olive oil and other olive-related products.

8)  Your favorite foodie can’t decide whether to dine in Rome, Venice, Florence or Milan? We had the same dilemma until we discovered these Italian Dinner Map Placemats. Now you can eat in (or at least on) all four cities. Comes as a book of fifty (50) paper placemats or as we like to call them placemaps. Now you can explore Italy without having to leave your dining table

9)  Already picked up the Panino cookbook shown in #2.  Go ahead and spring for the DeLonghi Retro Panini Grill.  Then tell your beloved foodie to stufff two slices of of rustic Italian bread with mozzarella, prosciutto, fresh basil, roasted red peppers, and whatever else takes their fancy, brush with olive oil, then press between the hot plates of this grill for the best panini outside Italy!

10)  A little music to go with the holiday prosecco?  Pick up a copy of Prosecco Party, a two-disc compilation, if you want to seem ultra mod.

11)  You’ll be on their good side forever if you arrive at the Christmas party with a whole prosciutto under your arm.  Volpi prosciutto is the product of a long, unhurried drying process lasting a minimum of 210 days. Each ham is carefully inspected and hand-trimmed by a master Salumiere. It is then carefully rubbed and salted to ensure an air-dried, even cure. The result is a soft, sweet flavor.

12)  You and your foodie are planning a little trip to Rome?  And you’d like to learn a bit about wine while you’re here.  Sign up for a guided wine tasting with superstar sommelier Hande Leimer.  Read an interview with Hande here or visit her website.




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