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Italian Cuisine:
In The Heart
Of Tuscany
by: Terry Lowery
When an American conjures up an idea of
"Italian cuisine," often what comes to mind
is pasta, red sauce, and garlic bread.
Pasta, no doubt, plays a large part in most
traditional Italian regional cuisine, and
few cultures know how to employ a tomato the
way that Italians can. However, there are so
many distinct
 styles
and trademarks within the different regions
of Italy that it is hard to lump together
all Italian regional cuisine into one
general type of cooking. In reality each
region has a very distinct style and taste,
and there is really no way to appreciate
Italian regional cuisine without visiting
restaurants and eateries all over the boot.
Tuscany is a region of Italy that takes
up a small piece of the western coastline on
the Tyrrhenian Sea. Since a large border of
the Tuscan region is coastal, seafood plays
a large role in the regional cuisine of
Tuscany. A coveted destination for tourists,
Tuscany is overflowing with cultural
experiences, with roots stemming from the
Renaissance. Florence, Pisa and the busy
port of Livorno all lie within this modest
region. Like it’s simple but beautiful
landscape, Tuscan cooking keeps things
simple. Tuscan bread, for example is a
saltless crusted compliment to their
judiciously spiced entrees.
While
many people think of Italian cuisine as
being very salty and filled with garlic,
onion, and basil, Tuscan cuisine uses
seasoning very sparingly to bring out the
natural flavors of the vegetables, beans,
and grains that make up their traditional
regional cooking. Chefs of Tuscany are
renowned for their rice dishes, and a fish
or duck dish in Tuscany is often not
complete without a risotto base.(see photo
left, Pesto Risotto) They also blend wine
seamlessly into these dishes, evaporating
the alcohol content and leaving the fruits
to mingle with the grains and filled pastas
that compliment the meat and fish entrees
that bring the rich and famous from all over
the world to Tuscany.
Along the coast, seafood plays an
integral part of the cuisine. A trademark of
the Tuscan coast is a soup called caccuccio.
Caccuccio is a rich soup made from a tomato
and fish base. The secret is to use many
different types of fish, pureed bones and
all directly into the base of the soup. This
soup, served with a hearty Tuscan bread is
filling enough to constitute an entire meal.
While the coast of Tuscany is home to many a
delicacy, it is the varied nature of the
Tuscan landscape that provides such variety
in the regional cuisine of Tuscany.
The
cattle and boars that are particular to the
region, for example, make for a taste that
you cannot find anywhere else, in soups,
grilled dishes, and hams. While Tuscany is
responsible for only four percent of Italy’s
overall olive oil production, Tuscan olive
trees can live to be hundreds or even
thousands of years old. So while each tree
produces less of an oil yield than trees
customarily found in other regions of Italy,
the trees have a much more rich history.
This simplicity grounded in a rich tradition
is only appropriate for the Tuscan region.
Photos: Traditional Tuscan food shops,
selling salamis, and other traditional
foods.
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