Instead of
the jolt of despairing reality usually served on Sunday, namely, Tick Tock the Climate Clock,
here’s something fun: Easter lunch, Sicilian
style, in a neighborhood restaurant.
This contemporary
Sicilian restaurant, called FlaM Osteria
Contemporanea, is right in our neighborhood, a mere block away. Thanks to my husband for the video.
After
admiring the non-traditional, subdued color scheme of our upstairs dining room—milky
olive green with dusty lavender—not to mention the adorable if inscrutable table
decoration above, we proceeded with a glass of Oltrepo’
pavese Spumante (a sparkling Riesling
from Lombardia, on the other side of
the Po’ River). That spells Old Home
Week for us, as we lived in Pavia, 25 miles south of Milan, in 1984-85, and recall
very good sparkling wines from this area.
You want to
sample every course in Sicily, but there’s only so much your waistline can
stand. So, our plan of attack was to
share an appetizer and a pasta and then to order our own main courses, with
wines by the glass, as we were having both fish and meat. Dessert would be an ice cream at a nearby gelateria.
Having
cleared the first hurdle, it was on to a shared Antipasto Siculo, which paired nicely with the Spumante: Eggplant caponata,
home-cured porchetta, saffron-infused cheese
from Siracusa, sun-dried tomatoes, peppery caccio cavallo
from Ragusa, olives and capers, fragrant honey (I succumbed to a
point-of-purchase jar), bitter orange marmalade, and house-cured cinghiale (wild boar) salami. My rule of thumb is, if the appetizer rocks,
you’re in the right restaurant. The
appetizer rocked.
As a primo piatto, we ordered the spaghetti
with chunks of sautéed baccala’, pane mollica (slightly sweetened, toasted bread crumbs), and
pine nuts. Delicious, as the photo
attests.
With this
course, I had a glass of Pinot Grigio
from Alto Adige and my husband opted for the local Inzolia. The latter is a
white grape primarily grown in western Sicily but also in southern Tuscany,
where it is called Ansonica. Inzolia
is also a component of Marsala. Both wine
choices were very credible, unlike us, because we forgot to photograph the
pasta course until the last bite.
As my secondo piatto, I ordered cotollete agnello (lamb cutlets--I avoid
lamb for obvious reasons, and make an exception only at Easter) with rosemary and a smear of potato puree.
My husband stayed with fish and ordered the involtini pesce spada, sword fish fillets
rolled and stuffed with pane mollica,
pine nuts, finocchietto selvatico
(wild fennel), and raisins. The involtini were served with three condiments: apple sauce, olive oil, and mint sauce. We shared the oven roasted potatoes, which were so
soft, they were almost caramelized.
I switched
to a Perricone with the lamb and my
husband continued with his Inzolia. Perricone
is a deeply colored, full-bodied red grape predominantly grown in Sicily. It’s often blended with the Sicilian grapes Nero d’Avola or Nerello Mascalese because of its density of color and flavor, but it
is also vinified alone. It’s the main
component of Marsala. Very smooth and really good.
After
dinner and for future reference, our sommelier recommended his favorite Perricone, which we’ll be on the lookout for.
Not a peep about our X-rated gelato. Eat your little hearts
out!
Keep it
real!
Marilyn









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ReplyDeleteOh, God! I’m so glad you’re not vegetarian. This posting was just sooo delicious!
ReplyDeleteDo you pack pants with elastic waist bands for your Italy time?
ReplyDeleteWhat a good idea!
Delete