Lifestyle / Italian Wine Week 2010
Lifestyle / Italian Wine Week 2010

"Italian American Food...Why DON'T it get NO Respect?" was the title of a seminar at Vino 2010. The conversation was stimulating and enjoyable. I hope that the Italian Trade Commission and Vino 2011 will host more dialogues such as this one...
Vino 2010, also known as Italian Wine Week, took place from February 3 to 6. A series of tastings and seminars, dinners and exhibits, it was the largest Italian wine event ever held outside of Italy. I enjoyed the chance to sample the wines, meet the producers, and listen to the discussions, but the most interesting presentation as far as I am concerned was entitled “Italian-American Food...Why Don’t it get NO [sic] Respect?” In 3 days of sessions, it was the only one that focussed on food.
The host of the panel was David Rosengarten, who began with a brief video of a new, and with any luck imaginary, show called “Hava Lasagna” (as in hava nagila, the Israeli folk song). In the video, David visits Italian-American restaurants and grocers seeking to find the flavors he remembers from his early years growing up in Brooklyn. He finally finds it at a restaurant in Queens where he is served a dish consisting of alternating layers of breaded and fried veal and eggplant cutlets, tomato sauce and melted mozzarella. In his opening remarks, Rosengarten speculated on whether food such as this, his Italian Anerican ideal, represents a unique, regional cuisine and why it has never been highly regarded, except by aficionados such as him.
Piero Selvaggio, the owner of Valentino Restaurants in Santa Monica and Las Vegas, as well as several others, told us how, as a young man, he was exposed to fine Italian cooking on a visit to Italy and from that point steered his restaurants away from Italian American food. He strives to prepare food as it is done in Italy, and seeks to find the best imported foods. He is, however, open to blending Italian and non-Italian foods, as in his new Houston restaurant where much of the menu is a hybrid of Italian and Mexican flavors.
Lou Di Palo of DiPalo Fine Foods spoke about his family’s long involvement in the food business. He recalled how his grandmother would make meatballs out of scraps of cheap meat scraps or cuts that were past their prime because that was all that the family could afford. Having experienced extreme poverty, they were all the more appreciative of the bounty of food they found in this country. He takes great pride in the high quality Italian products he imports and sells.
Ric Torrisi and Mario Carbone are the co-owners of the ironically named Torrisi Italian Specialties, a new shop in downtown Manhattan specializing in non-Italian products. The two young chefs believe in supporting only domestically produced products, even if it means shunning incomparably better, and often less expensive imports like Parmigiano-Reggiano, Prosciutto di Parma or San Daniele, or San Marzano tomatoes.
Michael Batterberry, editor and founder of Food Arts and Food & Wine magazines, also spoke. His take was that the best way for a restaurant to identify itself with regional Italian fare is as “special” items on an otherwise generic Italian menu, since many Americans still shy away from ingredients like rabbit, or tripe.