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Italian and Italian-American Cooking: Harmony vs. Abundance

Mike Riccetti* (July 14, 2011)

When you are going out for Italian, you usually are not going out for Italian. Nearly all of the time, you are going out for Italian-American.

According to a much quoted truism from playwright Neil Simon, “there are two laws in the universe: the law of gravity and everyone likes Italian food.” A meal at restaurants like Il Mulino in Greenwich Village, Tony

’s in St. Louis, Rosebud in Chicago (any of them), Damian’s in Houston, or Dan Tana’s in West Hollywood is likely to reinforce that. 

 
But, Simon’s Italian food is not what is served at the refined ristoranti of Rome or Florence, or anywhere in Italy. What he was referring to – and what we typically think of as Italian food – is not Italian. It is Italian-American.
 
Most of what is called Italian food here comes from the immigrants from southern Italy and Sicily who arrived from 1880 to 1924. They made up about 80% of all Italian immigrants. Interestingly, about half of the dishes that would become Italian staples in America originated in Naples. Pizza, pasta with clams, and spaghetti with marinara sauce are just three of the many. Though very few immigrants actually came from Naples itself, that city had long dominated the culture and cuisine of the Italian south.  It was easily the largest in Italy at the time, was a busy port, and had long been the capital of an independent country that covered the south and Sicily. So, “what is described abroad as ‘Italian’ cooking is really Neapolitan cooking,” opined Waverly Root in The Food of Italy in 1971. 
 
Italian food in America is largely based on the foods the immigrants had eaten during religious holidays and other celebrations – in and around Naples and elsewhere – much less on what they ate daily. That was often a dreary array of vegetable soups, greens, beans and poor-quality bread. In Italy, they seldom ate pasta, as it was too expensive. They rarely ate meat. They only ate seafood if they lived near the coast. 
 
But, with American wages, commercially made pasta and meat were easily affordable and became regular parts of their diet. Like nearly all immigrants before and afterwards, the Italians quickly grew to include American beef-steak and the crisp, German-born lager beer.
 
They ate far better than they had in Italy. But, many of the ingredients were not available or not as good quality, so these immigrants had to adapt. Vegetables became less important over the years, reflecting trends in the broader American landscape. Their food was necessarily different than that of Italy.  A national Italian-American cuisine emerged before the Second World War and became widely embraced. It had developed on its own, and continued to do so with the occasional dish from a restaurant in Italy added to the repertoire - like fettuccine Alfredo, saltimbocca, insalata Caprese, and tiramisu. 
 
Food today in Italy is similar, but is something else.  The often significant differences between Italian and Italian-American cooking can be described as harmony versus abundance. Italian-American cooking uses far more garlic, more sauce, much more cheese and meat. Fewer vegetables are used. The food is also “more cooked,” like the popular baked pasta dishes here such as baked ziti and manicotti. Pasta is an entrée, which is almost never seen in Italy; it is typically the first course (after the antipasti that is). Fewer seasonal and fresh ingredients are used here. The long-cooked and copious tomato sauces, along with the large amount of cheese, help to mask this fact. Overall, the food is much more robust here. Another difference is the vast array of distinct regional and local cuisines and traditions that endure throughout Italy that are not really found here.
 
These days, though, the delineation between Italian and Italian-American can often be tough. More contemporary Italian dishes and a more truly Italian ethos have been found here during the past couple of decades as chefs have traveled more frequently to Italy, excellent Italian food products have been more readily available, and locally sourced substitutes have improved dramatically. But, still, nearly all of the time, when you are going out for Italian, you are going out for Italian-American
 
That’s certainly not a bad thing at all, though.
 

 
* Mike Riccetti is an experienced food writer in the midst of a book project about Italian food in America. He contributes articles about Italian restaurants on a national basis for Examiner.com. An earlier version of this article previously appeared in The Galveston County Daily News.

Italian American or Italian Restaurants?

Here in the USA there is a truth in advertising law. I don't know if it includes restaurants, but most "Italian" restaurants here should clearly state" Italian American" instead of Italian Restaurant. I don't know many times I have gone to "Italian Restaurants" where the pasta ( Almost always overcooked beyond recognition!) is severed on the same plate as the veal, fish, or chicken! And why do they insists on serving salad first? I am sorry to say this, but it is never a good sign when you here Spanish or Arabic coming from the kitchen. Lastly, at the end of the meal when requesting un caffe,' I want to know why they always ask if I want a double or triple "EXpresso!!!" I generally respond, no, if it is a real ESPRESSO all you need is a "single." The next question I get is, " Do you want that with hot milk like a "Latte?" I respond, "No, not at 9 o'clock at night! "LOL

finally, someone calling it right

I am glad that someone finally called attention to the difference between the differences between these two cuisines. It's true that you do find dishes that bear some similarity to what you might find in an Italian American restaurant. I live in Italy most of the year and when I speak to friends about eating a big plate of spaghetti and meatballs, it really makes their eyes roll. For the Italians, it's like taking a primo and a secondo and dumping them into one dish. As for garlic: I rarely find anything I eat overwhelmed by garlic in Italian restaurants. In fact, a well-known music industry professional recently talked about loving to cook and how Italians use LOTS of garlic in their cooking. Uh-uh. Maybe you find that in Italian-American cooking. One stalwart proponent of the differences between these two distinct styles of cooking is Mario Rizzotti (he is an occasional judge on Iron Chef America) and is an Italian Culinary Specialist for Accademia Barilla. Rizzotti points out that a correct term for what we eat in Italian American restaurants is Italian-inspired cooking. Yes, you do find quantity on your plate in Italy. Here, though, it's all about eating seasonal and local, which ensures you're getting the freshest.

Authentic Italian Food

“nearly all of the time, when you are going out for Italian, you are going out for Italian-American.” – one reason I prefer cooking at home because I cook like an Italian. I grew up on "piatti poveri". We ate meat just on Sundays. To date, our meals still include poor dishes - dandelions with fresh fava beans, dandelions with cornbread, chick peas (ceci), pasta e piselli, etc. http://casa-giardino.blogspot.com/2010/09/sustainable-eating-means-cooking-from.html

True all over the world

Not just in America, over here (UK) the restaurants cook for the locals, few cook `the right way`. This has been a bone of contention for a long time amongst the traditionalist restauranteurs here. What we are against is the number of `foreigners` cooking our dishes in a non Italian manner and passing them off as Italian. As a head chef in `Italian Kitchen` in Edinburgh I know I am one of few Italians, (Abruzzese) who actually cook, physically in the kitchen, in the restaurant trade here. Remember Marcella Hazan: “There is no such thing as Italian haute cuisine because there are no high or low roads in Italian cooking. All roads lead to the home, to cucina di casa - the only one that deserves to be called Italian cooking.