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Christmas Lunch 2010

In our family tradition of international travel over the Christmas holiday, we generally read as much as we can about our destination in advance so that we are aware of options and historically important sights, but we leave most of our itinerary in the hands of spontaneity.  The one exception is that I identify one “fancier” restaurant in advance for a lunch reservation on Christmas Day.  This provides some insurance that we’ll have a festive holiday experience on the actually holiday, a day on which most shops and restaurants are closed in European countries.  This also gives us a chance to experience a traditional holiday meal, local style, something we always enjoy.

Prior to this trip, I understood that Italians, especially in southern Italy, celebrate Vigilia di Natale (literally, the vigil of the birth of the baby Jesus) with a Feast of the Seven Fishes. Then, a traditional Christmas Day meal, while somewhat variable, is likely to include antipasti, a stuffed pasta served in a meat broth, and some sort of roast meat (note:  this is as far as can be from the American roast ham!), and a panettone (light, buttery sponge cake) for dessert.

My search for restaurants serving a special Christmas lunch in the area surrounding Lucca (where our apartment was located) revealed a number of interesting options. We chose Restaurant Le Repubbliche Marinare Pisa, a restaurant in Pisa (site of the Leaning Tower) that was offering a special fixed price tasting menu.  When I sent an email to request a reservation, they offered a to prepare a simple pasta dish for our daughter.  I thanked them but suggested that she would likely enjoy the tasting menu as already planned.  We really want her to have the opportunity to experience the richness of the cultural fabric when we travel, and chicken nuggets and french fries would obscure that pretty completely!  We thought the menu included a choice of dishes at each course, but upon our arrival, we learned that we were going to be served each of the dishes listed, which amounted to 9 (yes, 9!) separate tasting plates, each so beautifully presented as to leave us awestruck.

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Internet, Schminternet

We are back in the U.S. after 8 days in beautiful Tuscany.  Our trip began with a couple of hiccups — a flight cancellation and two-day wait for a rebooked flight, a lost suitcase, an internet connection that didn’t work as promised, and arriving closer to the actual holiday than we generally prefer (mid-day on Christmas Eve), which meant that we were doing some very jet lagged shopping in cold rain to stock our apartment before all shops closed for the holiday.  These were all annoyances that we generally can avoid with some careful planning.  And although we prefer to see our planning result in success, we learned that the charm of Tuscany rapidly reduces these annoyances to something bordering on on irrelevant.

I intended to blog about some of the meals we ate in Tuscan restaurants and about our adventures in the markets and cooking in our apartment.  So, before I shift my mindset and blog focus to cooking in the U.S. in the new year, what follows in the next few posts are some of the culinary highlights. 

Buon appetito!

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Meal Planning for 2010: It’s a Wrap!

Next week’s game plan wraps up my scheduled menus for this year.  We’re going to close out 2010 with an afternoon of holiday gifts and feasting with friends — for that party, I’m planning to make some traditional hors d’ouvres for grazing throughout the afternoon and a fabulous southern french beef stew with garlicky rolls for our main course.  Then, we’ll have an assortment of desserts in small servings. One of our guests is planning make mulled wine.  Then, we’ll have just one weeknight left before we depart for our holiday travels in Italy.  For that night, I decided to dust off a concept that is always a crowd pleaser — breakfast for dinner!  We’ll try out a new waffle recipe and pear with with some chicken & apple sausage that is the perfect liaison between breakfast and dinner!

Planning these menus is a labor of love for me, but it is nontheless labor, and the notion that this is my last set of weeknight dinners for 2010 is pretty exciting!  After this, I’ll take a little hiatus from home cooking for the holidays and concentrate on some spontaneous cooking inspired by foraging in tuscan villages! I cook almost as much when we travel as I do at home.  However, it is a different kind of cooking based on daily purchases in local markets and simpler preparations, since I won’t have my full pantry. This cooking is so centered around the process of discovering local ingredients and preparing them as simply as possible that it doesn’t feel like work at all.  It is a spontaneity that is quintessentially European, and that is so hard to accomplish in our daily American life, what with jobs and commutes and homework, etc.

So, whereas my typical routine involves far too much time in an automobile and the necessity of planning out our meals to aid in shopping, cooking, and ensuring good nutrition, my holiday routine is focused on avoiding automobiles (in this case, a medieval village with no vehicular traffic) and an absolute lack of meal planning.  We will eat what strikes our fancy and live only in the present moment!