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Italians say that we're doing Italian food incorrectly

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    Italians say that we're doing Italian food incorrectly

    Apparently, a lot of people around the world don't eat Italian food properly

    On the "kinda naughty list" are...
    • Putting oil in the pasta water
    • snapping dry spaghetti before boiling it (WE SHOULD PROBABLY GET A BIGGER POT THEN)
    On the "REALLY naughty list" are...
    • garlic bread WITH a pasta meal (BLASPHEMY!)
    • no salt in the pasta water
    • pineapple on pizza
    • ketchup on pasta

    Click image for larger version

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    Source: https://yougov.co.uk/topics/internat...an-food-crimes

    #2
    Huh, and I always thought I was of Irish/German descent.

    Comment


      #3
      I gotta say ... I agree with the Italians ... except maybe for the garlic bread. I'd have garlic bread with corn flakes if I could. Snapping spaghetti's not totally off the table, though ...
      Last edited by MBMorgan; February 4, 2022, 05:23 PM.

      Comment


        #4
        I am all for snapping spaghetti, makes it easier to eat and easier to get into the pot. Never heard garlic bread was a no no, but I do draw the line with ketchup for myself. But, whatever floats your boat.

        Comment


          #5
          I’ll just add that to my list of things I still do wrong. Let me see, I’m up to page 12 line 8, there it goes, just below still makes beer can chicken.

          Comment


          • Oak Smoke
            Oak Smoke commented
            Editing a comment
            Not being as well traveled as many of you, my best Italian was at Carrabbas in Denver Co. It was so much better than anything I had experienced before. I have no idea if we were there on the right night or had the right cook, but it is one of the 5 best meals I’ve ever been served.

          #6
          Sehr Interresant...

          Havin been stationed in Sigonella, Sicily, fer 8 months, I went to Great Lengths to learn from th locals,; Ma's, Pa's, Grandma's. Grandpa's...

          An I have subsequently made my own tweaks, along th way, where permissible...

          Hopin this all here doesn't create a significant rift, 'tween us, an our stalwart Allly...

          *Sicilian ain't th same as Italian....
          Last edited by Mr. Bones; February 5, 2022, 06:16 PM. Reason: -'

          Comment


          • SheilaAnn
            SheilaAnn commented
            Editing a comment
            BF is Sicilian and you are right, Mr. Bones not the same as Italian!

          • T-bone
            T-bone commented
            Editing a comment
            Loved the times I was deployed to Sig. Great folks and food.

          • MarkN
            MarkN commented
            Editing a comment
            My paternal grandparents came to America from Sicily. While it is a part of Italy (I am qualified to claim Italian citizenship) it is different in so many ways. It is a veritable melting pot of nationalities, historically speaking. The Greeks, the Arabs, the Carthaginians (from the Middle East) and let us not forget the Normans and the Vikings all "visited" there at one time or another. It seemed to me it was a lot of seafood with Arab influences.

          #7
          100% agree on oil in the water being a bad idea, the sauce won't stick.

          Comment


          • Lost in China
            Lost in China commented
            Editing a comment
            The oil in the water is to keep the pasta from sticking to itself. Otherwise instead of spaghetti, you get a mass of noodles all cooked into a single piece.

          • bardsleyque
            bardsleyque commented
            Editing a comment
            just stir once or twice!

          #8
          It's kinda funny, the worst Italian I've ever had world wide (to include chain restaurants) was at two different places in Rome. Also found a few places that had some really good stuff away from the touristy areas of course.

          The best Italian I've ever had was at a little place in England, we ate there so much that after living in the US for a few years, we flew back to visit some friends and we went to this place for lunch and when we walked in the door both of the Italian ladies perked up and called my wife by her name and asked her if she wanted a specific pizza a specific way she always did when we lived there.

          There was also a place in Baghdad that had amazing pasta and calzones, they only spoke Italian so I assume it was legit... or everything not chow hall just tasted amazing there, I dunno.

          I however am happy to break almost any of the above rules, I don't have high expectations for my Italian meals or I'd make everything from scratch instead of a box and a jar.


          Comment


          • Mr. Bones
            Mr. Bones commented
            Editing a comment
            No experience quite like Gittin Out There, an Doin it, in One's Personal Pursuit of Global Cuisine, is they, Brother?

          #9
          I am shocked an Italian (or any other ethic person) would think we are doing it wrong... My sister-in-law, a second generation Italian, laughs that we buy Extra Virgin Olive Oil... She has stated there is nothing different between the first press and the last, so you (we) are wasting our money, especially since in the early 2000's when all the Italian Olive trees were killed in a freeze.. Since then, virtually all "Italian Olive Oil" has been from somewhere else..

          Comment


          • Henrik
            Henrik commented
            Editing a comment
            Yes, it's 90% Spanish olives. Nothing wrong with them though, they're really good.

          #10
          Anyone who puts ketchup on pasta should be horsewhipped. And I am not saying because of my loathing of ketchup. I mean, WTF? But I digress 🤣

          One of my best Italian meals was in, of all places, Okinawa. I was on assignment there for 7 weeks at Camp Foster. My other favorite was here in LA at the now shuttered, Valentino. I was on assignment here, too. Chef made me the best lobster risotto for my birthday.

          Comment


          • bbqLuv
            bbqLuv commented
            Editing a comment
            Ketchup on pasta just to get horsewhipped, is that an offer or a threat?
            "Hurts so good, stop it some more!"

          #11
          Years ago when I had the privilege to direct buy marble from quarries in both Spain and Italy (Carrara, some of the finest stone on the planet), I got an invite to layover in the gorgeous resort at Forte dei Marmi. Now don’t get me wrong, the food there could be fabulous but like anywhere else there were plenty of clunkers. We went to a local pizza joint for instance and ordered a pie and out came some cheese concoction with arugula all over it and a boiled egg plopped down in the middle. Not exactly haute cuisine. Worst pizza I ever ate.

          Again I think Italians have produced some of the world’s finest cuisine, but for them to look down their noses at the way we choose to interpret their cooking is somewhat disingenuous. Try leaving the boiled egg for breakfast or on a salad would be my response.

          Comment


          • Mr. Bones
            Mr. Bones commented
            Editing a comment
            Agreed.

            Experience Verified. Worst Pizza I've ever et was within th confines of an Italian Possessions Location.

            They asked us," Pizza?" "PIZZA?" "PIZZA?"
            repeatedly, like we was in some kinda BAD Addled State...

            Then brought us a Pizza Atrocity, graced by a sliced, boiled egg, an some dog-arse hot dog slices, as well...Sadly Enough...

            This did NOT change my tip, BTW:

            It's TOUGH to function / interact sucessfullly in another country...
            Last edited by Mr. Bones; February 4, 2022, 08:55 PM.

          • DogFaced PonySoldier
            DogFaced PonySoldier commented
            Editing a comment
            Yup. While in Venice a couple of years ago, we were served something called "American pizza" which was topped with... you guessed it... sliced hot dogs and soggy French fries.

            We ate it, we were stranded on Murano on a Sunday afternoon and every damned other place was closed - this was the kitchen of a hotel and we weren't allowed in, only allowed to sit at the tables outside and order. It was a weird experience. lol

          • FireMan
            FireMan commented
            Editing a comment
            DogFaced PonySoldier ? Huh? Say what?

          #12
          Never snap my spaghetti....that's just not right....
          I dunno most Italian food and food from that region are recipes that come from peasant food roots.
          For them to be getting all hoity toity about it....like Jimmy Falcone sez....Fuggetaboutit.

          Comment


            #13
            4 out of 6 so guess I ain't gettin’ through the Italian gate in heaven, I think the Irish gate will be more my style 😁 🍺🍺🍺

            Comment


            • Troutman
              Troutman commented
              Editing a comment
              Irish? That would be more like 🥃🥃🥃🥃

            #14
            I mean.. yeah. All of those are abominations. Ok a couple are just mistakes (oil in the pasta water, not salting the water). But all of the above are just flat out mistakes if your goal is to make actual Italian food.

            Two other things to keep in mind 1) Italian cuisine is regional - the food near Turin is not the same as in Bologna which is different than food in the Veneto and all of that is very different that food in the south and 2) Italian American food isn't like regular Italian food.

            There is, though, NO EXCUSE for ketchup on pasta.

            Comment


            • rickgregory
              rickgregory commented
              Editing a comment
              texastweeter - but those aren't traditional Italian dishes. They're kind of Italian-esque. But good point, I withdraw my label of abomination for those.

            • texastweeter
              texastweeter commented
              Editing a comment
              rickgregory both would be American dishes. Mac and cheese is decidedly American, crawfish monica is a recent dish that hails from NOLA. Couple of the odd combinations of fish and cheese that work. Most of what we call Italian in America is actually American. Spaghetti and meatballs for one, and debatable same with chicken parm.

            • rickgregory
              rickgregory commented
              Editing a comment
              texastweeter - Precisely. Hence my comment above. The Italians in the poll are expressing those opinions in the context of their cuisine, not ours.

            #15
            I will break the spaghetti now and then.

            Comment


            • Uncle Bob
              Uncle Bob commented
              Editing a comment
              I don't even know you....................................go to your room!

            • CaptainMike
              CaptainMike commented
              Editing a comment
              Hey, it doesn't fit in the pentola!

            • SheilaAnn
              SheilaAnn commented
              Editing a comment
              CaptainMike my dad used to take a knife and fork and cut the sauced spaghetti into smaller pieces. 🤣

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