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2013-01-14 11:05:12
Dany Mitzman By Dany Mitzman Bologna
Emilia Romagna is a region in northern Italy famous for its fine charcuterie,
which can make avoiding meat dishes there particularly challenging.
One of the nicknames of my adoptive town is "Bologna la grassa", or "Bologna
the fat".
The local diet is about as Mediterranean as chicken tikka masala. There is
mortadella, a sausage known elsewhere as Bologna, the forefather of American
baloney.
Then there is Bologna's world famous ragu, the pasta sauce known in the UK as
bolognese. This is a city where meat rules supreme.
But it is not fair to single out Bologna when really the entire inland part of
Emilia Romagna, a region of northern Italy, could be dubbed Emilia la grassa.
An hour away is Parma, the home of parma ham. Even Modena, just 20 minutes from
me, has its own porky specialities, traditionally eaten at this time of year.
This is probably the only region where you will find a central piazza boasting
a bronze statue of a porker.
Pig statue in Castelnuovo Rangone Castelnuovo Rangone is a proud pork capital
Forget patron saints and heroes of the unification, round here the pig is king.
For many visitors the meaty specialities are an attraction but, from a culinary
perspective, I could not have chosen a worse place to live.
The thing is, I do not eat meat. And for a local population where high
cholesterol is in the DNA and pork scratchings are considered fine charcuterie,
this is beyond comprehension.
They look at me with astonishment and pity.
"You do not eat meat?" they ask, with the same tone I remember using when a
girl at school told me she was allergic to chocolate.
"You choose not to eat meat?" they say, their perplexity now infused with just
a hint of disgust. "Well, I do eat fish," I tell them apologetically, as if to
save myself from being totally shunned. "I'm not a vegetarian."
Vegetarianism is considered an exotic illness here, while the word "vegan" is
almost completely unknown.
In case you think I am exaggerating, my neighbour recently asked if I would
take part in one of her market research surveys.
"Dany, do you fancy doing a prosciutto cotto tasting?" Prosciutto cotto is
cooked ham.
"Gabriella," I smiled, "I do not eat meat, remember?" She looked at me
genuinely nonplussed: "But it is not meat, it is prosciutto cotto." My smile
burst into a laugh.
Going to a traditional restaurant (or trattoria) is an amusing experience too.
I always know what I am going to have - tagliatelle with mushrooms. It is not
because I have a passion for tagliatelle with mushrooms, it's just that I know
it will be the only meatless dish on the menu. OK, there are ricotta-filled
tortelloni, but I'm not that partial to them.
Unlike ordinary locals, waiting staff barely flinch when I utter my near
sacrilegious phrase: "I do not eat meat." Determined to appear unfazed, they
chirp "no problem".
Then follows a script I've heard so many times I laugh before the punchline.
Firstly they say "no meat but a bit of affettati misti, si?" I explain that
cold cuts are meat, even if the slices do not look like the original animal.
Then they tell me plenty of their pasta dishes are vegetarian.
The Bolognese food fight
Bolognese
In 1982 Bologna's Chamber of Commerce asked the Italian Academy of Cooking to
come up with an official recipe
Ingredients include pancetta, white wine and milk
It should be served with tagliatelle not spaghetti
In 2010 a group of Italian chefs organised a worldwide day of action to promote
the "authentic recipe"
"We have home-made tortellini," they beam. I explain that, even though you
cannot see it, the meat stuffing inside those tiny pasta packages nevertheless
exists.
But my favourite is when they tell me they have a delicious vegetable sauce.
"It is made with peas and onions. Well, there is a spot of bacon too, but just
a tiny bit - you cannot even taste it." That is when I stifle a chuckle and
order my tagliatelle with mushrooms.
Main courses are much more straightforward. There's absolutely nothing.
Even if they list 10 options, they'll all once upon a time have had legs.
Nowadays, I don't even ask, I just get a side order of grilled vegetables
because, chances are, the potatoes are roasted in lard.
And now Emilians are glorying in the meaty treats they got in their Christmas
hampers.
There is cotechino - a huge sausage they boil and serve with lentils on New
Year's Eve. Then there is zampone - similar but stuffed into a pig's trotter.
It is a speciality of Castelnuovo Rangone - a little town near Modena which
once had more pigs than people.
Every winter they hold SuperZampone, a festival where local sausage makers try
to break their own world record for the largest zampone ever.
Yes, you may have guessed - it is the town with the pig monument in the piazza.
Right in front of the church, much to the priest's indignation.
He must be a vegetarian.