That's because your parents hated you.I grew up on buttered elbow macaroni. Best strained through a plastic collander.
The old dialect from the Marche region typically cuts off the vowel endings.Thats how it was spoken in places like Fano or Ancona.+It is gavone not covone. Italian Americans bastardized the language pretty badly. We grew up dropping the end vowel from lasagna, mozzarella, ricotta, etc. One reason we maule Italian was length of time away from the mother country. The other was our grandparents came before the language was unified in Italy. Italy became a country in the 1861 and our grandparents left around the turn of the century. The provinces had a long history of independence and they were slow to adopt the Roman dialect.
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There was never much love between regions (conferences/teams) and in many respects their union under the house of Savoy (conferences/NCAA) was forced on them.
Marcella Hazan was born in Emilia Romanga, and was a college graduate, Ferrara I believe. She didn't know how to cook until after herI can't believe you people started a food thread--and an Italian one at that--while I was away.
My maternal grandparents, like most Italian-Americans here I presume, were from the Naples area. My grandmother was the only one of them alive by the time I was born. She died when I was eight, but I could still pick the smell of her Sunday sauce out of a lineup. We always called it sauce; I've heard others call it gravy--but only the Sunday sauce, i.e., not the other types/styles of sauce.
I made fresh sauce solely from tomatoes (and herbs) I grew for the first time just a few weeks ago. Very labor-intensive, and very rewarding. Loved it so much that I made three times as much a week later with the end of my tomato harvest.
As for Italian cookbooks, we use a variety of them for various recipes, but far and away my favorite, and the one I consider to be most essential, is Marcella Hazan's "Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking."
Any Bridgeport-area folks grow up eating "scamozza" pie?
Yes, I am aware of her background and I agree. I don't use her cookbook or any other for red sauce. I just make it from the knowledge of having made it myself for around 35 years now. I make sauce similar to the way I make cocktails: I follow a few basic principles learned from decades of experience doing it, and I use what I have on hand.Marcella Hazan was born in Emilia Romanga, and was a college graduate, Ferrara I believe. She didn't know how to cook until after her
marriage and move to the US. She disdained Italian American Cocina. Don't get me wrong, she was a great cookbook writer, but she had no interest in our subject. If we are talking about classic Italian cooking; then other names come into play. I really like Anna Del Conte, since
she is UK based, she is not as well known in this country. Her "Gastronomy of Italy" travels the regions of Italy introducing you to favorites of all the regions. Her "Classic Food of Northern Italy" is just that. My point being that as much as I like and respect her and Hazan, I wouldn't use them as references for Italian American cooking. Traditional Italian cookbooks ignore this cocina.


My grandfather used "sauce" and "gravy" interchangeably, but, as others have pointed out, only for the Sunday slow-cooked red sauce with tons of meat in it -- meatballs, sausage, pork, even lamb made its way into the pot. It's basically what you saw being cooked in prison in Goodfellas.
I have a pretty amazing ragu/gravy recipe (whatever it would be called here) that was passed down from my Dad's Grandmother that I make about once a year that takes two days. Day one is lots of tomatoes and spices simmered with pork and beef meatballs, italian sausage, and beef and pork ribs. Day two is scraping a bunch of the fat off and resimmering the sauce and getting it hot enough to put on pasta - which was almost always ziti. I've given the recipe to @KembaSlice and @Deepster. Kemba told me he GF expected such great things all the time; Deepster never got around to making it or letting me know he made it.
If anyone wants the recipe, let me know.
Now I am infatuated with finding the best and most original recipe for pasta Genovese. I am going to make that. Thanks @B1GEast for that.