Is garlic essential in Italian food?
By ALESSANDRA RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
ROME — Look around the kitchen of Filippo La Mantia’s hip restaurant in downtown Rome and you’ll see oranges, fresh basil, olive oil. But no garlic.
“I will never use garlic!” declares the Sicilian chef as he demonstrates how to make a flavorful pasta dish — octopus linguine with orange juice and almond pesto — without the ingredient he hates.
A quintessential element of traditional Italian and Mediterranean cooking, garlic is at the center of a gastronomic dispute in this nation that prides itself on its food. To critics it is just a stinky product that overwhelms more delicate flavors. Admirers say garlic enhances taste, gives a dish an extra punch — and is also good for the health.
“Garlic is the king of the kitchen,” says Antonello Colonna, another prominent Italian chef. “To eliminate it is like eliminating violins from an orchestra.”
Critics have started a ferocious campaign for garlic-free dining, and the debate has moved out of culinary circles. Corriere della Sera, Italy’s top daily, devoted a page to the matter this week, listing celebrities in each camp under the headline: “The Crusade of Garlic Enemies.”
They have a high-profile campaigner in former Premier Silvio Berlusconi, whose aversion to garlic and obsession with minty breath are legendary. During his five-year stint, Palazzo Chigi, the premier’s palace, was rigorously garlic-free.
“He considers garlic very dangerous for the environment, his personal environment,” said Carlo Rossella, who heads the news department for one of Berlusconi’s Mediaset channels. “Berlusconi doesn’t like bad smells. Garlic is considered by Berlusconi a bad smell.”
Rossella, who says he is allergic to garlic, has been compiling a list of garlic-free restaurants and hopes to persuade “distinguished” restaurants to come up with separate garlic-free menus.
“Garlic for me is a sort of persecution,” he laments. “They put garlic in almost any dish: With meat, with fish, everywhere. It’s not politically correct to impose garlic on everybody.”
Food critic Davide Paolini counters that certain dishes — such as the aglio, olio e peperoncino (or garlic, oil and hot peppers) pasta — simply cannot be cooked without it. He has launched a survey on his Web site to ask readers where they stand on the debate.
“It’s nonsense dictated by people who want to keep their breath under control,” he told the Associated Press. “But it’s a real, genuine smell. It’s not stink.”
The bulbous herb has long been a mainstay of Italian cuisine, from steaks in Tuscany to dishes of the poor south, where cooking is traditionally less rich in butter and cream and garlic’s pungent flavor often accompanies simple vegetable dishes.
Garlic’s therapeutic qualities also have been proclaimed, including for heart disease, cancer and infections, but there’s no agreement in the scientific community. A study published in February in the Archives of Internal Medicine found garlic had no effect on cholesterol in people whose levels already were elevated.
Fearing the no-garlic campaign might hurt producers, farmers associations have weighed in. One leading farming group, Coldiretti, put out a statement lamenting the “controversy over the use of garlic” and maintaining it contributes to Italians’ longevity.
Italians consumed 108 million pounds of garlic in 2006, up 4.3 percent from the previous year, according to Coldiretti. Italian production, however, was down from 65 million pounds in 2005 to 62 million pounds in 2006, while imports were up from countries like Turkey, China and Egypt.
La Mantia’s customers love his garlic-free dishes — his trattoria has been a success story in Rome since it opened four years ago.
“You can cook perfectly well without it,” he said. “I use a lot of different ingredients — mint, basil, capers, orange, lemons — to make up for it.”
Moments after scooping his pasta from the pan and sprinkling it with thin almond slices, he says: “And that is how we do it.”
Garlic-Free Pasta
Filippo La Mantia
Trattoria restaurant, Rome
8 ounces linguine
10 oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes
1 cup toasted almonds
Handful of fresh mint
2 to 3 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
Fresh or dry oregano, to taste
Juice of 1 lemon
Caciocavallo cheese (a savory Italian cheese), for grating (Parmesan could be substituted)
Salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
Bring a large saucepan of lightly salted water to a boil. Add the linguine and cook until al dente.
Meanwhile, roughly chop the tomatoes, almonds and mint. Transfer to a large bowl. Add the olive oil, oregano and lemon juice. Mix well. Set aside.
Drain the pasta and add to the bowl. Toss to combine. Top with cheese and season with salt and pepper.
Serves 4.
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Toni wrote on Jun 26, 2007 11:58 AM:
Patricia Osborn wrote on Jun 26, 2007 11:59 AM:
Chef Nick wrote on Jun 26, 2007 12:03 PM:
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