A Milan (Italy) Rallye Created by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget
I wanted Florence to know about Milan, Italy’s fashion, food, and newspaper industry even as a child, because I loved Milan’s Corriere della Sera newspaper.
I
consider Corriere della Sera to be one of the best newspapers in the world for
news on the arts and culture coverage. I
absolutely struggled to learn to read Italian to read this newspaper and can do
it now. That is a lifetime goal of mine
that I checked off after reading Gelb’s How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci.
So,
when we were in Norfolk, I subscribed to Vogue and Glamour magazines and went
through the ads with Florence. She liked
Versace and Armani like I did, too.
I
eventually subscribed to Junior Vogue along with Nickelodeon and People in
English for Florence. She could read at
a young age thanks to those magazines.
I
wanted to do a Milan lunch and made steamed carrots and puréed them with olive
oil, dry garlic, chopped flat-leaf parsley, and red wine vinegar. This was my Italian version of a Libyan
hummus-like spread.
I
made toast and cut them into fourths and then put this carrot purée on toast
squares. These looked lovely stacked up
on a plate like a pyramid.
I
served this appetizer with lemonade when Florence was small, but adults might
like what some wine enthusiasts describe as hay-flavored Sauvignon Blanc with
them. Chilled Pinot Grigios and Rosés
would go well with this appetizer, too.
I might remove the vinegar, though, which clashes with wine.
I
talked with Laurent and Florence as I stirred the basic risotto Milanese I made
with butter, chicken stock, and mushrooms.
I made these sides to go with T-bone steaks for everyone.
I
asked Laurent what he thought about risotto.
“It’s soupy rice. I want sheet,
pan-baked potatoes with onions and Italian seasonings,” he said.
“A
lot of those cookbooks are just PR,” he commented.
“I
know, but I like trying to make foods from other cultures and parts of the country. It is good for Florence to know about other
cultures. Technology just seems to speed
up the process of cultural misunderstandings with language sometimes,” I told
Laurent.
I
did not use the Internet, but knew just getting a catering order done to
satisfy people from different religious, cultural, and dietary, political
preference backgrounds could be a grueling process let alone collaborating on
engineering projects.
During
lunch, Florence recited a poem about fall that she learned at school. It was a cute, Japanese haiku poem about
leaves turning color and falling to the ground in fall.
Laurent
and I applauded and yelled “brava” and “encore” as she recited the poem a few
times more times to general acclaim. We
asked her questions like “Why do tree leaves change color in fall?” and “Which
leaf color do you prefer and why?” after each poem recitation.
We
turned on some samba (street music) and bassa nova (fancy apartment music) from
Brazil after lunch. We all got up and
danced for an hour. (Italians definitely
dance at home dance parties, so we did our Franco-Italian rallye at home.)
After
dancing, I read Florence the book The Furry News: How to Make a Newspaper that
described articles, ads, and circulation.
Florence
took an old Virginia-Pilot and pasted some drawings in it.
“Do
you have anything to advertise?” she asked me.
“Can
I advertise mom’s taxi service for 50 cents?” I asked.
She
agreed to these terms and made me give her fifty cents. She, then, called grandma and asked her to
subscribe to her newspaper called – The Norfolk News for a quarter.
I
laughed at Florence’s business flair and asked her, “How many months can
grandma get for 25 cents?”
“A
long time,” she said.
We
took dad to the ship for work. On the
way home, Florence said, “I like risotto and prosciutto.”
We
stopped at the commissary and bought some chicken stock and other goodies,
including a small bag of Arborio rice.
The rice was expensive, but they had it.
I
improvised a risotto with chicken stock, grated Parmesan, pieces of chopped up
prosciutto, sautéed mushrooms, and butter.
We
listened to Laurent’s Ennio Morricone music and went out for ice cream cones
dunked in chocolate sauce after lunch for dessert.
The
ice cream place was across the street from our little apartment.
By
Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
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