
Recycling the South
One Man's Annual Crusade to Reimagine the South of Italy's,
From Seasonal Beach Towns, to the Purveyor of the World's
Greatest Food, Wine and Extra-Virgin Oil.
Puglia. La Vera Burrata Andriese

Long before I
crossed over into Puglia I had started making
phone calls to well-connected food friends, asking
about la Burrata di Andria. One name kept coming
up, the producer that tops everyone's list. A few more phone calls later I found myself
in the back of a caseificio, a cheese-maker's
work shop, where four generations work together
in perfect silence.
To say that fresh cheese is made of just milk,
salt and rennet is a bit misleading, the way
you might say that fine porcelain is just made
from fired earth. 
Milk is heated, rennet from a veal's stomach
is used to coagulate it and salt is there to
give it flavour. This is basic cheese-making
and up to this point, it's the same with every
cheese maker I've ever visited, which by now
must be in the hundreds. 
But
if you stretch the curd, you can begin to make
pasta filata cheeses, or stretch curd cheeses,
such as these cute, happy little provole. La provola, o la scamorza as it's most often
called where I live in the Salento, is widely-consumed,
both as it is- at the table- or altered by heat
in the kitchen. Grill one of the smoked versions
and you'll think you died and gone to heaven.
Sprinkle it with a little sea salt and a dash
of bitter, extra virgin ogliarola and you'll
have one of best three-ingredient dishes in all
of Italy, a nation famous for our three-ingredient
dishes. 
The
most famous fresh cheese in Italy is fior di
latte, although you the reader most likely
know it as mozzarella. Here though, mozzarella
used to be made from the milk of the Asian
water buffalo, as the animal gives milk with
a higher fat content. Fior di latte was the
version made from cow's milk. The line has
been blurred nowadays, and court cases have
been won and lost on both sides. 
I
asked Domenico to walk me through the making
of the most sought after fresh cheese in the
entire South of Italy, La Burrata di Andria. It was one of those moments, when you realise
you're seeing something that wouldn't be easy
to repeat: The son showing me how to make one,
the father narrating the cheese's history. For a brief moment, I was living inside a documentary. 
Francesco
explained that burrata doesn't go that far
back, roughly 100 years, and that it was started
in the country farm houses nearby. 'It was
a poor person's cheese' he said, 'with strong
cultural prejudices, probably because the cheese
was formed with human breath'. 
Fresh
cheese is stretched and formed into a ball. 
Francesco
shows me a ball of handmade butter, which may
have been the original filling for the first
burrate, as the name would seem to imply (burro
means 'butter'). Like all cheese makers I've
ever met, his hands were waterlogged to the
point of looking painful, an image you can't
really ever shake off. 
First
a bubble is formed using a jet of air. Then,
using a special nozzle, la burrata is filled
with water, just like a balloon. At this point, you could easily mistake it for
a cuttlefish. Maybe even a squid. 
Cream
and 'rags' of cheese are mixed together until
they form an almost egg-drop consistency. This
is the filling. 
The
filling goes into the little satchel and tied
closed. 'How long will this keep like this',
I asked Domenico. He placed the little drunken-snowman-of-a
-shape on the stainless steel counter as if
it were his first. 'I guess it could last 3
or 4 days but I don't think they ever do'.
And indeed at the school, that is way we treat
them as well, as perishable as fresh bread. 
Before
I realised it they had filled several bags
of fresh cheese and had loaded my arms with
them, my mention of bike travel never seeming
to register. As I scratched my last notes in my book I watched
as the father and sons continued to talk about
the cheese, clearly in a way they never had before. I wish I could say that I ate their burrate
on the side of some mountain over looking some
silvery lake speckled with bobbing birds but
it didn't happen that way. It was an impromptu
picnic. In a tiny park. Wine from the bottle.
Fresh bread torn rather than cut. An old worn
dishtowel on my lap. A bent fork that had recently
spent time repairing a bike. I wish I could say that I appreciated the cheese
for its artisanal merits, for its hand-made-ness,
as it were. But it didn't happen that way. If you would have passed in your car you would
have seen a man in dirty bicycle clothing, sitting
on a park bench, eating from saddle bags, a bottle
of wine at his heel, his forehead sandy with
evaporated salt. That would be outside though, looking in. For
me, it was the first time in a month that I had
filled my mouth with the flavours of home, my
eyes spilling as I ate. I'm nearing the Salento. It won't be long now. Journal
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