The
Facility: Our Cookery School in Lecce, Italy.
The
Awaiting Table Cookery School in Lecce, Italy, holds all its
traditional classes in its 18th century aristocratic palace,
lovingly converted into a cooking school and personal residence
of the owner. One of our two kitchens was originally the palace’s
equine stables: only now we use the troughs for storing all our
large French enamelware that you’ll use during the week.

Our
kitchens are decidedly home kitchens, even by local Italian-standards.
We decided very early on that we were to specialise in the home-cooking
of the region, as opposed to that of restaurants. What this means
to you is that you will be both instantly at home in our kitchens,
as well as find it easier to recreate what you’ve learned
back in your own kitchen.
The
larger of our two kitchens opens directly onto our city garden,
a surprising calm in the middle of a walled city, which is
easily the prettiest city in the entire south of Italy, just
as ask any Italian. We form our fresh local pasta each morning
directly onto wooden boards (spruce, the most common food-grade
wood used in Europe) and slide them out of the way in our pasta
rack that we built ourselves (and that was painted by the owner’s
two sisters, the two young ladies proud of their orecchiette
on the home page).
We
made our grill from the famous local stone called pietra leccese-
Lecce stone- that we found second-hand nearby when they were restoring
a 15th century cathedral. It’s a conversation starter as
well as the perfect place to grill lamb, seabass and the fresh
sausages we always make Wednesday nights (we always have local
dinner guests but Wednesday nights we’ve even had to stop
answering the doorbell!) It’s a simple grill, yet it produces
excellent results. We burn only high-quality lump charcoal (ours
made from olive wood) just like you probably do at home.
For the fire starter, we use the spent lemon
peels left over from making limoncello (which you’ll make
whenever local, organic lemons are in season. Hint: think colder
months). Organic, free and remarkably useful, we like to think
of using the by-product as a great example of the sort of folksy
pragmatism that drives all our lessons.
The
school is large and we often eat in the wine cellar, just no
one calls it that. We all call the room il nido, or the nest,
because it’s where we used to cram stuff we didn’t
know where else to put.
Now
days we keep the room well-stocked (and better organized) with
100% local wines (except for prosecco, but that’s a
given) based on the local negroamaro, primitivo, malvasia nera
and la verdeca, to name only the big grapes. If you’ve never
tried the wines of the Salento you’re in for a pleasant surprise.
The
wines tend to be elegant and fruity powerhouses (think a Tina
Turner encore) and the palace’s metre-thick stone walls
store the bottles perfectly. We keep over a thousand bottles
on-hand at all times, just to be on the safe side.
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"Specialising
in small, intimate hands-on classes based
on personalised instruction and individual
attention."
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And Friday nights we nearly always
open something spectacular, such as cult double magnums of
impossible-to-find local wines, that can’t be had at any price (our lawyers have instructed
us to deny any connection between any giving of said dinner
invitations for our fresh homemade sausages in exchange for
availability of such bottles: It’s sheer coincidence.
).
Our soggiorno, or the room you might be tempted to call a ‘living room’,
boasts our collection of hundreds of the local pugliesi plates, famous for
the tell-tale hen. We also have a full bar, featuring not only the liqueurs
from around the world but student-produced liquors such as limoncello, arancino
and rosolio di basilico.
Our library has one of the largest cookbook collections in all
of Italy, in either language, and students are free to browse
among the casement armours at will. We also have a computer for
you to use, with a several printers, an ADSL line and a soft
leather reading chair so comfortable you’ll leave
butt prints. If you’d like to contribute a book to the library, be sure
to sign it , date it and why the book has been special to you.
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