You
might think I'm flirting with the poetic when I say that just
two steps away from my house, there is a man, born to sell
vegetables, but I'm not, it's true, there is. Still just in
his mid-thirties, Simone has already been selling vegetables
right here in the public market in Lecce, Italy, for over twenty
years. He inherited the business from his father Antonio, who
was here for fifteen years, who in turn inherited it from Simone's
grandfather, Aurelio, who was here for forty-one. Glance up
above the rows of naked light bulbs and woven garlands of garlic,
and they're still here staring back at you, in black and white
and faded Kodachrome, right next to the portrait of Padre Pio,
the patron saint of just about everyone and everything here
in Puglia.
'Citrus
fruits, incredible right now', he says, without even the
slightest trace of the carnival barker common in fruttavendoli
here in Italy. 'You should try the clementini'. There's a
pause and I look over to catch his eyes lovingly caressing
the fiery orange citrus skins, the fruit lined up in woven
baskets on the floor. He turns away for a second, there's
another pause and I notice that he actually has to swallow,
his mouth juices going into overdrive, just thinking about
the little succulent fruits. We both laugh. Yep. Born to
work here.
Last
summer when an ex-girlfriend and I put up five hundred jars
of tomato sauce- just the two of us, in eight marathon days
and nights- the cases and cases of tomatoes all came from
Simone. So did the recipe, which I still have, the warbled
page compromised with splashed pulp and rings of red wine.
It was Simone who sold me the fifty kilos of onions that
I pickled and put up in jars, my pumpkin the last two Halloweens
and even these giant, 'elephant ear' mushrooms for my dinner
tonight, perfect to be grilled and slathered with parsley
and olive oil. 'You know, to be grilled just like a steak',
he says, holding them up to the sides of his own head. I
catch him through the viewfinder of my ancient camera and
take a picture. Focusing on his face, I watch as contemplates
the giant mushrooms, turning them in his hands, apparently
thinking about their steak-like qualities... about grilling
them...the meaty smell, the ribbons of smoke curling upwards...the
sputter and sizzle...and then he laughs, and discreetly hords
away two for his family in a sheet of newspaper. And like
these giant mushrooms, ever since our little school opened,
just about every vegetable we serve has come from his stand
here in the public market, and Simone hasn't let me down
yet.
And
while it's true that this time of year, his apples are the
world-famous Val di Non
from up north, his bananas are Costa Rican and his blood
oranges are from Sicily, most of what he sells never travels
more than an hour. The names on the crates are the same ones
on a local map; places that people in other parts of the
world would call 'suburbs', if only folks hadn't been living
there for thousands of years.
'Someone
in my family has been buying these clementini from this family',
he says, tapping a tiny wooden crate, 'since before anyone
alive remembers'. Looking over the charmingly-warped wooden
crates, most have the cities and family names clearly stamped
by hand, each with a personal little flurish in the penmanship
on the last vowel of their surname. 'I've never once had
to discuss quality with anyone from that family, they always
give me the good stuff. I call them up once a year and ask
the price. I tell them I'll take all they want to sell, which
really opens me up, but still, the quality never falters.
I'll get a phone call and the old gentleman will say, this
is the last week. Season's over.
'And
then what', I ask. 'Season's over, season's over. They simple
won't sell unless the fruit is perfect, at its peak. But
you know, no one even really notices the end of the season,
anyway, because spring onions are around the corner, then
artichokes and, you know, then those fava beans, you remember
last year'? He pokes me in my ribs and then deftly blocks
my attack (Crane Style), and we laugh, knowing that we'll
be having virtually the same discussion again, countless
times, about each of his fruits and vegetables as they come
into season. Sometimes I'll be with our cooking students,
our arms filled with the incredible pugliese products you
can't find anywhere else on earth.
There
are actually three family photographs at his fruit and vegetable
stall in the covered market here in Lecce, the last one-
developed with more modern chemicals- scotch-taped right
to the neck of his digital scale. Though only two, I'm somehow
certain that Simone's kid only gets serious about zucchine
if they still have blossoms attached. And too, has already
mastered that knowing thump-and-listen-melon-test, not unlike
the one contractors use to search for studs in the wall.
An honest, smalltime farming family sells to Simone, Simone
sells it to me, keeping me no further than just two steps
away.
This
is part one, of Two Steps Away, an ongoing, ten- part series
featuring the vendors and purveyors we know and trust and
frequent at our cooking school here in Lecce, in the sunny
south of Italy.
You can find out more about Simone, his town of Lecce or where you can
shop for, cook with and dine on his produce, by visiting www.awaitingtable.com
What
to look for in March: My fish monger is one saucy lady!
Just how does the modern woman stay sexy among the squirting clams, angry
scampi and mornings spent yanking out fish guts: a survivor's guide for
more radiant skin and firmer fillets.
Silvestro
Silvestori owns and operates The Awaiting Table cooking school
in Lecce, Italy. Located in an 18th century palace in the
historic center, the school offers small, intimate, hands-on
classes based on individual attention and a deeper, more
genuine understanding of the south of Italy. You can write
him at
or visit the site, www.awaitingtable.com
testo e fotografie da Silvestro Silvestori, Lecce, Italia, 2005
Do
you have friends interested in good food and wine? Are they
interested in where their food comes from and the stories
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week for two!
The Awaiting Table. A different part of Italy. A different approach.
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