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i{esla. u ra nts ter represented than in the region's osterie, casual restaurants that serve traditional, home-style cooking. In a parn' of mountainous portions three might receive four entire pans but on a recent visit. the of dessert Roddino, Cherasco, and Seatt!e: [ating Piedmontese Piedmont, the osteria was where men would gather after returning from the vineyards, hazelnut orchards, or cornfields. And while the customers now include entire families and tourists, the hearty food is still fit for farmers and rich no matter the temperature amounts seemed more reasonable, so that a table might actually finish them. (For the record, Boeri's son, Daniele, maintains that Da Gemma's portions remain as abbondanle as ever.) And while this is the heart of Piedmont wine country, and you can ask for a good Barolo or Nebbiolo grown, vinified, and bottled on one of the adjacent, and visible, hillsides, you're perfectly well off just ordering the house there's no house wine, a Dolcetto which comes gratis. white The other part of the osteria's old- Osteria da Gemma via Marconi,6, Roddino (aboutten minutes east of the wine village of March and April and the first two weeks outside. The diet is heavy in meat, dairy, and eggs, with, depending on where in the region you are, wheat, polenta, and rice sharing more or less ofAugust) equal importance. Monforte dAlba) tel o't73.7 94252, www.leradicieleal i.it closed Monday (plus fourweeks in z6 euros for four courses, including Da Gemma ("At Gemma's Place") is via Caribaldi, t3, Cherasco located in the tiny village of Roddino, which is nestled in the undulating hills of the Langhe's spectacular wine country and home, my Piedmontese friend Andrea likes to joke, to "a cat and a tel ot72.488458 couple closed Monday (plus ten days in winter and 6z-year-old matron of the place, has dessert, house wine, coffee, and grappa La Torre of dogs." Gemma Boeri, the a 30 euros before wine cherubic face and looks something like a sturdier Alice'Waters. She opened her restaurant in ry86 as a circolo sociale, Spinasse a social club where members could r53r r4th Avenue, Seattle gather and also have a bite to eat. Only in zoo5 was the public invited, and the earlier history still underpins the life of two weeks in August) tel zo6.z5l.7673, www.spinasse.com open dinner only, closed Tuesday $6o before wine Piedmont in northwest Italy runs from the'Western Alps to Ligurian Apennines and borders France, Switzerland, and the Italian region of Valle d'Aosta. It's associated most often with cars (Fiats), white truffles, and Barolo. But despite their region's relative wealth and luxurious associations, the Piedmontese are most proud of their contadino, or peasant-farmer, roots. This is the land of Slow Food and of a fair celebrating fattened oxen [AoE 83], with towns that specialize variously in the cultivation of leeks, chestnuts, snails, buckwheat, and peaches. Nowhere is the contadino pastbet- 40 rHE ARr oF EATtNc the place. lfhat the locals love about Da Gemma is the nostalgia they feel there, Andrea told me; it's how osterie were 20 years ago. Part of that is the generosity and casualness. Like many osterie, Da Gemma is thoroughly comfortable and unpretentious: warmly and a little too brightly lit, simply and functionally furnished with ample space between tables. Each is laid with grissini, a knife, and a cutting board with a whole salame cotto and a whole dry-cured salame. You slice and eat as much as you want and You share everything, just as with the rest of the meal, served family-style. For years, the dishes came in positively - school character is its constancy. Aside from one seasonally varying main course, the menu never changes. It covers many Piedmontese standards, if Gemma Boeri were your nonnl, somehow those standards taste wonderfully the same every time. (I ate there regularly when I lived in Piedmont for several years, and I try to return at least every other year.) After you've declared yourself finand as ished with the salumi, a server brings three more antipasti. Gemma's insalata di carne cruda and uitello tonnato are respectable versions of those dishes. The carne cruda is raw veal ground from the double-muscled thigh of the Piedmontese breed of cattle, dressed with olive oil, salt, pepper, lemon juice, and a touch of garlic. The texture of this raw veal, in restaurants as in homes, ranges from coarsely hashed, indicating hand-chopping, or even sliced in thin sheets like a carpaccio, to Gemma's finely ground near-pur6e. Vitello tonnato, "tuna'd veal," consists of thinly sliced boiled veal in a sauce of tuna blended with mayonnaise and flavored with capers and anchovies. (Landlocked Piedmont, while taking advantage of its lake and river fish, wtne notes and resources rcsiailranis books letters meat, the rabbit still bony, sitting in shallow pools of the cooking liquid, the surface shiny with grease. As tends to be the case at Da Gemma and in much of Italy in general, the meat was somewhat dry, and yet somehow iust right in the context of the meal, especially with a dish of borled costine, beet greens, which came alongside. Servingtajarin at Da Cemma. has for centuries embraced the flavors of preserved ocean fish.) It's the kind of classic osteria dish whose looks are unimpressive. The veal is a pallid gray color, and the tuna sauce is a gloppylooking pinky beige tone. But the meat is tender and mild, and the sauce makes a pleasingly creamy, piquant contrast. Similarly humble ts the insalata russa.The"Russian salad," a mixture of boiled, diced vegetables, usually potatoes, carrots, and peas, dressed with mayonnaise, was conceived in Belle Epoqo. Paris when it was frequented by Russian aristocrats, who would gild the mix with truffles and caviar. The salad came from France to Piedmont and from there spread through the rest of northern Italg where it is eaten by everyone (sans caviar). In Boeri's version, which includes chopped hardboiled egg, the vegetables are cooked perfectly al dente, and the dressing is ..2 ; tangy with a little vinegar. Hers is the best I've ever had. The sole primi arc taiarin and rauioli dal plin. The first, perhaps the region's most typical pasta, is a testament to its agricultural abundance' A fresh pasta handcut into long, thin just a few millimeters wide rib-bonlike strands (the meaning -of the dialect name), taiarin typically calls for five whole eggs and ten yolks per kilo of flour, but you'll hear people talk about a nonna they've heard of who made hers with the fabled 4o yolks per kilo. Boeri's taiarin is just fine, the pasta delicate and elastic, lighdy and sparingly dressed with a veal and mushroom ragi. The ravioli dal plin, also known as agnolotti dal PIin, is similarly straightforward and satisfying. The small pillow shape, created with a pinching motion (plin, tn dialect), encases a mixture of veal, spinach, cabbage, and beet greens, made sweetly mysterious by a little nutmeg. It's sauced with the same ragi. As often in Italy, the secondi are the least attractive of the courses. Gemma always offers a main course of roasted rabbit, and when I was there last, we also ate brasato al Barolo [AoE 8Zl. (On another evening, the other secondo might be wild boar or chicken or bollito, boiled beef.) Both were unapologetically unadorned, just chunks of For dessert, the Piedmontese seem to prefer the kind of soft, sticky sweets that the very young and very old, and the British, also like. Da Gemma offers you all four at once. There's bonet (pronounced boo-NEHT), one of the most beloved Piedmontese desserts, a splodgy pudding made with milk, eggs, and sugar and subtly flavored with, depending on the cook, amaretti cookies, cocoa, rum, and coffee (Da Gemma's has coffee but not amaretti). Cooked in a water bath in the custom- ary mold, it resembles the flattened beret for which it is named in dialect. The strudel, popular in northwest Italy (and further evidence of the porous- of borders), is a little limp and mostly forgettable, but anYwaY the real point of this course is the mer- ness ingata and dolce all'ananas. Both are resplendent with whipped Panna, or cream. The former layers the cream with crunchy, very sweet meringue, torrone, nougat, and hazelnuts, as well as candied chestnuts in winter, while the latter is just the simple and tasty combination of canned pineapPles and lots of that cream. The coffee and grappa help it all go down. If Da Gemma is the exemplar of the erstwhile osteria, La Torre is the osteda's most modern incarnation: refined and moderately ambitious, yet retain- ing all the casual eatery's comfort and some of its rusticity. Run by two forty-something brothers, Marco and Gabriele Falco, the restaurant lies a few paces from a r 5th-century Gothic 20i0 NUI\,4BER 86 41 I time of year, La Torre also serves giardiniera casalinga, homestyle pickled vegetables, lingua in giar dino, which treats boiled pig's tongue in much the same way,or peperone con bagna caoda,bell peppers in the well-known pungent anchovy-garlic-olive oil sauce. Marco's mastery of tradition is on display in his pastas. His gnoccbi al Castelmagzo (Piedmont's famous sometimes-blue cheese, made usually from cow's milk, but occasionally also with ewe's or goat's), long, spindly, and cloudlike, attain the classic ideal, as do his served agnolotti dal plin, sometimes with a sugo d'arrosfo from a roast) (juices which literally means - from the pan plus just the leavings The dining room at Da Gemma. some bits of meat. In both cases, pasta tower in the center of Cherasco, the seat of a small comune comprising fresh daily, and they are superb about 8,ooo inhabitants. As with Da Gemma, I try to return to La Torre as often as I can, and not just for the feel- nuttiness from whole-wheat flour. For antipasti, there might be handchopped carne cruda. Or uitello tonnato, for which Marco cooks the veal like roast beef, leaving the meat inside an attractive rosy pink. It's prepared alla maniera antica, "in the old manner," though it seems more modern than Boeri's boiled version. (Everything ings it inspires. It also serves some of the best food in Piedmont. Gabriele is the brother you'll interact with most. Garrulous and a little eccentric, he attends to the front with help from maybe one other server, while shy and quiet Marco hides in light and crunchy from lard, with a delicate old is new again.)And unlike Boeri, he the kitchen, turning out, from a menu that changes daily, dish after brilliant perfectly executed Piedmontese dish tradition with his carpionatd, a refresh- classics as well as subtly tweaked renditions and a bit of inspired fantasia. ing summertime dish whose name and method come from a similar fish prepa- - At La Torre, everything is done with care. The grissini are made by a Cherasco baker who makes them only for the restaurant. Grissini have been integral to the Piedmontese table since at least the rTth century, and maybe as early as the r4th, and have since spread to pizzerias and "Italian trattorias" all over the world. Unlike the usual paperwrapped, cardboardlike breadsticks, these grissini, as good grissini should be, are stirato a mAno, or hand-pulled, 42 THE ART oF EATtNc likes to garnish his plates with the occa- sional branch of rosemary. He hews to ration in which a variety of items, but especially zucchini, pumpkin, seafood, and sometimes veal, are breaded and deep-fried and then marinated in vinegar, olive oil, garlic, a whisper of clove, "la parte pii importante and always - della carpionata," says another Piedmontese friend sage. Carpionata was important in days before refrigeration as a way to keep food from spoiling, and preservation is no small part of Piedmont's flavors. Depending on the is the main ingredient, the rest is condi- ment. (If served al fumo, the agnolotti are just cooked in meat broth and served plain.) He might borrow from neighboring Liguria for mabagliati al pesto or for a white ragi (made with rabbit and without tomatoes). You'll probably never be offered taiarin with the elsewhere-ubiquitous buruo e saluia (bttter and sage), but the pasta might come with a sauce of fegatini (chicken livers). Pretty much every Piedmontese hill town and village has a crop, product, or dish that it claims as its own. Cherasco's is lumache, or snails, referring to any species of Helix. And though the cultivation of snails dates only from the efforts of a few enterpris- ing farmers in the r97os, it has been thoroughly embraced. Marco prepares snails in a variety of local ways: fried, gratin6ed, stewed, alla parigina (butter, garlic, parsley). Among secondi, however, his real genius lies offal - in his way with commonly featured in Pied- montese cuisine, but not prepared with quite his imagination, which conjures up ceruella dorata, "golden brains," f .9 wine zuppa di trippa, "tripe soup," animelle al limone con i funghi, "sweetbreads with lemon and mushrooms," in addition to the classic batsod, pig's feet boiled in vinegar and water, boned, breaded, and fried. La Torre's cheese cart is a testament to Piedmont's remarkable cheesemaking tradition and a sign of the a showstopper osteria's ambition - you might find to any comparable in a Michelin-starred restaurant. The glass case might hold large wheels of Gorgonzola (from Novara in northeastern Piedmont) and Castelmagno, Raschera, luscious Robiola di Roccaverano, softly aromatic ewe's and cow's milk Murazzano and other stacked rounds of tomini, Montebore, a small cheese with rzth-century origins, alpine Testun of various ages or covered with grape must or chestnut leaves. (Desserts at La Torre hold few surprises. Among those you might find on a given night are bonet,panna cotta, zabaglione, and s emifr e ddo, and all are fine standard versions, gussied up with a little squirt of vanilla sauce or a sliced strawberry.) La Torre's wine list pulls no punches either: there's plenty of Arneis, Dolcetto di Dogliani and d'Alba, Barbera, Nebbiolo, Barolo, and Barbaresco from good and great producers, but you can also select from a number of French bottles all the way up to 8oo-euro Roman6e-Conti. La Torre is one of the best examples in Italy of how a creative, talented, thoughtful chef can keep traditional dishes tasting fresh and make you consider what they really say about a place. There are many restaurants in Piedmont, including expensive try to pull off the new global cooking, incorporating Asian ingredients or molecular gastronomy, stretching the limits of the local cuisine as well as of taste itself. By workones, that ing within the idiom and showing restraint, Marco allows Piedmontese food to do what it and Italian food do best, which is to highlight the flavors of the ingredients: the sturdy foundation of grain, the warm plushness of egg yolks and cream, the winey, iron-y richness of veal and beef. It's food that describes the summers in the fields and the foggS hard winters. It's not cucina pouerai it's cucina borghese, the cooking of comfortable abundance whose backbone is nonetheless the humble, honest, hearty fare of the contadino and which is influenced by France and generations of Savoy kings. How does this kind of cooking translate when it's taken overseas? Unlike the cooking of TuscanS Sicily, Naples, or even Emilia-Romagna, that of Piedmont is little known outside Italy. But as the popularity of Italian regional cooking continues to grow everywhere, more such restaurants are popping up. I was skeptical, though hopeful, when I heard about Spinasse. Too often American chefs feel compelled to make the food more visually attractive and to "correct" its modest flavors with excessive acidity or fat. Jason Stratton, at Spinasse in Seattle, surprised me. He leaves well notes and resources :'csi:{.;.ar,is books letters roasted pork loin. lnhis sformatino, a light, savory flan, usually accompanied by fonduta, a cheese sauce, he might use Dungeness crab. (The sformatino of cauliflower would be perfectly at home in the Langhe.) He might com- bine Kusshi or Kumamoto oysters with zabaglione as sauce for tajarin. That tajarin made me wonder where and horv Stratton learned to cook this food so rvell. The tender, eggy noodles rvere handcut and so narrow they started to curl. (They're actually made rvith 4o yolks per kilo of flour.) Vhen I ate them, they were modestly dressed in a wonderful loose ragl). Stratton learned to cook in Seanle, his hometown, where he has worked in several of the city's most respected restaurants. It was during his tenure as sous chef at Caf6 Juanita, which specializes in northern Italian food, that he became interested in Piedmontese It began with the wines of cooking. the region, and then, he told me on the phone, he became fascinated with the "minimalist cuisine that was meant to show off the wines." He has traveled to At Spinasse not long ago, I ate some of the best Piedmontese food I've ever like had. It's osteria food - refined, although the dimly lit, La Torre's high-ceilinged room is decidedly more elegant and sophisticated than that of the typical osteria. The prices are also much higher. Like Marco Falco, the Piedmont a couple of times, and specifically to Alba. "The other reason for my geekiness," he told me, "is that I'm also interested in the history of cuisine. In Piedmontese food you can feel the past very much as a living thing in the modern cuisine." Above all, he seems to be a highly sensitive cook, attuned to where the balancing point is in the region's cooking, and appreciative of how well the old dishes work. His food, like Falco's, manages to be both comfortingly familiar and totally excit- baby-faced, bespectacled Stratton uses ing enough alone. the cuisine as a framework to show ingredients at their best. Stratton, as is expected of chefs these days, focuses particularly on the local ingredients of the Pacific Northwest. Instead of veal in his tonnato, he might use slow- precise the cooking is so beautifully that it forces you to re-examine what you know of a dish and rvhere its merits lie. At Spinasse, you realize once again that Piedmontese cooking deserves much more attention. Winnie Yang - 2oro NUNlBER Ea L)