Tuesday, August 28, 2012

The street under my balcony

In case anyone is wondering, these photos show what the street out the balcony looks like, looking left and right.



This street doesn't have it's own name; it's name is simply the first cross street of the street (that you cannot see in these photos) that you would find if you were to walk to the end of this street in the direction of the first photo above:  Via Monte Nuovo Licola Patria.  Monte Nuovo is the mountain that you can see in this third picture:


It is an inactive volcano, created over the course of only a couple weeks in 1538, which is why the it's name is "new mountain".   It's height is only about 135 meters. The center of the volcano crater is only about half a mile from where I am. From this angle you can't really tell that it's a volcano, but from an aerial view it's quite clear.  For example see this photo on this page:  http://www.wunderground.com/wximage/cagtripodi/27

You can visit the vulcano and climb up to the rim and walk around, it's a nature preserve area.
The entrance is in a park at the end of Via Virgilio which is a cross street of Via Milliscola, nearby.

This area is where I lived when I was about 5 to 8 years old.  It still feels more like home than Columbus, even though I've now lived in Columbus for nearly 40 years!

Adesso mi viene da piangere quando ci ripenso a come sono stato strappato via da qui.  Si questa zona non è una zona bella e tranquilla, ma è quello che mi ricordo come il paese mio, con tutta la mia famiglia attorno.


Monday, August 27, 2012

Procession of the Virgin Mary on Ferragosto

I am catching up a bit with some photos taken days back.

Back on the 14th of August, on the eve of Ferragosto, in Tortoreto Lido they hold a procession of the Virgin Mary.  The procession starts at the church, a few blocks from the sea, and goes down to the sea.  The Virgin Mary is put on a fishing boat and undertakes a brief tour at sea, then returns to shore and the procession proceeds a few tens of yards to a piazza on the Lungomare Sirena, where the statue is set up to watch over an open air mass.

Here are just a few photos of the boats at sea and the statue of the Virgin Mary coming back on to the beach.






Hot dinner party erupts into street

A quiet dinner party during the last few days of vacation. It was a hot night after a hotter day. Inside the house it was just too hot, so when we saw a table already out in the street ... well we rearranged things a little.



The ladies decided there was more decorum in staying inside:



The menu was based on seafood.

Risotto ai frutti di mare

Gnochetti con faggiloi e cozze

Funghi con pane con gorgonzola e mascarpone

Alice

Everybody had a good time

Things got out of hand to the point that they were dancing in the streets!

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Festa a sorpresa per paolo

A dinner party to indulge in arrosticini and beer and other various things turned into a surprise birthday party.





Some random pictures:





Saturday, August 18, 2012

Fireworks of ferragosto

Ferragosto is an Italian religious holiday in the middle of August. It's the Assumption of the Virgin Mary. In Abruzzo it's an especially popular holiday. Traditionally in Tortoreto they have a fireworks show at night on the day of the holiday.  The fireworks aren't at dusk, as is common in the USA, but are deep into the night, at 1:30am.  The fireworks are launched from the beach and from platforms at sea. Our spot was only about 100 feet from the closest fireworks.


Here are some sample images from the fireworks:





The whole show lasted about 30 minutes.  This is just the last minute or so of the finale.


Your roving reporter.

Friday, August 17, 2012

The Feast of Ferragosto

Ferragosto is the 15th of August, and is the feast of the assumption of the virgin Mary (see http://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferragosto).
Tradition is that families will get together for a big meal.
This year, the family I am visiting decided to go for something a little lighter with a few small courses.  Then things got out of hand....

Slices of pecorino cheese topped with a cream or marmalade made from Vin Santo, a sweet dessert wine:


Cremini Abbruzzesi.  Pastry cream that's deep fried.  Sickly sweet:

Olive Ascolane:  stuffed olives, fried:

Pizza di Scarola:  more or less a stuffed pizza in white.  No tomato sauce, no cheese. Filling is escarole, olives, pine nuts, etc.

Bocconcini di fior di latte:  bite size pieces of cow's milk mozzarella, served with cherry tomatoes and basil.

Tonno con maionese.  Tuna fish salad with mayonnaise

Two different appetizers on one serving plate (running out of room): salmone affumicato e carapaccio di tonno rosso:  smoked salmon and carpaccio of red tuna

Ventricina abrruzzese: a traditional abbruzzese type of salami, see http://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ventricina, but in the form of a spread:

Two things on this service plate:  Coglione di Mula  and  Salamino di Cinghiale:  Coglione di Mula is a type of mortadella that contains a piece of lard in the center, and they're cured by tying a pair of them on a string and then hanging the string over a pole; so they look like the balls of a mule, and that gives it it's popular name.  See http://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortadella_di_Campotosto
Salamino di Cinghiale is small salami of wild boar meat.

Focaccia con prosciutto:  focaccia is a thin flaky bread that's similar to a pizza dough, here it's just wrapped with prosciutto.

Two appetizers on this tray: Fiori di Zucca Ripieni and Formaggio Fritto:  the lower half of the picture has Zucchini Flowers filled with ricotta, battered, and fried.  The upper half has battered fried cheese, usually pecorino.

Focaccia con Lardo di Colonnata: This is a thicker focaccia than that in the other picture, and it's covered with a special gourmet lard from Tuscany:

Fichi con prosciutto:  these are fresh figs (I helped picked them that very morning) with prosciutto.

So, if anyone is counting, that's 16 dishes so far.  Those were the appetizers.  We have not even started the real eating yet!

There were only two "primi piatti" on this day.  (I told you it was a light meal)


Timballo:  this is the abbruzzese version of lasagna, and instead of being made with pasta made from grain, it's made with crepes.

Pasta fresca con sugo di gorgonzola e pistacchi: fresh pasta with a sauce made from gorgonzola cheese and pistacchio.

Pane:  two types of locally baked fresh bread.  I am including them here with the primi piatti because the bread is so often used to help with eating the sauce.


That's it for the primi piatti.  After the first plate comes the second plate.  This was a light meal, remember, so we only had one second plate and a few side dishes (contorni).


Two things in this photo.  The meat is the "secondo piatto", it's what counts.  The pepperoni on the left is one of the contorni.
Arrosto di maiale e peperoni fritti:  Roasted pork and fried red peppers.

Melenzane arrostite:  roasted (really lightly pan fried) eggplant. The little red things are a spicy red pepper.

Peperoni con patate:  Roasted red peppers and potatoes.


That's all for the first and second plates.  All that's left is the fruit and the dessert.

Frutta fresca di stagione: fresh seasonal fruit.   Kiwi, pescocce  (a yellow flesh peach with a very solid body, see http://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percoca), grapes, banana.

Torta Sacher:  sachertorte.  Not an abbruzzese tradition, just happens one of the family recently had a birthday and their favorite cake is a sacher torte.


So that's it.  If you count all the dishes, including the fruit, the cake, and all the photos where there were two dishes in a photo, you come up with a 26-course lunch.  Not counting three wines (spumante, montepulciano d'abbruzzo, and a brachetto) and the coffee.  This is "a light meal" here.

One last picture for you all:

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Jethro Tull?

Jethro Full cover band concert at 11pm some 30 yards from the sea.


Sunday, August 12, 2012

Rough Seas II

The sea has been rough several days now.
Last night was actually chilly, temps may have been down in the high 70's or mid 80's (just not sure, sorry).

Here's some of the sea, I think this photo was on Saturday.


Today the sea was even rougher, the waves higher, and the skies started to get some high clouds.  Wind direction changed too, coming from the east instead of the north.  The weather prediction is now calling for a return to warmer temps on Monday or Tuesday.


Civitella del Tronto

After the sagra at Rocche Di Civitella, we stopped by Civitella del Tronto to see the city by night. It's late and dark.  This is one of those ancient cities with a fortified castle on top of the hill.

This QR code will take you to a web page with tourist information for the city:


This is a view of some of the city from the approach road.  It's a parking lot and the light is very bad.


This is a view of the main square of the city, when you've just entered.


To get from the main square up to the entrance to the fortified area there are two routes.  We missed the wide road when we walked in to the square, but we followed the signs past the square and it took us to this narrow road, which the sign claims is the narrowest road in Italy:


It's basically only just wide enough to walk up, like a stairwell. Here's two of my friends walking up:

We got up there but it was too late at night and there was nothing to see.
Here's a shot of one of the other streets higher up in the city.


We also got the impression that an ongoing maintenance project probably has made the fort unreachable even during daylight.