The Brooklyn Ragazza ~ 2012 "DaVinci Storyteller" Winner
Sunflower patch in Toscana, Italia, 2012 |
Culinary Roots That Run Deep
The Brooklyn Ragazza |
Growing up in a close-knit, Italo-American community in Utica, NY, that proudly clings to Depression Era, "cucina povera-style" cooking, her recipes are a peek into the treasure chest of culinary heirlooms from many Italo-American's family generations throughout New York. Growing up in a large family with modest means, she describes her mother, Donnamarie, as "a bit of an alchemist, with a lot of panache," and as someone who could "coax luxury out of random ingredients that are lying around the pantry," with the belief that resourceful Italians are artists making imaginative use of whatever is at hand.
Over many years, her family has been involved in the restaurant biz/food industry in many ways, from small diners to catering; from food carts to fine dining. These inherited influences are strongly represented in her cooking and rustic, photography style, with anecdotal, story-telling. She sees her kitchen as another studio where she creates art, but a different kind of canvas; an edible canvas. A camera and a mandoline are equally essential tools in her kitchen, as she photographs nearly everything she prepares.
From Moniker to Blog
Self portrait, acrylic painting by Cathi Iannone |
In 2010, she began entering recipe and food photography contests, seeking fun and adventure, and as a way to share her community's "best-kept secret" recipes with the rest of the world, while making new friends, and winning numerous national competitions along the way.
She began getting many requests for her recipes. After surmountable inquiries, and as a way to keep up with the requests, The Brooklyn Ragazza identity crystallized and a blog was created as a platform to expand on her love of story-telling, food photography,
and romancing the "cucina povera," home-style recipes.
Adding personal stories and photography was a way to create something that was more meaningful and enduring. Her narratives serve to anchor the reader, as she gives you a sense of local color, the people, the inspiration, and creative process behind the recipes as a kind of culinary scrapbook of cherished memories. She emphasizes the delicacies of Italian cooking, rather than the monotony of tomato-garlic-laden dishes that Americans mistakenly come to associate with Italian food.
Adding personal stories and photography was a way to create something that was more meaningful and enduring. Her narratives serve to anchor the reader, as she gives you a sense of local color, the people, the inspiration, and creative process behind the recipes as a kind of culinary scrapbook of cherished memories. She emphasizes the delicacies of Italian cooking, rather than the monotony of tomato-garlic-laden dishes that Americans mistakenly come to associate with Italian food.
CNY to NYC
en route to Katz's Deli in NYC |
Within months of settling in to the new pace of NYC, she signed with a talent agency and began doing contract work, as a promotional model and brand ambassador, working on many well known brand campaigns. Additionally, she dabbled into acting with a feature on the reality show, "Blind Date," where she was The Great Throwdini's professional assistant, performing in his marksman act. Over the years, she has booked numerous "extra" and "stand-in" work in productions ranging from major motion pictures to prime time television shows, such as, "Law & Order."
With her passion for food always in the forefront, she worked weekends at Williams Sonoma's bustling, flagship store in Columbus Circle, and she describes this experience as "more of a paid internship, than anything" as she had the opportunity to work several celebrity chef book signings, and the learned experience of culinary prep-work and skillful techniques.Throughout her employment with Williams Sonoma, she received extensive classroom training from major manufacturers such as, Wusthof, All Clad, Le Creuset, Le Courneau, Nespresso, Breville, Cuisinart and Kitchen Aid, to name a few.
A Culinary Passport
Cathi; exploring the canals of Venice, Italy |
Preceding this adventure, armed only with a copy of Rick Steves' "Europe Through the Backdoor" as her travel companion, and a hunger for old world romanticism, she took a sabbatical and back-packed throughout 13 countries in Eastern and Western Europe, photographing and journaling her cultural and culinary experiences, learning about the land from the locals, the importance of "food-seasonality," while forging great, life-long friendships along the way. She, emphatically, goes on about Europeans "appreciating the unifying influences of the family meal and the political nuances of hospitality,"and how American culture has lost this art over the generations.
Throughout this journey, she compiled a fantastic journal of fine food, learning the classic procedures of pasta-making in Naples, and how to stretch homemade mozzarella. She regales about her experience in the hills of Petras, Greece where she picked champagne grape bunches fresh off the vine, and bartered for authentic, Greek extra virgin olive oil with an old pair of Levi Jeans.
The DaVinci Wine "Storyteller Experience" in Tuscany
Making brick-oven pizza for the DaVinci Storyteller Experience |
As a "Storyteller" for DaVinci Wine, Cathi spent a week soaking up the beautiful, historic Vinci, Italy, and
translated all of the Tuscan inspiration through her food, stories, and
photography. She explored the Tuscan Chianti Region, where over 200
wine growers have joined together to form a grower's cooperative
committed to producing beautiful, authentic, Tuscan wine.
She had the rare opportunity to put on a chef's jacket and go behind the scenes in the kitchen at the Dalle Vigne Wine Loft Ristorante Enoteca, a famous restaurant on the Cantine Leonardo DaVinci, where the critically acclaimed, Executive Chef, Fabrizio Gaviano shared some of his treasured recipes.
Farm-to-Fork: Brooklyn Roof Top Style
Unripe vine tomatoes from the garden |
Although she describes the Farmer's Market in Union Square as one of her favorite places to buy organic, local produce, she proudly boasts of her own urban garden, right above her very own apartment in Brooklyn, NY.
Having been raised in a family that cultivated an extensive fruit and vegetable garden every year, Cathi saw her urban, Brooklyn environment as an opportunity to get creative, and makes use of her flat, Brooklyn roof top and fire escape as the perfect locations to grow vegetation. She describes these locations as "prime real estate," as they "get maximum sunlight, and whenever I want fresh basil, all I have to do is to open my kitchen window, reach out and clip it; it's great!"
In terra cotta planters, she grows everything from tomatoes, to string beans, hot cherry peppers, baby eggplants, and various herbs, to name just a few.
Being an advocate of the Farm-to-Fork Movement, many of her posts express the importance of "food seasonality," and she seeks to educate her readers on healthy alternatives, gardening practices and tips, and ancient food production practices.
From my old, Italian family heirloom recipes, the many diverse, Regional Italian dishes, to the modern twist on an old classic, or the inventive fusion recipes that strike me as I roam these diverse NYC neighborhoods, I'm here to share with you, my friends!
Mangiamo, a tutti! ~ Let's eat, everyone!
-Cathi Iannone, The Brooklyn Ragazza
Splash Page: about.me/Cathi
The Brooklyn Ragazza in Montalcino, Toscana for the DaVinci Storyteller Experience, July 2012 |
I love your blog. Just found it on Linkedin posting. I also have a blog about food and my family. www.everyonewantstobeitalian.wordpress.com
ReplyDeleteHello, there!
DeleteThanks for stopping by! I checked out your blog, too! It was like walking into the home of someone I already knew! I really liked it. We, Italian Americans, have so many of the same traditions, and "staple" foods and those meant for celebration, like the rum cake. It's funny because I had a rum cake for my First Communion party, and I remember not really liking it as a child, but now, I love it! Someone, just recently, called me up in a panic and needed a recipe for rum cake for his Dad's 80th birthday. So, I will be featuring the recipe soon on my blog in honor of his Dad.
Again, thanks, for stopping by, and I hope you come again soon!
Ciao!
Cath
Questo รจ molto impressionante! Sono diventato fame leggendolo. Penso che stasera cibo italiano!
ReplyDeleteCordiali saluti,
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Thanks for the greens and riggies recipe..They came out amazing..
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