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lunch at an agriturismo

I finally have a foodie post for you!

In Italy, I’ve learned, an increasingly popular way to take in the countryside and delicious food simultaneously is to dine at an agriturismo.  Yesterday, our good friends Josh and Becca invited us to join them for lunch at one nearby called Borgo Antico.  We left the base and drove for about 45 minutes along a modern two-lane highway.  A fertile valley stretched out on either side of the road, filled with grazing sheep and country villas.  On the rocky hillsides, abandoned castles surveyed this brave new world resignedly and little towns bustled with Christmas preparations and live nativity plays.

I guess I expected something more rustic of an agriturismo… perhaps because of the word “agriculture” in the name?  Certainly I was not prepared for an entrance with a modern power-operated gate within thick stone walls or the lush groves of citrus fruit along the lengthy driveway.  We parked behind a sprawling villa and walked into the dining room.  Tables were set with gleaming glassware and red-checked tablecloths and across the flagstone floor a cheerful fire crackled in a large fireplace.

After the rest of the lunch patrons arrived around 1:30pm, we all were seated and the food began rolling out.  And oh! such food!  We started with crusty white bread and extra virgin olive oil (pressed on the property from their olive groves), and then slices of cheese spread with marmalade over cured meats, roasted artichokes, cheese quiches, sun-dried tomatoes, hard Sicilian cheese cubed and dressed in olive oil and spring onions, spicy marinated olives, eggplant parmigiana, and more that I’m forgetting.  We told ourselves to slow down… but I couldn’t get enough of all the cheeses.

After awhile the appetizers stopped and we took a few moments to sip wine from one of the several decanters on our table.  This vino da tavola is a Sicilian staple and goes so well with the food.  I don’t know if they water the wine down or what, but it is very light and refreshing, and not at all heavy or stupor-ifying… which is not what you need in the middle of a 3-hour lunch anyway.

(Also, this is affordable like America doesn’t know.  A bottle of vino da tavola in our local shop costs about 3 euros for half a gallon.  Elliott and I just had some with our dinner tonight of local roasted rabbit, potatoes, and zucchini.)

Next came two pasta dishes: one with thick, chewy noodles (not hollow and very made-by-hand) and another winter pasta offering with beans and short thin noodles.

And then the meat dish: one beef dish and one roasted-chicken-and-potatoes platter.

And then the insalata course, or salad.  I love the fresh salads here: a few types of lettuce tossed with olive oil and balsamic vinegar.  And that’s it.  No Ranch dressing, no Bacon Bits, no shredded carrots, no plum tomatoes, no apples, no croutons.  So simple.

And finally the dolci course… the sweets.  Always a hit for Becca.  They served miniature cannoli, citrus gelatin, and mandarin oranges from their groves.

“Leave the gun, take the cannoli.”  And I did.  These two cannoli were left over and I took ’em home with me.  And ate them as soon as we walked in the door.

Lena and I went to town on their sweet mandarin oranges.  They sell them by the crate along the road near our house.  A crate for 3 euros.  Yes, please.

After we were finished, we walked out into the orange grove below the villa to play hide and seek with our friends’ kids and take some pictures.  In retrospect, I felt deliciously full but not overstuffed after that meal, which is what I’ve heard about Italian cuisine.  Now I just need to learn to cook like a Sicilian!

3 :: in eat this, friends, Sicily, travel

lunch at an agriturismo

I finally have a foodie post for you!

In Italy, I’ve learned, an increasingly popular way to take in the countryside and delicious food simultaneously is to dine at an agriturismo.  Yesterday, our good friends Josh and Becca invited us to join them for lunch at one nearby called Borgo Antico.  We left the base and drove for about 45 minutes along a modern two-lane highway.  A fertile valley stretched out on either side of the road, filled with grazing sheep and country villas.  On the rocky hillsides, abandoned castles surveyed this brave new world resignedly and little towns bustled with Christmas preparations and live nativity plays.

I guess I expected something more rustic of an agriturismo… perhaps because of the word “agriculture” in the name?  Certainly I was not prepared for an entrance with a modern power-operated gate within thick stone walls or the lush groves of citrus fruit along the lengthy driveway.  We parked behind a sprawling villa and walked into the dining room.  Tables were set with gleaming glassware and red-checked tablecloths and across the flagstone floor a cheerful fire crackled in a large fireplace.

After the rest of the lunch patrons arrived around 1:30pm, we all were seated and the food began rolling out.  And oh! such food!  We started with crusty white bread and extra virgin olive oil (pressed on the property from their olive groves), and then slices of cheese spread with marmalade over cured meats, roasted artichokes, cheese quiches, sun-dried tomatoes, hard Sicilian cheese cubed and dressed in olive oil and spring onions, spicy marinated olives, eggplant parmigiana, and more that I’m forgetting.  We told ourselves to slow down… but I couldn’t get enough of all the cheeses.

After awhile the appetizers stopped and we took a few moments to sip wine from one of the several decanters on our table.  This vino da tavola is a Sicilian staple and goes so well with the food.  I don’t know if they water the wine down or what, but it is very light and refreshing, and not at all heavy or stupor-ifying… which is not what you need in the middle of a 3-hour lunch anyway.

(Also, this is affordable like America doesn’t know.  A bottle of vino da tavola in our local shop costs about 3 euros for half a gallon.  Elliott and I just had some with our dinner tonight of local roasted rabbit, potatoes, and zucchini.)

Next came two pasta dishes: one with thick, chewy noodles (not hollow and very made-by-hand) and another winter pasta offering with beans and short thin noodles.

And then the meat dish: one beef dish and one roasted-chicken-and-potatoes platter.

And then the insalata course, or salad.  I love the fresh salads here: a few types of lettuce tossed with olive oil and balsamic vinegar.  And that’s it.  No Ranch dressing, no Bacon Bits, no shredded carrots, no plum tomatoes, no apples, no croutons.  So simple.

And finally the dolci course… the sweets.  Always a hit for Becca.  They served miniature cannoli, citrus gelatin, and mandarin oranges from their groves.

“Leave the gun, take the cannoli.”  And I did.  These two cannoli were left over and I took ’em home with me.  And ate them as soon as we walked in the door.

Lena and I went to town on their sweet mandarin oranges.  They sell them by the crate along the road near our house.  A crate for 3 euros.  Yes, please.

After we were finished, we walked out into the orange grove below the villa to play hide and seek with our friends’ kids and take some pictures.  In retrospect, I felt deliciously full but not overstuffed after that meal, which is what I’ve heard about Italian cuisine.  Now I just need to learn to cook like a Sicilian!

3 :: in eat this, friends, Sicily, travel

last day in San Antonio

On our last full day in SA, Elliott had to be out the door early for a graduation ceremony at Ft Sam Houston.  (I love saying Fort Sam Houston really fast.  Sounds so American and Texan.  Sad I can’t say that every day anymore.)  We thought Lena and I weren’t invited (although we were… whoops) so I stayed home and made him celebratory cinnamon rolls for brunch.

They were delish!  Paula Deen’s fab recipe here.

As we began packing and cleaning, Elliott harvested his last crop of oyster mushrooms.  He ordered the Back to the Roots Mushroom Kit from Amazon and has been tending to them (and harvesting crops!) for the past month or so.  With these mushrooms Elliott combined a lot of fridge leftovers and made us elaborate omelets for lunch.  Yum!

I cleared out all our food from the kitchen to give away to Lewis and Bekah.  Lena had fun discovering that pile! Hippie child hair.

Suitcases filled our once-tidy little apartment… sigh…

I was alerted by my friends Sarah and Johanna that Starbucks was having a 2-for-1 holiday drinks sale, so we headed down the River Walk one last time for this treat.  Grande peppermint mochas… yessss.  On the way back we took a final saunter through Hemisfair Park and a tourist offered to snap this photo of us at the bottom of the Tower of the Americas (where we went for a date recently).

That night Lewis and Bekah took us out on a group date.  We got all gussied up, and I wore one of Elliott’s birthday presents to me: lovely earrings designed by my nursing school classmate and dear friend Tara  Montgomery.

They chose Carmen’s de la Calle, an incredible tapas bar with live music.  Flamenco dancers performed that night to live music, and they left our blood racing!  Innovative dishes, fabulous decor, sangria that went down oh-so-easily, and some of the sweetest friends… it was quite the farewell to this lovely town.

Thanks, dear Lewis and Bekah, for welcoming us and loving us so well while in your hometown.  We miss you.  Keep dreaming and planning that visit to Sicily!

1 :: in eat this, friends, Texas

last day in San Antonio

On our last full day in SA, Elliott had to be out the door early for a graduation ceremony at Ft Sam Houston.  (I love saying Fort Sam Houston really fast.  Sounds so American and Texan.  Sad I can’t say that every day anymore.)  We thought Lena and I weren’t invited (although we were… whoops) so I stayed home and made him celebratory cinnamon rolls for brunch.

They were delish!  Paula Deen’s fab recipe here.

As we began packing and cleaning, Elliott harvested his last crop of oyster mushrooms.  He ordered the Back to the Roots Mushroom Kit from Amazon and has been tending to them (and harvesting crops!) for the past month or so.  With these mushrooms Elliott combined a lot of fridge leftovers and made us elaborate omelets for lunch.  Yum!

I cleared out all our food from the kitchen to give away to Lewis and Bekah.  Lena had fun discovering that pile! Hippie child hair.

Suitcases filled our once-tidy little apartment… sigh…

I was alerted by my friends Sarah and Johanna that Starbucks was having a 2-for-1 holiday drinks sale, so we headed down the River Walk one last time for this treat.  Grande peppermint mochas… yessss.  On the way back we took a final saunter through Hemisfair Park and a tourist offered to snap this photo of us at the bottom of the Tower of the Americas (where we went for a date recently).

That night Lewis and Bekah took us out on a group date.  We got all gussied up, and I wore one of Elliott’s birthday presents to me: lovely earrings designed by my nursing school classmate and dear friend Tara  Montgomery.

They chose Carmen’s de la Calle, an incredible tapas bar with live music.  Flamenco dancers performed that night to live music, and they left our blood racing!  Innovative dishes, fabulous decor, sangria that went down oh-so-easily, and some of the sweetest friends… it was quite the farewell to this lovely town.

Thanks, dear Lewis and Bekah, for welcoming us and loving us so well while in your hometown.  We miss you.  Keep dreaming and planning that visit to Sicily!

1 :: in eat this, friends, Texas

a visit from her Grammie

Last week we were treated to a three-day visit from my mom.  We’d been talking up San Antonio for awhile and she was eager to see some of the places we’ve come to love here.  However, she was much more eager to see her little granddaughter!  

We took her to see a San Antonio landmark: the Alamo.  She took a few family photos for us… always a treat!

The next evening my mom watched Lena while Elliott and I went out on a date!  We chose an exciting location for this date: the top of the Tower of the Americas, 750 feet off the ground.  We were totally excited about our first one-on-one date since Lena was born (can that be right?!) and loved our little window booth with a view of the whole city.

The restaurant rotates on top of the tower so you can get a 360-degree view.  We tucked a tiny piece of paper onto the window to see if we would make it all the way around.  It took about 2 hours for the piece of paper to get around, and we missed it the first time.  Four hours later we were still savoring our wine and conversation when we discovered our tiny slip of paper again.  By then it was dark (this restaurant likes ambiance!) and impossible to take a picture without a huge flash.  We thought this was funny at the time. 

Of course no trip to San Antonio would be complete without some evening exploring along our River Walk.
 

My mom took us out to a local gastropub (ie. foodie restaurant) on her last night in town.  The dishes were amazing!  We chose about 6 or 7 little tapas-sized plates with Brussels sprouts in a sweet chili sauce, Bourbon pork belly on sweet potatoes with torched marshmallows, fried chicken in Old Bay spices, cauliflower and paneer in a curry sauce… I’m getting hungry just remembering it. 

Lena went to town on the aforementioned sweet potatoes, which were pureed as though intended for her.

I finished off the meal with a delicious mug of thick cinnamon hot chocolate.   Sooo good.   Highly recommend this if you come through San Antonio; it’s called The Monterey.

The next morning we all got up at 3:45am to go to the airport.  Ouch!  My mom flew back to Virginia while our little family flew to California for the weekend.  More photos to share about that trip tomorrow.

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2 :: in eat this, family, hospitality, Lena, Texas

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