The last reading I owe to Mary’s Handbook is Andrea Francavilla’s Non-Democratic Dwarf Tales.
The short stories are dwarfed in terms of length but the author’s ability to evoke situations and contexts in the space of a few words by building characters through their dialogues immediately emerges.
The short stories are not democratic, how would you personally interpret this definition?
The author mentions a friend in the acknowledgments for this very title.
These Non-Democratic Dwarf Tales have a common denominator: a rainy night.
I don’t know about you, when I think of the words ‘night’ and ‘rain’ I immediately think of the very famous phrase from the film The Crow: It can’t rain all the time.
For me it’s like a kind of mantra in difficult times.
Do you like the rain? Do you like to go out when it rains ?
The book’s protagonists are what one might call a repertoire of varied humanity and well represent hardship, frailties, mistakes, doubts, imperfections, and all the varied facets of the difficulties of living.
My compliments to the author on how he has come full circle.
Non-Democratic Dwarf Tales is a first work but I hope we will soon be able to read more by Andrea Francavilla.
In his bio he says he is convinced that behind every problem lies an opportunity and I personally have only to learn.
These are days of heavy thoughts and perhaps for this reason even more I feel an instinctive call towards traditions, as if I could find a kind of refuge.
After having definitely appreciated the pumpkin pie, I wanted to try to recover the recipes of Lomellina.
But apparently we are more predisposed to the oral tradition without then bothering to transfer in writing …
In fact, it is a feat to find sources other than the same phrase bounced more or less at random without confirmation.
Annalisa Alberici wrote very well about this in the book Cucina del Pavese della Lomellina and Oltrepo
on page 13 there is an important question: Does Pavese cuisine exist?
The answer is long and complex, but in short: I must admit: over the centuries the cuisine of Pavia was never written. Or it was by chance.
Apparently Pavia cuisine is just like the beautiful silence… and as soon as I read this sentence I could not help but smile, thinking back to the memory of the sentence my grandmother used to repeat to me.
In reality, however, I also found another book that talks about Milan with reference to the Visconti‘s period, which therefore it can be considered extended to Vigevano
At the table, the sadness of the day of the dead, with its traditional visits to the cemetery, yields to the traditional dishes that require the biella (pot) with supa coi sisar (chickpea soup) enriched with pork rinds, and pangiald or bread of the dead. Now pangiald can be bought in bakeries or pastry shops, but it was once baked in the home oven.
It is true that my family is contaminated, but we have never eaten chickpeas… so the pangiald remains right.
All Saints’ Day, bread … this phrase comes to mind: The two best and holiest smells are those of warm bread and rain-soaked earth. Ardengo Soffici
Here it rains less and less, but the earth is still wet: by fog.
So, rather than for the kitchen, it is on the scary side that Lomellina has nothing to envy, our atmospheres lend themselves a lot!
In fact, unlike the recipes, there is no shortage of legends.
Al diaval: the devil, for example, would have unleashed all his fury on the church of Santa Maria in Lomello to prevent the second marriage between Queen Teodolinda, a Catholic, and Agilulfo instead of Arian.
About the stria: witch, as you can imagine, there are many stories and it seems there are also direct testimonies … but you know, this part is the “soul” of these stories … forgive the pun.
Among all I would opt for the one that gave the name to The Branch of the Witches which is actually a wonderful branch of the Ticino river
It is said that The Branch of the Witches was named after the misfortune of a woman suffering from strange symptoms who on a full moon night, in order to purify herself in the waters with the help of her friends, finds herself having to face the devil and ends up transformed into a giant seaweed that drags all the other women to the bottom as well.
And the algae, which are the characteristic of that stretch of river, are said to resemble the hair of witches.
In return, I do not limit myself to pangiald: I could not fail to present the classic “treat” as well.
These are the most similar to the oss di mort (Dead’s Bones) version that I remember eating: rather large, oval in shape, and vaguely similar to the panforte.
But if we abounded with chocolate for the Keep Calm variant, would it be serious?
OPINIONI