We also had a bagful of leftover pizza to get through, plus assorted cheeses, salad greens, and other food that had to be disposed of. Some of it went into the garbage, and some of it, the best things, we piled up as a big gift to Rita and her family. And some of it, of course, we ate ourselves, including most of the pizza. (Maria was right--it was even better reheated in the oven.)

(The photos show, top to bottom, Claudio, Maria, and Rita. Fernando was across the room, participating in a very lively game of cards. Raucous card games and beer drinking seem to be the raison d'etre of the Circolo Unione.)
I wish I had a movie of Maria and Claudio talking. Their English is heavily accented, flavored with both their native Italian and with the Italo-American inflections they picked up during their years living in Queens, NY. Plus they both have, in spades, that Italian genius for comedic gestures and grimaces that makes even the most pedestrian marital bickering sensationally funny.

Apparently the Montaganesian appetite for partying had been merely whetted by all the celebrations during our two-week visit. Rita and Maria informed us that the next day, Sunday, they were all planning a meal out in the woods, with an open-air spit roast. Surely we'd like to stay another day so we could get in on it. Please, please, wouldn't we stick around till Monday?
We were tempted, because we knew the food would be great. But we had already paid for a room in Barletta, over toward the Adriatic, and our bags were all packed, and we were still trying to digest the pizza from the day before, and I wasn't sure I could take one more Montaganesi blow-out. Furthermore, I was afraid that if we didn't stop accepting these invitations we'd never leave. So we declined, with great regret.
Later I regretted it even more. The redoubtable Paolo posted a photo on Facebook showing the barbecue. The main offering, aside from a very healthy-looking chicken, was a banquet-sized array of torcinelli, those fabled skewers of lamb innards wrapped in milk-fed intestines.
2 comments:
Funny how God and cuisine are intertwined. Just like all those carvings of saints and ex-votos, the food seems to honor some higher order. Culture there has a different order.
Food is always a sacrament of some kind, don't you think? Some cultures are more keen on the pleasure of it, though.
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