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An Ex-Expatriate

~ and what she saw

An Ex-Expatriate

Monthly Archives: September 2010

Il Molino Vecchio – The Old Mill

26 Sunday Sep 2010

Posted by farfalle1 in Italian folk tales, Italian habits and customs, Italy, Liguria, Photographs, Rapallo, San Maurizio di Monti, Uncategorized

≈ 20 Comments

Tags

Chestnut mill, Chestnuts, Giovanni Pendola, Italian frantoio, Italian molino, N.S. della Cipressa, Old Italian mill, Olive mill, Wheat mill

Sometimes it happens in Italy that you’re walking down a street, a lane, or a path in the country, and you come upon something that sends you back, in your mind’s eye, a few hundred years. “I can just imagine,” you say to yourself, “what it would have been like to be alive when this place was new and bustling with life.”

It happened to me not long ago when I took a walk with a friend. We came to the old and interesting Complesso Molitorio (Mill complex), which lies on a sentiero (walking path) that connects San Maurizio di Monti to Rapallo along the San Francesco torrente (fast flowing stream), on the opposite side of the narrow valley from the paved road.  The sentiero is not particularly well known, and does not appear on the trails map for this area. To reach it from San Maurizio you walk down what begins as an ever more narrow residential street, which finally turns itself into a path. From Rapallo the route begins on a paved street but soon takes the form of an old mule path which climbs and winds through the forest. According to the website lacipresse.it, the path is known as “Strada Antica di Monti,” a part of the “Antica Via del Sale” (The Old Salt Road – why there was a Salt Road here I have not been able to learn).

The Mill complex is comprised of four buildings, three of which you can see in the photo above. The large building in front was constructed in the 17th century and was an olive mill. A wheat mill was housed in the smaller building on the left; and the small building up above the others was a chestnut mill. The fourth building, not much more than a room really, is behind the large main building, and was used for collecting the refuse of the olive pressing.

The San Francesco feeds a mill pond above the highest building:

The water can be directed down an earth and stone canal to tumble into the waterwheels that powered the various milling operations:

The oldest structure in the complex is the old stone bridge that crosses the San Francesco, built in the Roman style, quite possibly during Roman days.

The little chapel on the bridge, a recent addition, honors the Madonna of Montallegro and is called Nostra Signora della Cipressa.   According to the story, there was a chestnut tree that stood nearby. One day, during the plague years, the tree suddenly died – in just the one day! The belief is that the tree, through the intercession of the Madonna, absorbed the deadly disease and rendered it harmless, thereby saving the citizens of San Maurizio di Monti. (For more about the Madonna of Montallegro and the plague, see here).

There have been several re-structurings of various elements of the complex, including one in the early 18th century, one in the 1920’s, and another in the early years of this century . During the recent renovations the large building was turned into a museum, Il Museo della Civilta’ Contadina “Cap. G. Pendola” – the Museum of Rural Culture (named in honor of Giovanni Pendola, a heroic Captain in Garibaldi‘s Army). In it you will find old implements that farmers employed to wrest a livelihood from these steep hills, as well as accouterments of the mills themselves. It is open on the third Sunday of each month from 3 – 5 p.m., at which time a very well informed docent can explain the uses of the various tools, and tell about each of the buildings. (The renovations in 2001 won Second Prize in the 2003 Concorso  “Ama il nostro paese” – love our country – sponsored by the City of Rapallo and the Rapallo Lions Club.  In 2006 the Complex was designated a National Monument.)

Some centuries before our mill, but I like the image!

Although the mill was still functioning as late as 1940, it is much more fun to imagine what it would have been like in, say, 1750. You’ve gathered all the chestnuts in your part of the woods, have dried them over a smoky fire and have thrashed them out of their husks.


Now you put them in barrels that are firmly strapped, one on each side, to your mule. Slowly and carefully the two of you make your way up the path, your mule finding a careful foothold between the upturned stones on the steep parts of the road. You hear the mill before you see it; the water is rushing down the canal and the big wheel is squeaking a little as it turns. When you get a little closer you can hear the big gears groaning and clicking as they engage. There are a lot of other people there with their chestnuts, too. Chestnut flour is a staple, and a good crop might form the basis of your family’s diet for much of the year. (For an interesting article on historical food uses of chestnuts, look here.) While at the mill you have a chance to exchange gossip with neighbors you haven’t seen for a while and to catch up on the news of the town below. After you’ve left your chestnuts to be ground into flour, you might continue up on the mountain to give thanks at Montallegro for a good harvest, and to ask the Madonna to protect you through the short winter ahead.

There’s another great story associated with the mills. The present owner’s grandfather, the  Giovanni Pendola for whom the Museum is named,  was the owner of the mill in 1907 when he went to Genova to take aid to the victims of a cholera epidemic there. He contracted the disease himself, and died soon afterwards. His true love, a lady named Caterina who was, they say, still beautiful, lost her will to leave her house when she received the news of his death. Then, taken by an irresistible urge for freedom, she became a wild creature of the woods.

Painting by Patrick Soper, soperstudio.com

Still today, disguised as a fox with a soft tawny tail, she wanders during the coldest days, “those of winter when the cold north wind blows, or when windy gusts blow the last dry leaves, and the bare, rattling branches of  trees reach to the sky like imploring arms.” The tradition says that if you meet this fox and look into her eyes, you may lose your memory or be swallowed up by the woods.

If you’d like to see some more pictures of the mill, click here.  Click on ‘slideshow.’

Many thanks to the website lacipresse.it, from which I learned the content of this post.

Kumquats

19 Sunday Sep 2010

Posted by farfalle1 in Italian recipes, Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Kumquat chicken, Spicy chicken with kumquats

Kumquats are amusing because they are made inside out. Though they appear to the observer to be a normal, if rather small, citrus fruit, it becomes clear immediately to the eater that they have sweet skins and a very tart interior. Ha ha.

Wikipedia tells us that “they are slow-growing evergreen shrubs or short trees, from 2.5 to 4.5 metres (8 to 15 ft) tall, with sparse branches, sometimes bearing small thorns. The leaves are dark glossy green, and the flowers pure yellow, similar to other citrus flowers, borne singly or clustered in the leaf-axils. The kumquat tree produces 30 to 50 fruit each year.[dubious – discuss] The tree can be hydrophytic, with the fruit often found floating on water near shore during the ripe season.[citation needed]” I can’t speak for the hydrophytic (growing in water) nature of the tree, but the information on fruit production is dubious indeed. We have a very nice, short kumquat tree that we planted in ordinary garden soil a couple of years ago, and it gives us more fruit than we can count. Here is a photo of it after our most recent harvest:

“The plant is native to south Asia and the Asia-Pacific,” continues Wikipedia. “The earliest historical reference to kumquats appears in literature of China in the 12th century. They have long been cultivated in Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines and southeast Asia. They were introduced to Europe in 1846 by Robert Fortune, collector for the London Horticultural Society, and shortly thereafter into North America.” Their late arrival may account for the fact that they are not a particularly well-known or frequently grown garden tree in America. And their unusual taste guarantees that they are not going to be in a bowl on everyone’s table.

There are only so many one can eat in passing. Eating a kumquat really does wake you up. First you say, oooh, sweet. Then you say, yikes! sour!! A kumquat is a truly happy marriage of sweet and sour, in a pre-packaged and ready to eat form.

So what does one do with all the kumquats? We have asked ourselves that very question, but we are hardly the first to do so. Marmalade is the obvious answer, but we passed this year. Our shelves are already groaning under the weight of cherry, apricot and plum jam; we don’t need more jam. The people at Chow.com have some great answers to the question, all the way from soup to nuts… or at least from salad, through main course to dessert, with a nice rum drink to wash it all down.

The Captain found and adapted a delicious and unusual chicken dish that uses kumquats on the epicurious web-site.

You can find the recipe here, or over on the right in the recipe index.

But whether you look at the recipe or not, I hope some day you’ll have a chance to eat some kumquats. They’ll make you sit up and say ‘howdy!’

When in Rome…

12 Sunday Sep 2010

Posted by farfalle1 in Food, Italian recipes

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Spinach recipe, Spinach with raisins

The Ristorante Da Meo Patacca was a great favorite of the TWA crews years ago when the Captain was flying to Rome frequently. One of the most popular dishes of that discerning group of eaters was spinach prepared with garlic, pine nuts and raisins. Yes, raisins. Yum.

The recipe is simplicity itself. The quantities listed will make enough (barely) for two; adapt as required for your table.

2-3 Tablespoons raisins
1/2 kilo (1 lb) fresh spinach
2 Tablespoons olive oil
1 garlic clove, crushed
2-3 Tablespoons pine nuts

First put the raisins in a cup with some warm water and let them soak for a while – 15 minutes to half an hour should be sufficient.

Wash the spinach well and put it in a big stock pot with a little bit of water. Cover and bring to a boil, flipping the leaves around frequently so they cook evenly. Cook them only until they are wilted and dark green; do not finish cooking them. Pour into a colander and let sit for a while or, if you’re in a rush, press the remaining liquid out with a wooden spoon.

Wipe out the stock pot with a paper towel, put it back on the stove and put in the olive oil. Put the garlic in the oil and cook until it is nicely browned, then remove it.

Add the pine nuts to the oil and cook until only just beginning to turn brown.

Toss in the spinach and the raisins and cook, stirring frequently, until the spinach is cooked to the degree you like it. Add salt and pepper to taste.

It couldn’t be easier, and it is absolutely delicious. The raisins are a wonderful surprise.

Patience

06 Monday Sep 2010

Posted by farfalle1 in Italian habits and customs, Uncategorized

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

Lines in Italy, Waiting, Waiting in Italy

Patience is a virtue,
Posess it if you can.
It’s always found in woman
And seldom found in man.

My aged granny taught me that little bit of doggerel about a hundred years ago.

Patience.  If you are dreaming about moving to Italy, or even just having a visit here, it is a virtue you might want to cultivate.  One must wait in lines for everything here, from the Post Office to the Train Station Ticket Counter (allow extra time if you need to purchase train tickets at the station) to, always and ever, the food stores.  I’m always amazed at how patient everyone is as they shuffle slowly forward in whatever line they’re in.  Once a friend came late for tea, telling us that she had had to wait an hour at the Post Office.  An hour.

This is something that’s hard for Americans to wrap their heads around.  If there are more than three or four people ahead of us at the supermarket we become restive – quick! Open another register!

But with a slight attitude shift the lines and the waiting become rather fun.  First, they give a great opportunity for people watching.  Second, they give you the chance to remember the thing you forgot to get (if you’re at the market).  Third, they give the time to practice what you need to say in Italian (at the Post Office).  If you’re into meditation, the line is a great place to zone out and ommm for a while.

Also, the take-a-number system employed by many stores, offices and (hallelujah!) the Post Office now ensures that people are served in the order in which they arrived… or at least in the order in which they thought to take a ticket.  There’s something demoralizing, however, in taking a ticket at the deli counter and realizing that there are 18 people ahead of you.  But it’s better than the unchecked chaos that used to reign.

At the top is a photo of all the people waiting to check out at a nearby Ipercoop.  Granted it was a Sunday, so the store was quite crowded.  Che casino! as they say here – what a mess.  There were trolleys every which way, people with hand baskets and strollers trying to navigate through the lines, other people trying to sneak into the middle of a line.  What an adventure.  The postures of the women in the foreground tell the whole story: these are not people who are moving smartly along; these are people who are waiting.  What I said above about the waiting being fun?  I lied.  It really isn’t all that much fun, especially if it drags on for 20 minutes, as in the picture above.

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