Italian cuisine has never been so popular as it is
right now, with 'cooking class holidays' and 'gastronomical tours' in
Italy having become extremely popular. Olive-oil sales are rocketing
while Italian/Mediterranean cooking books are being sold, almost before
they hit the shelves and Italian farmers can hardly keep up with the
worlds demand for 'food made in Italy'.
The world appears to love
Italian food, from pizza to pasta, from wine to coffee and from fruit
to vegetables it all just seems to taste better from Italy!
Italians
have had a very close relationship with enjoying fine food throughout
history and one look at their ancestry explains why. Italian cuisine
has been influenced by the Greeks, Arabs, North Africans and all the
other cultures overthrown by the immense Roman Empire.
Most importantly, the famine endured by most Italians during
World War II shaped their cuisine for ever, as simple, cheap foods
like; pasta, pizza and most of the other classic Italian dishes were
borne from hardship alone during this time.
The hardship of war
meant that Italians began growing their own Mediterranean herbs and
vegetables in their own back gardens and both do particularly well in
the Mediterranean region. Vegetables like the artichoke have long been
prized by Arab cultures and thus it also features in Italian cuisine.
The arrival of the solanums (tomatoes, egg-plant, peppers etc) took
their cuisine into another dimension and subsequently had an effect on
the way that the rest of the world perceives food.
The
cultivation of vegetables and Mediterranean herbs has always been a
popular hobby for the men in Italy and it seems both a way of spending
time without 'the wife', keeping her happy and ensuring that they are
fed well with fresh vegetables and herbs from the orto (vegetable
garden). The freedom to consume healthy quantities of wine while
tending their vegetable gardens and discuss 'male business' in peace
could also be an incentive- but that's another story!
In any
case, tending the vegetable garden and herb garden is an important part
of Mediterranean culture. The right to have a piece of land to
themselves, without having to donate 50% to the aristocracy is indeed a
new right and the Italians have taken full advantage of it.
You
do not need to live in a huge villa to create a formal vegetable
garden, as a formal. Italian vegetable garden can be just 10 yards
across and can cost far far less than the standard method of planting
expensive roses. Italian vegetable and Mediterranean herb plants/seeds
cost cents as opposed to the tens of Euros needed to plant costly
shrubs etc. It has to be said that, aside from being easy to install,
inexpensive and spectacularly beautiful... Italian vegetables and
Mediterranean herbs are actually... EDIBLE!!!
Contemporary garden
designers here in Italy are looking towards history to find solutions
to modern problems and address modern requirements! We are also tearing
our hair out trying to convince the world that it's time to change...!
I truly believe that the future of gardening lies in the past, as there really is ... Nothing More Modern Than The Past...!!
Jonathan
Radford is an English landscape designer, dedicated to creating
ecological, Italian-style gardens from his base in Siena,
Tuscany.Contact him at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it