The Most Famous Italian food In The World

Italy is a country that has beautiful natural wealth, and has famous historical sites, also has famous Italian food in the world. The natural beauty and history of Italy make it one of the world’s tourist destinations. Not only natural and historical tourism, Italy has also become one of the world’s culinary tourist destinations. The reason is, typical Italian food is known to have a delicious taste. Moreover, several dishes of Italian origin have an international reputation, and are popular in many countries.

Popular Italian dishes are pizza, lasagna and carbonara. Italians use pasta and cheese for lasagna and carbonara. After that, there is also gelato ice cream which has various flavors. Typical Italian food is known from pasta ingredients and cheese toppings. Here’s a note on a meal originating from Italy.

1. Pasta

A typical dish that originates from Italy is pasta. This country in mainland Europe provides a variety of dishes from pasta. An example of a dish made from pasta is carbonara. There is also gnocchi paste, which is added with tomato sauce, sausage and turmeric spices.

2. Risotto

Not only pasta, there are also typical Italian dishes that are slightly soupy, namely risotto. This dish is made from whole grain rice, chicken broth, beef, and vegetables. The method for making rice and broth is stirred in low heat. After thickening and being cooked, the risotto is then topped with cheese, spices, and seafood.

3. Pizza

Pizza is a typical Italian dish that is popular in Indonesia. There are various optional toppings that are added to the top of the pizza, such as cheese, smoked meat, sausages, meatballs, and many more.

4. Polenta and Cured Meat

Northern Italy has special dishes for certain times. The name of this Italian dish is polenta. Polenta ingredients consist of yellow corn flour, then cooked with butter and Parmesan cheese. Polenta is generally eaten when it is cold in Italy. Not only polenta, residents also preserve meat. The name of the meat preserved into sausages is nduja. Nduja is made from pork. After that, this meat is cured to become spicy pork sausage.

5. Tortellini

Tortellini is a typical Italian dish in the form of small, flat pasta. Pasta tortellini includes pasta dishes that contain a cheese and meat mixture.

6. Tiramisu

The famous Italian cake is Tiramisu. In Indonesia, many Tiramisu are sold with various colors and unique flavor combinations. Tiramisu has a slightly bitter taste when eaten. In Italy, Tiramisu is a dessert. This cake is made from a combination of sugar, cheese and chocolate.

7. Gnocchi

Gnocchi are small, similar to tortellini, but fatter. Gnocchi is made from a combination of wheat flour and mashed potatoes. This food is also mixed with butter and sage.

8. Lasagna

Lasagna is a typical Italian dish which is famous in Indonesia. This dish is layered with pasta, cheese and meat. Lasagna is covered with tomato sauce, ricotta cheese and mozzarella cheese. The food ingredients are then baked until cooked.

9. Ravioli

Ravioli includes pasta-type dishes that are square or round in shape. The ingredients for making ravioli are flour, eggs, and olive oil. Instead, the inside of the ravioli contains a combination of ricotta cheese, spices, tomatoes, mozzarella cheese, and eggs. The inside is then put in pasta and then boiled in boiling water.

10. Spaghetti Carbonara

Spaghetti carbonara is also a typical Italian dish that is well known in Indonesia. Carbonara is made from eggs, parmesan cheese and dark pepper for spaghetti sauce.

11. Bruschetta

Another typical Italian dish is Bruschetta, which is a toasted bread dish. This dish is grilled with garlic, tomatoes, vegetables, mushrooms, and various toppings.

12. Margherita Pizza

Quoting from NDTV Food, Italy has a cheese pizza called margherita pizza. This dish uses mozzarella cheese to cover the entire top of the pizza. In addition to mozzarella cheese, tomatoes and basil are also added to the topping.

13. Pistachio Panna Cotta

Pistachio Panna Cotta is a sweet treat. Pistcahio Panna Cotta is made from gelatin, cream and milk. In Italian, panna cotta means cooked cream. Italian society serves panna cotta for events at home.

14. Panzenella

Italy has salad and vegetable bread for summer. Panzenella uses the main ingredients, namely tomatoes and bread. After that, the top is given a vegetable salad which is enjoyed when it’s hot.… Read More

Clear Lake, Garner restaurants among those with department of inspections infractions

CLARK KAUFFMAN Iowa Capital Dispatch

State, city and county food inspectors have cited Iowa restaurants and stores for hundreds of food-safety violations this past month, including moldy taco meat, beef marked “Not For Sale,” long-expired milk, and unskilled workers preparing sushi that failed to meet minimum safety standards.

One Des Moines food store was found to be importing fish directly from Thailand, which meant that none of it went through the usual process of being inspected and certified as safe. At the same store, whole chickens from an unknown, unlabeled source were being sold to the public.

The findings are reported by the Iowa Department of Inspections and Appeals, which handles food-establishment inspections at the state level. Listed below are some of the more serious findings that stem from inspections at Iowa restaurants, stores, schools, hospitals and other businesses over the past four weeks.

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The state inspections department reminds the public that their reports are a “snapshot” in time, and violations are often corrected on the spot before the inspector leaves the establishment. For a more complete list of all inspections, along with additional details on each of the inspections listed below, visit the Iowa Department of Inspections and Appeals’ website.

Fujisan Sushi at Sam’s Club, 305 Airport Road, Ames – During a Nov. 16 visits, a state inspector cited the establishment for food that was holding just above the maximum temperature of 41 degrees, including tempura shrimp at 42 degrees and crab at 43 degrees.

Also, the establishment was not following the required Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points protocol for identifying and managing risks related to sushi and raw-food production. The inspector noted there was no current HACCP plan on the premises, and there were issues with the proper calibration of the pH meter and the process used to test the pH level of the rice. Also, the establishment had not filled out the logbook with the dates of pH testing and other safety-related information.

The inspector also noted that the establishment was thawing crab meat in stagnant water rather than in running water.

Hy-Vee Foods, 2540 Euclid Ave., Des Moines – During a Nov. 16 visit, a state inspector noted that the required shellstock identification tags – used to track the source of shellfish in the event of a food-related outbreak of some kind – were not maintained alongside the store’s Cherrystone Clams, Littleneck Clams and Chesapeake Pride Oysters. Also, an inspection of the store’s Hickory House Kitchen indicated there was raw ground beef stored above a whole roast inside one cooler, and packages of raw chicken were stored above whole-muscle meat on a cart.

In addition, “heat-treated potatoes” were measured at 59 degrees on the breakfast area’s food preparation table; sliced ​​ham was holding at 61 degrees; and cooked sausages were measured at 46 degrees. All of those items had to be discarded as their holding temperatures weren’t hot enough to ensure food safety.

The inspector also noted that sliced ​​turkey, sliced ​​roast beef, cooked chicken, sausages, pico de gallo, and other foods were not marked with their preparation or opening dates. In the Hy-Vee Chinese area, packages of raw, unwashed mushrooms were stored directly on uncovered pans of cooked beef and chicken inside a walk-in cooler.

In addition, crab Rangoon was being held at 88 degrees, which was too cool to ensure safety; and egg rolls were held at 128 degrees. The egg rolls were reheated to 165 degrees and the crab Rangoon was discarded. In the Hy-Vee Chinese area, “pooling water and debris” was accumulating on the floor below the wok and the adjacent reach-in cooler. In the Hickory House Kitchen area, water was pooling on the floor near a handwashing sink.

The inspection was in response to three non-illness complaints. One complaint maintained to sanitation in the bottle-redemption area; one concerned sanitation in the Market Grille area; and the third concern alleged adulterated food in the meat, dairy and Hy-Vee Chinese areas. All three complaints were deemed unverifiable.

Seven Stars Family Restaurant, 2309 3rd Ave., Clear Lake – During a Nov. 2 visits, a Cerro Gordo County inspector found two half-gallons of milk in the refrigerator, with one having expired Sept. 26 and the other on Oct. 6. In addition, some food items in the walk-in cooler had no date markings on them, and cooked bacon was left in a pan, uncovered, on the floor of the walk-in cooler.

Hy-Vee Foods, 1025 Quincy Ave., Ottumwa – During a Nov. 1 visit, a state inspector found potatoes, presumably cooked, that were “on the counter for about 4 to 4.5 hours at an internal temperature of about 65 degrees” and had to be discarded. Also, the inside of an ice machine was soiled with a buildup of debris.

The inspector also cited

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Le Bernardin tops vaunted ‘List’ as NYC restaurants gear up for critical holiday season

December will be a make-or-break month for many Midtown restaurants hobbled by slow lunch business, but they’re not sweating it at Le Bernardin.

The West 50th Street seafood palace, where Michelin recently reaffirmed a precious three-star rating, was just named the world’s No. 1 restaurant for 2023 by La Liste, the increasingly influential rankings based in Paris. The findings are based on analysis of thousands of guidebooks, media stories and online reviews worldwide, while Michelin relies on anonymous inspector visits.

Eric Ripert, Le Bernardin’s chef and co-owner with Maguy Le Coze, celebrated the second time Le Bernardin has been so honored (it was also No. 1 on La Liste in 2019) as “excellent news for us. La Liste, which is only seven years old, is starting to impose itself,” and is widely followed by visitors to the Big Apple from Asian countries including Japan and Korea.

Le Bernardin hardly needs another boost. It shares the no. 1 billing with Guy Savoy in France and Frantzen in Sweden.

Ripert said Le Bernardin, which was also named No.  1 by La Liste in 2019, has "never been so busy."
Ripert said Le Bernardin, which was also named No. 1 by La Liste in 2019, has “never been so busy.”
Not all Midtown restaurants are experiencing the same kind of lunch success as Le Bernardin.
Not all Midtown restaurants are experiencing the same kind of lunch success as Le Bernardin.
Robert Miller

“We have never been so busy,” Ripert said — at lunch as well as at dinner.

But although tables are hard to come by before the end of the year, the one-two punch of Michelin and La Liste “are much more important to us in January and February.”

However, not everybody in Midtown, the heart of Manhattan’s restaurant industry, is ready to break out the Champagne. Holiday party bookings have been unexpectedly robust, but weak lunch traffic continues to be a lump of coal for places still recovering from the pandemic.

Although fine places have opened such as Fasano, Le Rock and Simon Oren’s buzzing new Monterey, and old favorites like Fresco by Scotto and Polo Bar seem like non-stop parties, the pandemic felled the fabled ’21’ Club and more are on the brink .

Times Square Alliance president Tom Harris said he’s “watching December closely.” He said the restaurant business area is down 9% overall from 2019 levels. Reduced lunch demand kept places such as Jasmine’s on Restaurant Row dark before 4 pm

The turbulent scene keeps savvy owners on their toes. Jeff Bank, CEO of Alicart Restaurant Group, which owns Carmine’s and Virgil’s, said operators must “acknowledge the huge shifts in demographics and timing.”

Before COVID, “You pretty much knew what was going to happen at lunch and dinner,” he said. But now, “We have to be flexible. It’s easier for [better-established places] that have multi-legs to stand on. We know Friday is dead due to empty offices, but we can pick up tourism on the weekend.”

Alicart Restaurant Group CEO Jeff Bank said restaurant operators must “recognize the huge shifts in demographics and timing.”
Alicart Restaurant Group CEO Jeff Bank said restaurant operators must “recognize the huge shifts in demographics and timing.”
Freelancers

Owners or landlords of Gallagher’s, Bryant Park Grill and Nobu 57 all claim their revenues are running 20-25% higher than in 2019. But New York Hospitality Alliance’s Andrew Rigie said, “For restaurants that relied heavily on office workers, it’s tough when the building upstairs is less than 50% occupied.”

The new Avra ​​on Sixth Avenue always looks full, but partner Nick Tsoulos says his three restaurants are only “about 60% to 70% back” compared to pre-COVID levels.

“I’m waiting to see [what happens] this Christmas season,” he said. the
“power lunch” where prime-movers did business over their meals, “has faded,” he added.

Ben Grossman, CEO of Fireman Hospitality Group, said that the company’s overall business is “close to pre-COVID.” But lunch is a little softer at Italian spots Bond 45 and Trattoria Dell’ Arte.

Dinner still rocks, especially at Trattoria across Seventh Avenue from Carnegie Hall.

“What’s missing in the area is lunch,” Grossman said. “Friday which used to be our best lunch day is now the worst.”

Some lunch traffic is location-specific, based on office occupancy in the same buildings as the restaurants. Porter House Bar & Grill at Columbus Circle had less of a lunch crowd because Deutsche Bank staff, who replaced Time Warner upstairs, seemed to take more meals in their cafeteria than their media predecessors did.

Trattoria Dell' Arte, like many restaurants in Midtown, is suffering from a softer lunch during the week.
Trattoria Dell’ Arte, like many restaurants in Midtown, is suffering from a softer lunch during the week.
Helayne Seidman

However, chef/owner Michael Lomonaco said, “Our private events have never been stronger since the summer” and his 260 seats are filled almost every night.

The private events frenzy is making up for a slower lunch trade — half as in 2019 — at Dino Arpaia’s Cellini on East 54th Street. The popular spot has hosted recent parties for Santander Bank, Jefferies, KPMG, Blackstone and Black Rock.

But, “They’re all condensed into Tuesday through Thursday because they don’t come in

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