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Five
Tips From An Italian On A Mediterranean
Diet
By
Constance Weygandt
Growing up Italian, I marveled at the women
and men, in my family, who cooked. Not only
were they wonderful chefs but had a natural
talent for balancing food groups. There
was an emphasis on fresh produce and meat,
that I am partial to today. One of my grandmothers
used to take me to the chicken store to
pick out a chicken. Yes, the chicken was
still clucking and running around. Today,
although I no longer visit the chicken store
to get the freshest poultry available, there
are still some valuable lessons I like to
follow.
Think of Pasta as a side dish, not a main
course. The first time I was served pasta,
outside of my family, I was astonished.
The pasta on my plate would have been four
servings, in my family. One pound of pasta
serves eight people. Two ounces of pasta
with a vegetable and a protein is a meal.
Serve more vegetable dishes, if needed.
Only serve bread with your pasta on occasion.
Pasta is your grain.
Have a hearty soup, as a meal, at least
once a week. There are so many nutritious
and wonderful soups. A soup with leafy greens
and beans, served with a good Italian bread,
was often served at my house. A soup, with
pasta in the soup, such as chicken noodle
would not be served with bread.
Make a salad the first course. Having more
courses for dinner helps to regulate the
portions eaten in each course. I remember
having a salad, with an olive oil and red
wine vinegar salad dressing, at every dinner.
Use olive oil as your main fat. We very
rarely ate anything deep fried. Instead,
if there was oil involved, we sautéed
our vegetables, chicken or fish, and pasta
in olive oil.
Have fruit or nuts as a dessert. During
the holidays, my grandmother always had
a huge fruit bowl and another bowl with
a variety of fresh nuts on her dining room
table. After dinner, we were allowed to
choose a fruit from the bowl and a handful
of nuts. Sweet breads, cakes and cookies
were an occasional treat, eaten two to three
times a month.
I don’t follow all of my grandmother’s
cooking traditions as much as I probably
should. However, when I start to gain a
few pounds, I typically fall back on the
old ways. My sisters and I lead busy lives.
Many still have children to raise as well
as jobs. It is not always easy to cook the
way my mother, father and grandparents did.
I was surprised, therefore, when talking
to my sister not too long ago. Even though
we live thousands of miles apart, in both
of our houses, there was a pot of soup and
a pot of sauce simmering on the stove as
well as a chicken simmering in the crock
pot. I guess the apple doesn’t fall
far from the tree, or is it the olive?
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