Italian food secrets that make it the world's greatest cuisine
Embrace all things Italy at home
Choose quality ingredients
Make time for an aperitivo
Know your olive oils
Considering how much Italian food differs from region to region – sometimes you’d think you were in another country – it’s not surprising that olive oils have just as many regional variations. If you like your olive oil peppery, go for Tuscan oil. Ligurian olive oil has a much-prized subtlety and is paler in colour. Go south to Puglia and Sicily and the flavours become sharper and fruitier. Check out our complete guide to olive oil for more buying and storing tips.
Be generous with sage
While some British and American cooks tend to think of sage as something that goes with stuffing, the Italians have discovered many uses for this wonderfully aromatic herb. One of the most popular is to chop the leaves and let them infuse in melted butter to pour over a filled pasta dish such as pumpkin tortelloni. You could also try this recipe for polenta gnocchi with sage butter.
Don’t sniff at tinned tomatoes
Use the right risotto rice
Add the finishing touch to risotto
There’s a very good – and simple – reason why an above-average risotto will have a glistening gloss to the finished dish. That will be the generous addition of butter and parmesan at the end of the cooking. Allow for a bit of time to allow the butter and cheese to melt, leaving the dish with the most luxurious creaminess. Try this in famed French chef Marco Pierre White’s spring vegetable risotto recipe.
Cook pasta in lots of water
Keep an eye on the pasta cooking time
Use the pasta water
Add your pasta to the sauce
Start with a soffritto
Be careful with chilli – to a point
As a general rule of thumb, the further south you go in Italy, the more chilli you’ll find in regional dishes. You won’t have to go too far: by the time you’ve reached Lazio and Abruzzo, you will have tasted the wonderful simplicity of spaghetti aglio, olio e peperoncino – spaghetti with garlic, olive oil and the thin red chillies known as peperoncini – as shown in this delicious recipe. By the time you’ve reached Calabria in the deep south, you can try their famously spicy sausage ’nduja.
Don't overlook capers
Use breadcrumbs
Cook potatoes for gnocchi in their skins
Get the pasta right
Don’t put cream in carbonara
Don’t add oil to pasta water
Go easy on the garlic
Use courgette flowers
Take time for coffee
Finish with a digestivo
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