drinks – Æolia http://blog.aeolia.com Ristorante in Costozza Thu, 01 Dec 2016 22:10:31 +0000 it-IT hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://i0.wp.com/blog.aeolia.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/cropped-logo-aeolia-color.gif?fit=32%2C32 drinks – Æolia http://blog.aeolia.com 32 32 181766824 COOK’N WITH ‘CLASS’ in Vicenza – Vicenza Cooking Class at Æolia http://blog.aeolia.com/cookn-with-class-in-vicenza-vicenza-cooking-class-at-aeolia-2/ http://blog.aeolia.com/cookn-with-class-in-vicenza-vicenza-cooking-class-at-aeolia-2/#respond Sun, 21 Feb 2016 23:38:41 +0000 http://www.blog.aeolia.com/?p=5643 cooking-class

For the new Year  We have 3 type of course:

1) “PASTA E BASTA” –P&B- on monday from 11.00 to 15.00.

Mini Cooking classes where we Prepare 5 different Main Course and each time they are be different! Three of them to eat there as a group, and the other two to take home.

Only 35 euros Drinks included Minimum of 10 people maximun 20
(If less than 10 the price is 315 for any number you are)

2) CHEF FOR A DAY – C4AD– from 17.00 to 21.00 on Monday/Wensday/Thursday.

Similar to Pasta e basta but we can make even on afternoon (depend avaiability)

Here is intended to prepare and then eat a complete menu, generally an apetizer, a main course, one serving og meat and vegetables and a dessert
(if you like to make fagottini the menù will be shorter due preparetion time)

here are 2 examples:

– one with the fagottini http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-chef-4-one-day
– and another without http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-chef-4-one-day

Only 35 euros Drinks included Minimum of 10 people maximun 20
(If less than 10 the price is 315 for any number you are)

3) A COURSE IN 4 LESSON ON  –Cuocinando– on thursday from 17.00 to 21.00

Basic http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-corso-basic-cooking-class
Advanced http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-corso-advanced-cooking-class
Master http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-corso-master-cooking-class

Price varies on the course. Drinks and food are included. Minimum of 10 to maximun 20 people.
(If less than 10 people the price is 10% less of the cost for 10 for any number you are)

home

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COOK’N WITH ‘CLASS’ in Vicenza – Vicenza Cooking Class at Æolia http://blog.aeolia.com/cookn-with-class-in-vicenza-vicenza-cooking-class-at-aeolia/ http://blog.aeolia.com/cookn-with-class-in-vicenza-vicenza-cooking-class-at-aeolia/#respond Tue, 05 Jan 2016 23:03:16 +0000 http://www.blog.aeolia.com/?p=5636 Like it![zilla_likes]

Anche per il nuovo anno proseguiamo con  3 proposte di corso:

1) “Pasta e Basta” –P & B– il lunedi 11,00-15,00.

Corsi di cucina Mini dove prepariamo 5 diversi Primi  e ogni volta sono  diversi! Tre da preparare e mangiare assieme, e gli altri due da portare a casa.

Solo 35 euro Bevande incluse minimo di 10 persone massimo 20

2) CHEF PER UN GIORNOC4AD– 17,00-21,00 il Lunedi / Giovedi.

Simile a Pasta e basta, ma si può fare anche a pomeriggio (dipende Disponibilità)

con lo scopo di preparare e poi mangiare un menu completo, generalmente un antipasto, un primo , un secondo, verdure e dessert

qui ci sono 2 esempi:

– Uno con i fagottini http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-chef-4-one-day
– E un altro senza http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-chef-4-one-day

Solo 35 euro Bevande incluse minimo di 10 persone massimo 20

3) Un corso di 4 LEZIONI  -Cuocinando- il giovedi 17,00-21,00

Basic http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-corso-basic-cooking-class
Advanced http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-corso-advanced-cooking-class
Master http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-corso-master-cooking-class

Il prezzo varia in corso. Cibo e bevande sono incluse. Minimo di 10 ad massimo 20 persone.
(Se meno di 10 persone il prezzo è di 10% in meno del costo per 10 )

For the new Year  We have 3 type of course:

1) “PASTA E BASTA” –P&B- on monday from 11.00 to 15.00.

Mini Cooking classes where we Prepare 5 different Main Course and each time they are be different! Three of them to eat there as a group, and the other two to take home.

Only 35 euros Drinks included Minimum of 10 people maximun 20
(If less than 10 the price is 315 for any number you are)

2) CHEF FOR A DAY – C4AD– from 17.00 to 21.00 on Monday/Thursday.

Similar to Pasta e basta but we can make even on afternoon (depend avaiability)

Here is intended to prepare and then eat a complete menu, generally an apetizer, a main course, one serving og meat and vegetables and a dessert
(if you like to make fagottini the menù will be shorter due preparetion time)

here are 2 examples:

– one with the fagottini http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-chef-4-one-day
– and another without http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-chef-4-one-day

Only 35 euros Drinks included Minimum of 10 people maximun 20
(If less than 10 the price is 315 for any number you are)

3) A COURSE IN 4 LESSON ON  –Cuocinando– on thursday from 17.00 to 21.00

Basic http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-corso-basic-cooking-class
Advanced http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-corso-advanced-cooking-class
Master http://www.blog.aeolia.com/events/cuocinando-corso-master-cooking-class

Price varies on the course. Drinks and food are included. Minimum of 10 to maximun 20 people.
(If less than 10 people the price is 10% less of the cost for 10 for any number you are)

home

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10 Rules For Eating in Italy Without Scaring the Italians http://blog.aeolia.com/10-rules-for-eating-in-italy-without-scaring-the-italians/ http://blog.aeolia.com/10-rules-for-eating-in-italy-without-scaring-the-italians/#respond Tue, 29 Jan 2013 00:07:34 +0000 http://www.blog.aeolia.com/?p=3153 10 Rules For Eating in Italy Without Scaring the Italians
Posted by:  Posted date: May 24, 2012 In: Everyday LifeTOP 10 TIPSTRIPS & TRICKS | comment :

Italian food culture is probably very different from what you’re used to at home. And, since Italians have been perfecting it for over 1,000 years, try going with the wine and olive oil flow instead of fighting against the current when you’re in Italy.

1. Don’t ask for “fettuccine alfredo” or “spaghetti with meatballs”

They don’t exist here. Alfredo is an Italian name, and when I asked my Florentine friends if they really had never heard of “fettuccine alfredo,” they responded: “Chi?” (Who?). To get pasta with cream sauce, try any one withpanna (cream) listed in the ingredients – just know that you’ll never find pollo (chicken), on that same list. Explaining the idea of putting chicken in pasta provokes confused looks and expressions like, “Che schifo!” (How disgusting!) Likewise, spaghetti is not served with meatballs. In Naples, you’ll find miniature ones on other types of pasta. Everywhere else, pasta al ragù (with meat sauce) is a common first course, and “polpette” (meatballs), are a typical – separate – second course. If you’re way ahead of me and already thinking, “I’ll just ask for both those things and mix them together,” you can certainly do that. But…reread the title of this article first.

2. Only drink wine or water with a meal

Wine and Water Italian Beverages and Drinks

Water & Wine: The Only Beverages Acceptable to Drink with an Italian Meal

In America, my mom used to open up the fridge come dinnertime and list every drinkable thing inside: “Ok, we’ve got ginger ale, milk, coke, lemonade, bacardi breezers…what do you want?” This would never happen in Italy. The table is usually set with a bottle of sparkling or still water, and a bottle of wine. Cocktails and liquors are reserved for: aperitivi (before-dinner drinks) anddigestivi (after dinner drinks). Italians take enjoying the flavor of food very seriously; and you have to admit, drinking peach ice tea with rosemary lamb chops has to mess with your taste buds. One exception is pizza, to which Coke and beer are acceptable compliments – but a single glass; no refills.

3. Don’t eat eggs in the morning

The quintessential Italian breakfast is a strong espresso and a sweet pastry. Mix up some scrambled eggs to start your day, and your Italian roommates will watch as if you’re building a spaceship on their stove top. In Italy, eggs are usually eaten hard-boiled on a lunchtime salad or sandwich, or as a frittata (open-faced omelet) for dinner. If you’re dying for a salty breakfast, try a ham and cheese toast (you guessed it, a toasted sandwich) at a local bar (in Italy, a café is called a “caffè” or “bar”), or escape to American paradise, The Diner, where you can find sausages, omelets and bacon on the menu.

The Diner
Via dell’Acqua, 2 – Florence
+39 055 290748
Open from 8:00 to 22:30, daily

Italian Cappucino in Florence Italy at Moyo

The Giant Cappucino At Moyo Bar in Florence, Italy

4. Do drink cappuccino in the morning

…with your (non-egg) breakfast, and not as an accompaniment or finish to other meals. A sure-fire way to be immediately labeled “foreign” is ordering up a pizza and a cappuccino. If you want to fit in, wean yourself off frothy milk and get used to black espresso, which Italians drink after eating, all day long. Or, feed your cappuccino habit with one of the giant, almost bowl-sized ones at Moyo Bar in the morning, and ride the high for the rest of the day.

Moyo 
Via de’ Benci, 23r – Florence
+39 055 2479738
Open from 8:00am – 2:00 or 3:00am, daily

5. Know what a “pepperoni pizza” is

Duh! Sliced meat on a pizza! …right? In most countries, yes. But in Italy, “pepperoni” is Italian for the plural of bell pepper. So, if it’s little red meat circles you want and not strips of red or yellow peppers, order a “pizza al salamino” – just be prepared for a some spiciness.

6. Peel your fruits and vegetables

Peel Fruits and Vegetables in Italy

Italians Peel Most Fruits and Vegetables

Italians peel fruits and vegetables normally enjoyed with the skin on in other countries: apples, pears, sometimes peaches, carrots, cucumbers, potatoes; and even they don’t know exactly why. I’ve heard, “it’s healthier,” “you’ll get sick if you don’t,” and “it tastes better, ” but I think it’s mostly just tradition. And why peelers are sold in Italy, Italians prefer good, old-fashioned knives. If you eat unpeeled produce in front of them, they might just take it out of your hand, remove the skin in one perfect spiral, and slice it into uniform wedges with the speed and dexterity of a sushi chef. In fact, one of my most embarrassing moments (and I have a lot to choose from) was trying to peel a pear at the dinner table while my Italian friend’s parents watched.

7. Don’t ask for salad dressing

…reach for the olive oil and vinegar.  If you want to be pointed in the direction of the salad dressing aisle at the grocery store, you’ll get blank looks (because there isn’t one). Some tourist restaurants have “ranch” and “french dressing,” which taste like anything but ranch and french dressing. It’s best to begin an amateur mixologist career, finding the perfect balance of oil and vinegar for your palette. Sound a little boring? You probably haven’t tasted authentic Italian oilio e aceto (oil and vinegar); the varieties are endless and the flavors intense. Opt for a cloudy, green oil and pay a little extra for an aged, balsamic vinegar, and you might just write off other (less healthy) dressings for life.

Condiments Salad Dressing Italian Olive Oil Mayonaise Mustard Ketchup

The Only Condiment, The Only Salad Dressing: Olive Oil

8. Use condiments sparingly

Olive oil is the only real Italian condiment. All the rest came from some other place and show up at grocery stores on the same shelf as exotic food. But “exotic” will not be the word Italians use to describe you putting ranch dressing on your pizza, ketchup on your potatoes, and mayonnaise on your sandwich, to their friends. People in Italy like to enjoy the exceptional flavor of what they’re eating (which is usually handmade, or picked that day), and not mask it with other toppings. If they’re eating chicken,  they want to taste chicken, not barbecue sauce. A condiment (read: olive oil) should enhance flavors, never cover them up.

9. Take time to enjoy your food

Eating is not a race, and a bowl of cereal in front of late-night TV is not a dinner. It’s not uncommon for Italians to spend an hour preparing a meal and even more time savoring every bite. And when eating out: service is slow, courses are many, and it’s highly unlikely that a waiter will ever tell you they “need your table.” Block off large chunks of time in your agenda for eating. Italian food is unbelievably good and so worthy of “wasting” a few hours; sitting at a table is so much nicer that running around town with a sandwich in your hand. Relax! You’re in Italy! You can mail that letter and drop off your laundry…tomorrow :)

10. Wait to eat plain bread with your meal

Dipping bread in sauce in Italy

“Fai La Scarpetta!” (Do The Little Shoe!) Italian for: Using Bread To Mop Up Food

Can’t wait to show Italy how Italian you are by sitting down at your first ristorante, pouring some olive oil and vinegar on your plate, sprinkling it with Parmesan cheese and dipping your bread inside? Save it for the Olive Garden, because, like that restaurant, it’s actually not Italian at all. Visitors to Florence often complain about the flavor of plain Tuscan bread, as it’s made without salt. But that’s just because they don’t know that in Italy, table bread is more of a utensil than an eat-alone food. It’s used as the main tool to fare la scarpetta (do the little shoe): the action of mopping up any delicious-ness left on your plate after a meal, or whatever your fork can’t pick up during one.

*Interesting fact: Fare la scarpetta (do the little shoe) ‘s origin came from one of three things: 1) An old word similar to “scarpetta” that was used to describe someone who didn’t have enough food 2) That bread picking up food off a plate is similar to they way the sole of a shoe picks up things off the ground 3) That using bread to scrape up food off a plate smashes it into a shape that somewhat resembles a shoe. (I choose to believe #3).

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Æventi della Settimana – where to eat in Vicenza on Friday http://blog.aeolia.com/aeventi-della-settimana-friday/ http://blog.aeolia.com/aeventi-della-settimana-friday/#respond Wed, 23 Jan 2013 23:36:24 +0000 http://www.blog.aeolia.com/?p=3096 scampi.jpg

Long Live Cod!

Dried salted cod fish –

Appetizer

Rice with cod fish

Sacred and Profane Cod Fish

Sorbetto

28 euros

Drinks not included

Minimum of 2 people

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Æventi della Settimana – where to eat in Vicenza on Monday http://blog.aeolia.com/aeventi-della-settimana-monday/ http://blog.aeolia.com/aeventi-della-settimana-monday/#respond Wed, 23 Jan 2013 23:29:34 +0000 http://www.blog.aeolia.com/?p=3088 primop.jpgcropped-melanzana.jpg

 

Pasta and That’s All!

Prepare 5 different pastas, and each time it will be different! Three will be to eat as a group, and the other two to take home.

35 euros

Drinks included

Minimum of  10 people

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