8.26.2012



Colazione, pranzo, aperativo, cena. Everything in Italy seems to be organized around food.

Before you go to work you'll have a caffé con brioche. At lunchtime you hook up with your colleagues or meet some friends to have a decent pranzo which usually consists out of a primo (pasta), a secondo (meat, fish or vegetables) all flushed away by some water or a vino della casa. If this hasn't been enough you can go out for an aperativo late afternoon or wait for diner time.

Even in Milano many shops - especially the small entrepreneurs - are closed from 13.00h to around 16.00h. To people from the north of Europe this might seem very old fashioned. For the Italians however this closure (or siesta as it is called in Spain) gives the entrepreneurs the opportunity to have a decent lunch. The decent lunch will enable them to go on until halfway the evening.

During the weekend lunch becomes even more important. On Sunday families or groups of friends go out together or meet each other in a ristorante or go for a picnic or barbecue in the countryside.

A few weeks ago me and my boyfriend went for a long hike up in the mountains near Bergamo. Since there was enough time we started somewhere around 300m and walked up to a rifugio a 1000m higher up. After a three hours walk - during which we hardly encountered any people - we reached the top. And we were amazed. Not only by the view but probably more by the fact that the hill-top and the field around the rifugio was packed by people eating polenta and drinking local wine.

This is Italy. Even when you don't expect it, you will find food and people enjoying it. Although people might be critical on the country and the way it has been governed in the last decennia we could all learn from their traditions in which food - and eating food in particular - has such an important role in daily live. After all  it is true that Mediterranean diet and life style makes people healthy and old.