Italians, and Italian American Food

Italians are really proud of their culture, for good reason, and they don’t experiment a lot because of that.

It’s no secret to the food-informed that Italian food is one of the most celebrated cuisines across the globe. At any turn, Italian food is ubiquitous, often at the top of food surveys and guides – Italians, of course, are passionate about their cultural food offerings, and seem to enjoy their place among the celebrated.

Italian Food

Three Itailan pasta dishes on a table - pasta e ceci, pasta alla gricia and amatriciana
Instagram/armandoalpantheon

For example, there is a stark contrast between Italian-American garlic bread, and Italian “garlic bread”. For Italians, garlic bread is a bruschetta, lightly rubbed with garlic cloves and a drizzle of olive oil. Italian-American garlic bread, on the other hand, features butter, a garlic spread applied to the loaf, parsley, and sometimes mozzarella. For the Italian, the inclusion of cheese and parsley, butter, and a heaping of garlic would confuse them – “why would you add these extra ingredients? Unnecessary!” We could hear the shouting now in the alleyways of an Italian town. But for the Italian-American, the experience of a new land brought a new frontier, and a new sense of possibilities.

Two photos of garlic bread - North American garlic bread on the right with butter, herbs and cheese, and Italian garlic bread on the right - toasted bread, olive oil and fresh garlic
©Shugary Sweets, ©A Day in Rome

Italian-American Food

Traveling across the Atlantic, you arrive in the United States, home to approximately 15.9 million citizens of Italian descent. As popular as Italian food is globally, in the US, Italian food has taken on a personality all on its own. After over 100 years of Italian immigration, a subculture of Italian identity formed in America, as did its cuisine. Now, we have Italian-American food, distinct as a Brooklyn dialect.

We thought we were eating authentic Italian food, because the dishes were the same ones all the other Italian families we knew cooked and ate. But in reality, our cuisine was an American invention: an amalgam of hearty, rustic dishes brought here, primarily by southern Italian immigrants (my grandparents came from Abruzzo and Campania), then adapted and embellished upon in American kitchens.”

Itallian-American food of spaghetti and meatballs, sprinkled with parsley
©Delish.com

The adaptation and embellishment of Italian-American cuisine gave way to bolder, heavier dishes. Our guess is that dishes amalgamated to also coincide with the timing of meals; in North America, dinner is usually the largest meal, whereas in Italy, lunch is the main meal of the day. Consequently, chicken parmigiana with a side of pasta, and chicken tetrazzini became staples, as Italian-Americans adapted to meat-based dishes for family dinners, as well as Italian restaurants serving to the hungry dinner rush.

We thought we were eating authentic Italian food, because the dishes were the same ones all the other Italian families we knew cooked and ate. But in reality, our cuisine was an American invention

Italians, on the other hand, view meat as a separate item, a secondary dish, or “secondo”. Even then, it’s often smaller in quantities, and usually seasoned without much cheese or sauce; while there are meat-based pasta sauces (e.g., ragu or Bolognese), you will generally not see pasta served with larger cuts of meat, or chicken. Further, Italians very much cook according to seasonality and availability, with the use of ingredients dictated by location, and time of year.

Spezzatino (Italian beef stew) in a white bowl with a glass of red wine to the side
©Juls Kitchen

Italian-American dishes, rather, deliver a full-throated bellow – think Lobster fra diavolo, the aforementioned chicken parmigiana, or Brooklyn-style pizza. All these dishes bring about an expression of flavor to the maximum (and beyond). It’s as if Italian-Americans are saying, through their food “we have arrived, we have prospered, so we are making our dishes grand and beautiful”. In a sense, it is the quintessential expression of the immigrant success story in America, that their dishes reflect a newfound freedom, an ability to showcase with a bevy of ingredients, to demonstrate that with hard work, and opportunity, anything can happen. It is something that, for Italians, who view their food making as sacred, and not in need of any change, is perhaps lost in translation when they see their cross-Atlantic cousins making the gravy.

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