It's okay, it's a mistake that gets done so many times EVEN by other nations that in countries where there are embassies of both countries, they legit sort out mail together to see which was actually meant to be sent to the other rofl
As a portuguese, I love to discover diferent italian dishes, because aside from pasta and pizza, there are several dishes similar or with a similar concept, and I love to find their similarities
Per la mia esperienza, sono stato in Portogallo diverse volte, ho sempre apprezzato la vostra cultura culinaria e ho sempre apprezzato le vostre specialità. Personalmente, è solo una mia opinione, rispetto alla Spagna, ho sempre ritenuto migliore la cucina portoghese, ma non voglio creare un dibattito, è solo la mia misera considerazione
There's plenty of Italian food many Italians themselves don't know exist. I once talked to a Sicilian chef about traditional Tuscan dishes. She had never heard of any of them. She loved Tuscany and had been there several times, but more or less every little village in Italy has its own unique traditions in the area of cusine.
I sure hope there's a Part 2 for the remaining regions that you skipped 🤨 As an Italian who doesn't know too much about every Italian region's culture but loves learning about different foods, I appreciate this video a lot!
I have visited Italy twice and 3 main cities, Rome, Florence and Venice. Oh my my my the food is incredible. Italian food inside italy is sooooo gooood. I recommend everyone who visits Europe should go to Italy. You have probably looked into less than half of what it could offer. When I get married, I'll visit Italy every year to check all the cities and the food it could offer. Very romantic and very beautiful country and the people are so passionate and lovely generally. I also loved the sandwich in the famous All’Antico Vinaio Florence shop. I recommend it, the lines move faster so don't worry about the length of it.
Food heaven. It is an incredible country. Like all great food cultures it is regional. In Tuscany, Florence & Livorno may as well be different countries. Another great video. Excellent insights.
Guys, this is just the tip of the iceberg. Each region has 20 to 30 typical local dishes. Within the region you can find provincial variations of regional dishes.
I don't want to make a long list of dishes that you haven't mentioned, your video has the right point of view because it talks about regional cuisine. I would just like to correct some serious errors. To be more precise, chickpea farinata is from Genova and dates back to the 13th century. Porchetta comes from Ariccia in Lazio or Norcia in Umbria. The arrosticini are typical of Abruzzo and not of Puglia. Sardinia, isolated for millennia, has a very particular cuisine and desserts of extraordinary beauty (look for coricheddos and durchiceddos). And Calabria?
Thank you for this wonderful and very incomplete video. Of course, a 10-minute video about Italian cuisine outside pasta will be "forse" incomplete. But the idea is excellent! And I hope this video inspires more content creators to talk more about the diversity of Italian cuisine.
Great video Matthew! Some honest criticism: Maybe change the way your structure the video? After explaining a few regions, the video gets a bit pale. Furthermore, your voice sound is not normalized (different volumes) so I would recommend to take a look at that or even only record with one device only. Good luck!
I love you man, from Italy! People are very delusional thinking that is only pasta and pizza, this misconception has been spreaded methodically by Italian haters, there is a lot more that you can try and discover, loved the video, new subscriber!
Out of all of the dishes covered here, the artichoke one was the most interesting to learn about even if I have no desire to consume it at all. Just plain neat to find out about all these various dishes that just never come up.
I’m Italian (from northern Italy, from the region of Liguria), I live in London now, for the past 10 years. Where I come from we mostly eat Risotto instead than Pasta, and another very good meaty dish is “pollo alla fricassea” a chicken stew slow-cooked in broth, cream and butter, it’s from both Italy and France.
What I'm most interested in myself is the Crossover it has with Greek Food. The South shares so much cultural heritage with Greece. Also impacting Greek and Italian Australian food too
I'm from Brasil, simply love your chanel and, if you ever come to Portugal - where I live now - please let's meet and get some food here. Portugal has such an amazing cousine!
You are completely right about the north. We have a lot of crossover food. Cheese, truffle, risotto, gnocchi, chocolate and whipped cream are our favourites.
@@francisdrake7060 I've had Italian beers beyond the standard mass produced ones and they're fine. I just wouldn't rate them over any of the greats from like Belgium or Germany
I wonder if it's difficult to find these diverse dishes in restaurants when you come to Italy as a tourist. It's probably easy to end up just eating pizza and pasta.
You can find some of them; but for the other half you probably can't seek on a regular "reastaurant" and you have to look for place that offer food for common folks, not luxury, elegant tourist traps... Something such as "tavern/trattoria/pub" and so on... If you go on certain restaurants, you may only find the rich version of some "traditional" dishes, but they are totally different from the original ones... In both look and taste. Btw, bigger cities offers a huge variety of food from everywhere.
Eating pasta isn't a problem, it's that foreigners always go for the same 5 pasta dishes. Pasta is like rice to East Asian cuisines, it's kind of a base, not a dish per se. Trofie with pesto is different from busiate alla trapanese which are again different from agnolotti al plin or garganelli alla zingara. Leave that pasta alfredo, carbonara or spaghetti bolognese aside, pasta is in various dishes, from North to South.
It seems like you missed the most delicious one of them all: Parmigiana di Melanzane (Campania). But also classics like Panzerotto (Puglia), Gnocchi Fritto (Emilia Romagna) Maritozzo (Lazio), Sfogliatella and Baba (Campania), Granita (Sicilia) and all the variaties of Salami (which would be a great subject for a video too)
@@theresemalmberg955 not really. There are soo many books on regional cuisine. As far as I know, there is no really best, or most famous book for any of Italian regions
You know, my maternal grandmother who is Azorean (part of Portugal) feels that Italian USer food diversity & diversity of Italian food in general is severely underrepresented beyond the heavy red sauce based dishes (which give her acidic stomach) plus pizza & pasta, especially given the dearth of bakeries showcasing even the regional stuff that could be brought. It really is a shame how little of the Italian food diversity (in diaspora versions or otherwise) gets shown heeding how rich it is alongside other regional Italian cultural facets. For example, one fairly major stuff of Sardinia that gets used quite often is bottarga, not too unlike using parmesan for bringing savory depth to dishes & is one of Italian regions to get practically no representation abroad at all
That's already happened. Pizza was only eaten in Naples, before it became known as Italian food in America thanks to Neapolitan Italian immigrants, and the rest of Italy had to accommodate the tourists who expected to find pizza everywhere in the country.
@@ehmzedYall give too much relevance to tourists. The explanation is simple: Neapolitans have been migrating to the North since the industrial triangle and during the economic boom the Northern richer regions were full of Southern Italians (and Neapolitans). First pizza was for those in the "Neapolitan community", then it started to spread, bit by bit. That's also how granita, from Sicily, has been a staple of our summers for years, and how cannoli, also Sicilian, can be found quite often (despite the fact that its specific fresh ricotta is quite hard to get)
Now whenever I see the Roman Colosseum @6:16 I, can’t help, but to see MV Goji taking a nice long nap, within the famous structure. PS Love your videos and hoe much time & effort you put into to help teach more people about different countries, and there unique culinary menus in traditions keep up the good work mate.
Then all the Americas have fusion cuisines, even Mexico or Peru when they use chicken and pork, wheat, rice, bananas, onions, mangoes, coffee and sugar. Tomatoes weren't even the same when they were brought over and nowadays Italy grows its own (quite famed) varieties
Ottimo filmato, complimenti. Mancano alla rassegna molte specialità italiane che anche gli italiani non conoscono. La cucina italoamericana me la devi spiegare perché non la conosco. In Sicilia la cucina è l'incontro tra la cucina italiana e quella arabo mediterranea e sud africana. cmq ottimo lavoro ciao
good video, but i'd probably do a part 2 to it and cover more regions and food that you didnn't cover here. Also, small note, Porchetta is from Lazio, not Tuscany. It's from the town of Ariccia, near Rome.
What are you talking about? Every region has its own Porchetta. One of the very best is from Tuscany. Second best Umbria. It's just roast pork. What a bizarre comment.
@@shakiMiki i am from Italy, been to Ariccia many times over and as far as i know the most famous, most important, most well regarded and easiest to find at the store is the one from Ariccia.
@@mygetawayart That makes your post even stranger. It exists in every corner of Italy where they have pigs. From Veneto to Sicily different versions . You will hear Abruzzi & Umbrians claiming they invented too. Which also doesn't make sense. Castelli Romani and especially drom Bagnaia near Viterbo do amazing porchetta . They use wild fennel flowers to give an unique, distinctive flavour.
I'm an idiot and used the Slovakian flag for Slovenia. Whoops.
A war is gonna start in the comments. You summoned the balkans.
You broke all hell loose. RIP 🙏
It's okay, it's a mistake that gets done so many times EVEN by other nations that in countries where there are embassies of both countries, they legit sort out mail together to see which was actually meant to be sent to the other rofl
There IS no si h a word Slovakian. It's Slovak.
You are anything but an idiot.
As a portuguese, I love to discover diferent italian dishes, because aside from pasta and pizza, there are several dishes similar or with a similar concept, and I love to find their similarities
Portuguese are way more open and knowledgable about other countries compared to their neighbours, portuguese food is also amazing and very underrated.
Per la mia esperienza, sono stato in Portogallo diverse volte, ho sempre apprezzato la vostra cultura culinaria e ho sempre apprezzato le vostre specialità. Personalmente, è solo una mia opinione, rispetto alla Spagna, ho sempre ritenuto migliore la cucina portoghese, ma non voglio creare un dibattito, è solo la mia misera considerazione
There's plenty of Italian food many Italians themselves don't know exist. I once talked to a Sicilian chef about traditional Tuscan dishes. She had never heard of any of them. She loved Tuscany and had been there several times, but more or less every little village in Italy has its own unique traditions in the area of cusine.
I sure hope there's a Part 2 for the remaining regions that you skipped 🤨
As an Italian who doesn't know too much about every Italian region's culture but loves learning about different foods, I appreciate this video a lot!
What areas were skipped over 😮
I have visited Italy twice and 3 main cities, Rome, Florence and Venice. Oh my my my the food is incredible. Italian food inside italy is sooooo gooood. I recommend everyone who visits Europe should go to Italy. You have probably looked into less than half of what it could offer. When I get married, I'll visit Italy every year to check all the cities and the food it could offer. Very romantic and very beautiful country and the people are so passionate and lovely generally. I also loved the sandwich in the famous All’Antico Vinaio Florence shop. I recommend it, the lines move faster so don't worry about the length of it.
Food heaven. It is an incredible country. Like all great food cultures it is regional. In Tuscany, Florence & Livorno may as well be different countries. Another great video. Excellent insights.
Pieno di errori, da rifare completamente
Guys, this is just the tip of the iceberg. Each region has 20 to 30 typical local dishes. Within the region you can find provincial variations of regional dishes.
I don't want to make a long list of dishes that you haven't mentioned, your video has the right point of view because it talks about regional cuisine. I would just like to correct some serious errors. To be more precise, chickpea farinata is from Genova and dates back to the 13th century. Porchetta comes from Ariccia in Lazio or Norcia in Umbria. The arrosticini are typical of Abruzzo and not of Puglia. Sardinia, isolated for millennia, has a very particular cuisine and desserts of extraordinary beauty (look for coricheddos and durchiceddos). And Calabria?
Norcia e Ariccia si sono appropriate di un qualcosa che si fa in tutto il centro Italia e con più o meno la stessa qualità
Arrosticini are from Abruzzo, not Puglia.
Brava
Thank you for this wonderful and very incomplete video. Of course, a 10-minute video about Italian cuisine outside pasta will be "forse" incomplete. But the idea is excellent! And I hope this video inspires more content creators to talk more about the diversity of Italian cuisine.
Great video Matthew! Some honest criticism: Maybe change the way your structure the video? After explaining a few regions, the video gets a bit pale. Furthermore, your voice sound is not normalized (different volumes) so I would recommend to take a look at that or even only record with one device only.
Good luck!
Great video, although I am almost certain that Slovenians wont be pleased with the Slovakian flag.
oh fucking shit lol
Love your videos. I'm always sharing them with other people.
I love you man, from Italy!
People are very delusional thinking that is only pasta and pizza, this misconception has been spreaded methodically by Italian haters, there is a lot more that you can try and discover, loved the video, new subscriber!
Out of all of the dishes covered here, the artichoke one was the most interesting to learn about even if I have no desire to consume it at all. Just plain neat to find out about all these various dishes that just never come up.
Tiramisu should be on this list. Please do part 2 Matthew.
Why?
Tiramisù is world famous actually.
I’m Italian (from northern Italy, from the region of Liguria), I live in London now, for the past 10 years.
Where I come from we mostly eat Risotto instead than Pasta, and another very good meaty dish is “pollo alla fricassea” a chicken stew slow-cooked in broth, cream and butter, it’s from both Italy and France.
Thank you Matthew I am so hungry!
Great video , Looking forward for you to make a 2nd one for Italian foods
Interesting topics, well produced and some lovely food. Great work, keep it up Matt!
I really enjoy your videos!
Mexican food beyond tex mex
You mean Texan food beyond tex mex
yeah doing a whole video on the different regional foods of Mexico would be cool
What I'm most interested in myself is the Crossover it has with Greek Food. The South shares so much cultural heritage with Greece. Also impacting Greek and Italian Australian food too
Not true, except the south has a Mediterranean diet. In the north we use butter and veal .
I agree@@fran-js8ve
I'm from Brasil, simply love your chanel and, if you ever come to Portugal - where I live now - please let's meet and get some food here. Portugal has such an amazing cousine!
You are completely right about the north. We have a lot of crossover food. Cheese, truffle, risotto, gnocchi, chocolate and whipped cream are our favourites.
Great video!
I gotta try some of that stuff!! Great Job
No Umbria on this list but imo they are the best in Italy at brewing beer.
that's a pretty low bar considering the state of Italian beer lol
@@artirony410 You don't know much if you think Italian have only Peroni, Moretti and Nastro Azzurro, you need to travel more.
@@francisdrake7060 I've had Italian beers beyond the standard mass produced ones and they're fine. I just wouldn't rate them over any of the greats from like Belgium or Germany
You completely skipped Calabria.
Umbria, Marche, Molise... they skipped a lot.
I literally audibly yelled "son of a BITCH" when he went from Apulia straight to Sicily lmao
I guess he didn't visit these regions. Room for a part 2 maybe.
Thank you for talking about my region Friuli Venezia Giulia ...one of the regions least known by Italians themselves😅
I wonder if it's difficult to find these diverse dishes in restaurants when you come to Italy as a tourist. It's probably easy to end up just eating pizza and pasta.
You can find some of them; but for the other half you probably can't seek on a regular "reastaurant" and you have to look for place that offer food for common folks, not luxury, elegant tourist traps... Something such as "tavern/trattoria/pub" and so on... If you go on certain restaurants, you may only find the rich version of some "traditional" dishes, but they are totally different from the original ones... In both look and taste. Btw, bigger cities offers a huge variety of food from everywhere.
It's not difficult. You just need to avoid tourist trap, as there are plenty
@@Clayjar444 If you don't have a local showing you around, that's probably pretty difficult in itself.
@@EmjiAmsdaughter Google, super easy, check for places with only Italian reviewsm
Eating pasta isn't a problem, it's that foreigners always go for the same 5 pasta dishes. Pasta is like rice to East Asian cuisines, it's kind of a base, not a dish per se. Trofie with pesto is different from busiate alla trapanese which are again different from agnolotti al plin or garganelli alla zingara. Leave that pasta alfredo, carbonara or spaghetti bolognese aside, pasta is in various dishes, from North to South.
Calabrian erasure shall not be tolerated. Need part 2
I'm gonna love this. Also Pasta Grannies
It seems like you missed the most delicious one of them all: Parmigiana di Melanzane (Campania).
But also classics like Panzerotto (Puglia), Gnocchi Fritto (Emilia Romagna) Maritozzo (Lazio), Sfogliatella and Baba (Campania), Granita (Sicilia) and all the variaties of Salami (which would be a great subject for a video too)
Good excuse for me to go back to Italy
English influence on Italian cooking is strange but shows how underrated their cuisine is.
I have to say, I like the sprinklings of curse words in your videos. Does a great job of destigmatizing them.
Traditional piadina is made with pork lard. Thanks for the video
Gluten intolerant historical royalty. I don't know why but that sounds hilarious to me
Sardinian fregula is like North African berkoukes
Nope, totally different
@@francisdrake7060 the pasta part is the same, the dishes made with it are different
I am from Marche, on the east coast, another time we are forgotten
Yes, I noticed that as well. I have a cookbook from that region called Cucina of Le Marche. Perhaps you've heard of it?
@@theresemalmberg955 not really. There are soo many books on regional cuisine. As far as I know, there is no really best, or most famous book for any of Italian regions
Si è scordato l'Umbria e non solo, almeno non sei l'unico.. Della Sardegna pensavo avrebbe nominato il fottutissimo Casu Marzu sinceramente, lol
colpa di Pesaro e della Rossini
Vabbè, con tutta la roba che c'è in Campania (inclusa anche la tradizione dolciaria) non mi meraviglio
My Basilicata: mentioned!
You know, my maternal grandmother who is Azorean (part of Portugal) feels that Italian USer food diversity & diversity of Italian food in general is severely underrepresented beyond the heavy red sauce based dishes (which give her acidic stomach) plus pizza & pasta, especially given the dearth of bakeries showcasing even the regional stuff that could be brought. It really is a shame how little of the Italian food diversity (in diaspora versions or otherwise) gets shown heeding how rich it is alongside other regional Italian cultural facets. For example, one fairly major stuff of Sardinia that gets used quite often is bottarga, not too unlike using parmesan for bringing savory depth to dishes & is one of Italian regions to get practically no representation abroad at all
Thai food beyond Pad Thai and Tomyum Kung next pls.
Weve might have been united 200 years ago but weve been always Italian for thousands of years❤
i love ur content
How crazy would it be like if all the Italian diaspora returned to Italy, they would totally change the culture
Eh?
That's already happened. Pizza was only eaten in Naples, before it became known as Italian food in America thanks to Neapolitan Italian immigrants, and the rest of Italy had to accommodate the tourists who expected to find pizza everywhere in the country.
@@ehmzed so then, you can say that one dish United the country 🔥
@@ehmzed What an insane comment.
@@ehmzedYall give too much relevance to tourists. The explanation is simple: Neapolitans have been migrating to the North since the industrial triangle and during the economic boom the Northern richer regions were full of Southern Italians (and Neapolitans). First pizza was for those in the "Neapolitan community", then it started to spread, bit by bit. That's also how granita, from Sicily, has been a staple of our summers for years, and how cannoli, also Sicilian, can be found quite often (despite the fact that its specific fresh ricotta is quite hard to get)
Great sound design man. Are you doing it yourself?
Now whenever I see the Roman Colosseum @6:16 I, can’t help, but to see MV Goji taking a nice long nap, within the famous structure.
PS
Love your videos and hoe much time & effort you put into to help teach more people about different countries, and there unique culinary menus in traditions keep up the good work mate.
8:42 because most of italian immigrants in usa were from Sicily
Excellent video, Bravo.
Try some scrippelle mbusse, amazing dish
Ch must sound K, so even if it is written porchetta, is pronounced porKetta
Idk, i feel if its using ingredients native to the Americas is it really a traditional european dish? maybe more a fusion.
Then all the Americas have fusion cuisines, even Mexico or Peru when they use chicken and pork, wheat, rice, bananas, onions, mangoes, coffee and sugar. Tomatoes weren't even the same when they were brought over and nowadays Italy grows its own (quite famed) varieties
@@Hastdupech8509 yeah its all def fusion-ed up after the 1700s.
Ottimo filmato, complimenti. Mancano alla rassegna molte specialità italiane che anche gli italiani non conoscono. La cucina italoamericana me la devi spiegare perché non la conosco. In Sicilia la cucina è l'incontro tra la cucina italiana e quella arabo mediterranea e sud africana.
cmq ottimo lavoro ciao
As a portuguese, when you said it is similar to pastel de nata it made me scream. The filing is similar, but paster de nata has a diferent pastry
Italian version is way better.
No Napoli? Nduja? Sfogliatelle?!
I don’t know where all these maps with Emilia-Romagna put in Central Italy come from…
Maybe…😇
Questo bimbo ha scoperto una piccola parte della cucina italiana e la vorrebbe spiegare in un video a chi? Si possono descrivere i sapori a parole?
did you tell the Italians about Neapolitan spaghetti
God no, I can’t give half the country a stroke.
See Jojo's bizarre adventure part 5 for a list of Italian food.
Here comes the balkan flame war.
What?
Mexican isn’t Taco Bell and
You should do Indonesia
0:22 demonetized
good video, but i'd probably do a part 2 to it and cover more regions and food that you didnn't cover here. Also, small note, Porchetta is from Lazio, not Tuscany. It's from the town of Ariccia, near Rome.
What are you talking about? Every region has its own Porchetta. One of the very best is from Tuscany. Second best Umbria. It's just roast pork. What a bizarre comment.
@@shakiMiki i am from Italy, been to Ariccia many times over and as far as i know the most famous, most important, most well regarded and easiest to find at the store is the one from Ariccia.
@@mygetawayart That makes your post even stranger. It exists in every corner of Italy where they have pigs. From Veneto to Sicily different versions . You will hear Abruzzi & Umbrians claiming they invented too. Which also doesn't make sense. Castelli Romani and especially drom Bagnaia near Viterbo do amazing porchetta . They use wild fennel flowers to give an unique, distinctive flavour.
.-.
It's called anti-pizz-asta.
waiting for the sterotypical spicest food in the world indian food
you didn't mention olive garden even once 😂
I just gave this video 666 likes at 3:00 AM!
You have a perfect Italian pronunciation for an English speaker! 😍
No Abruzzo? For shame
Molisn't
Too much swearing
TH-cam Kids is that way chief