Posts Tagged ‘florence’
The “Buontalenti” icecream
This gelato, named after Bernardo Buontalenti, a sixteenth-century Florentine who may have been one of the world’s original ice-cream makers, is made with any number of flavorings. The “secret” ingredient is usually a liqueur (such as Di Saronno Amaretto). A delicious alternative would be a pinch of mixed spices such as cinnamon, nutmeg, and allspice
- 2 cups whole milk
- 3/4 cup minus 1 tablespoon superfine granulated sugar
- 4 large egg yolks
- 3/4 cup heavy cream
- 1/2 teaspoon Di Saronno Amaretto or other flavoring (see note, above)
Preparation :
In a 2-quart heavy saucepan bring milk and about half of sugar just to a simmer, stirring until sugar is dissolved.
Have ready a large bowl of ice and cold water. In a bowl with an electric mixer beat yolks and remaining sugar until thick and pale. Add hot milk mixture in a slow stream, whisking, and pour into saucepan. Cook custard over moderately low heat, stirring constantly, until a thermometer registers 170°F. (Do not let boil.) Pour custard through a sieve into a metal bowl set in ice and cold water and cool. Stir in cream and add liqueur. Chill custard, covered, until cold and up to 4 hours.
Freeze custard in an ice-cream maker. Serve gelato immediately or transfer to an airtight container and put in freezer to harden no more than 2 hours.
A landmark en passant…
For a great number of Florentines the familiar small, walled oval hill on piazzale Donatello is little more than a roundabout.
Granted, it is a rather mysterious roundabout, higher than most, revealing peaks of elegant cypresses and glimpses of marble tombstones, but undoubtedly a landmark en passant for the modern motorist speeding along the wide viale from piazza Libertà down towards the Arno. However, this urban island, housing the originally named Cimitero Protestante di Porta a’ Pinti, described by custodian Julia Bolton Holloway as ‘a place dense with meaning, a burning glass of history,’ is a worthy destination in itself.
As an English woman living only five minutes away from the ‘English Cemetery’ and knowing embarrassingly little about it, I decided to find out more. Unbeknown to many, the cemetery is actually open for ash burials of all faiths, the most recent having taken place over Easter 2010.
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