1. Pistic, traditional food from Western Friuli, N.E. Italy
- Author
-
Angelo Leandro Dreon, Giovanni Giorgio Lorenzoni, and Maurizio G. Paoletti
- Subjects
Friuli venezia giulia ,Plant ecology ,geography ,Rite ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Celtic languages ,Agroforestry ,Ethnobotany ,Spring (hydrology) ,Plant Science ,Horticulture ,Herbaceous plant ,Rural population - Abstract
Western Friuli, Italy, there is a small area near the town of Pordenone where an ancient rite of spring is still carried out. This is the preparation of a special dish, known as “pistic,” a collection of 56wild herbaceous meadow and wood plants which are boiled and then sauteed together. This practice is still alive in a few areas of Friuli today and possibly goes back to pre-Roman Celtic cultures in this part of Friuli. The number of herbaceous plants used in this dish is extraordinarily high (56), especially when compared to the low number normally used in other conventional dishes. “Pistic” is therefore important, not only because it represents a quantitatively high use of wild herbs in the diet of the rural population, but also because it reflects environmental awareness, in that the archaic method of naming, identifying and using these plants still exists today. Similar rural practices include the use of “pot herbs” in Great Britain and in France the cooking of “mesclun.”
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF