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FOOD AND DRINK

17 ways your eating and drinking habits change when you live in Italy

Habits change in subtle ways when people move abroad, and in food-obsessed Italy the changes are most obvious when it comes to eating and drinking.

17 ways your eating and drinking habits change when you live in Italy
Photo: DepositPhotos

When you first move it’s likely you’ll still be craving foods from home or (if you’re like me) pouring milk into your tea for some time. But sooner or later you’ll find you’ve ditched your old ways and adopted Italian-style dining habits.

Here are just some of the ways your eating and drinking habits will probably change in Italy – depending on how resistant you are.

Eating better quality food

The biggest and most obvious change for most people is that you’ll be eating high-quality, fresh produce pretty much all the time, whether you eat at restaurants or cook at home.

Fresh food markets are common in Italy, so it’s easy enough to get hold of the best ingredients yourself. But even if you stuff your face with pizza and gelato, there’s a good chance even that will be handmade with fresh ingredients.

Who needs supermarkets? Photo: Clare Speak/The Local

Forget about spicy foods

Lovers of chilli and all things hot and spicy won’t have much luck in Italy. Unless you’re in Calabria, the home of spicy ‘nduja, you can forget it.

Those of us who love an Indian or Thai curry or any other sort of international cuisine will have to take time to hunt one down as, with the exception of sushi, these restaurants are thin on the ground in Italy.

You’ll need to go to the bigger cities to seek out a restaurant serving your international food fix. And once you find it, you’ll probably also need to ask the waiter to spice things up (più piccante per favore) as dishes are toned down to appeal to Italian palates.

Drinking tea without milk

If, like many of us Brits, you’re used to drinking big mugs of strong black tea with plenty of milk and sugar, you might think you’ll never be able to live without a proper brew. But once you’ve been in Italy for a few months/years (delete as appropriate for you) you might be surprised to find yourself turning your nose up at the very idea of putting milk in your tea – che schifo! -and just drinking coffee instead.

On the day you find yourself ordering a black espresso without sugar and drinking it in one shot, you’ll know you’re really becoming Italian.

No more heavy drinking

Despite moving to the land of aperitivo and endless varieties of very affordable wine, it’s time to put your binge-drinking ways behind you and become more civilised.  At least if you’re from a country where big nights out are the norm.

You’ll probably have a tipple a lot more often, including at lunch, but you’ll stop drinking until you drop on a Saturday night. (If you do, you’ll be the only one – drunk Italians are a rare sight.)

As for lazing around with a hangover on Sunday morning? Italians have far better things to do, and so will you.

READ ALSO:

Eating a proper lunch

The two-hour lunch may be in decline in (some) Italian cities, but it’s far from a thing of the past. Taking time to eat lunch, or any meal, “properly” is paramount – you won’t find anyone here scarfing a sandwich at their desk.

Some Italian employees also get food vouchers which can be used at restaurants or supermarkets, and some workplaces have full kitchens where employees can cook and eat together.

 

Nothing but wine (and water) with meals

You might be used to having a beer, soda, or something else with your lunch, but that’s all about to change if you’re moving to Italy. Here instead water is essential with every meal, and wine is practically seen as a condiment, essential to the enjoyment of food.

The excepton is pizza, which you can drink beer with.

Photo: Depositphotos

Eating offal

Ever thought you’d find yourself eating a tripe sandwich – and enjoying it? What about kidneys, or fried brains?

These dishes might not be on the menu at Italian restaurants abroad, but in Italy they’re very traditional and still popular today. particularly in areas like Tuscany. You’ll know Italy is truly your home when you start choosing offal at restaurants.

Eating a sugary breakfast

One of the strangest (and unhealthiest) things about eating in Italy is the fact that you often can’t get anything for breakfast but cake.

While this seems like heaven on earth when you’re on holiday, it quickly gets old when you live here and have to go to work – or think about the effect on your health. Other popular Italian breakfast options are sugary cereals, biscotti swimming in a big bowl of warm milk, or just coffee and a cigarette.

Once you start ditching your once-healthy (or at least substantial) breakfasts for a quick sugar hit, you’ll know you’ve really gone native.

READ ALSO: Seven reasons why living in Italy can be bad for your health

Loving fruit and veg

One of the biggest myths about Italian food is that it’s all about pizza, pasta, and cheese. It is about those things, but you’ll also eat a huge amount of fruit and vegetables – all of it seasonal and locally grown. And delicious, especially if you’re used to it tasting mostly of water.

Even if you rarely touched fruit before moving to Italy you’ll soon find yourself dreaming of fresh fig season and talking too much about tomatoes. They really do taste that good.

Dessert is a must

Even if it’s just a piece of fruit, there’s always something sweet to finish even the simplest meal. While back home dessert is seen as a bit of a treat, here it’s just standard – and soon you won’t feel like you’ve eaten “properly” if you go without.

Knowing all the food rules

Italy famously has quite a few food rules which foreigners inevitably get wrong. It’s not our fault – the rules just don’t make any sense to us, at least at first. Why can’t you put cheese on seafood pasta, or have meatballs and spaghetti on the same plate? And what’s wrong with salad as a starter?

The truth is that not all Italians follow these unwritten rules at home. But it’s good to know that asking for grated cheese on your seafood linguine in a restaurant won’t go down well.

Even if you thought they were nonsensical to begin wth, sooner or later you’ll be following all the rules yourself without thinking – and giving the side-eye to people who get them wrong.

READ ALSO: Ten ‘Italian’ dishes that don’t actually exist in Italy

Enjoying rare meat

Maybe you used to insist on having your steak well done back home, but Italian chefs wouldn’t do such a thing to their prized cuts of prime beef. Asking them to do so might cause serious offence.

But you’ll never be able to go back to blackened meat once you get used to having your steak cooked a media cottura (pink in the middle, at the very least), which is how waiters in Italy usually assume everyone wants it. The only other option deemed acceptable may be rare (al sangue).

Smothering food in oil and cheese

Those concerns we have in western countries about fats and oils just don’t register in mamma’s kitchen.

Especially in rural areas where the olive oil is homemade, you’ll be encouraged to pour it on everything – and to cover it in a snowdrift of grated cheese. For the taste, of course, but also because such foods are believed to be full of health-giving properties.

It’s hard to prove whether this is really true or not, but your 90-year-old nonna probably swears by it. Either way, since moving to Italy I’ve definitely relaxed my attitude towards fatty foods.

As for low-calorie cooking sprays – what are those? They’re hugely popular in some countries, but most Italians I know would dismiss such a thing as unnatural, flavourless, unhealthy and overpriced. And why would you bother when you’ve got ten litres of homemade olive oil stored in the basement?

Photo: Depositphotos

No drinking on an empty stomach

Back home in the UK, a (proper) night out doesn’t include eating – a rule which is so elegantly summed up in the phrase “eating is cheating”.

But in Italy, this would never happen in a million years. Bars always offer you a few little snacks (stuzzichini) with your drink: usually crisps and olives at least. Aperitivo “hour” involves a full-on hot buffet. Nope, there’s no danger of that spritz going to your head.

Say goodbye to fast food

While McDonalds does exist in Italy, I’m yet to meet an Italian who has anything less than a scathing opinion of it.

Ready meals and pre-prepared foods in supermarkets exist too, but the selection is small and they’re very much viewed as a last resort.

And you can forget about ordering a late-night takeaway, too. As far as most Italians are concerned, take-out food is pizza – full stop. And everyone knows pizza is best right out of the oven, and it sweats in the box. So why not just go to the pizzeria down the street?

And we’re talking about the fresh, handmade article, of course. The sight of the oily, flabby, cheese-laden version you can get in other countries could reduce many an Italian to tears.

After some time in Italy, you too will no doubt find the very idea of greasy takeaways revolting.

Photo: Depositphotos.

Coffee after dinner

While you might previously have avoided drinking coffee after dinner, thinking it would ruin a good night’s sleep, it won’t be long before you’re ordering a caffe after every meal. Dinner just won’t be the same without that delicious little shot of caffeine. (But not a cappuccino, of course – you’re not a heathen.)

No more filling your wine glass to the top

While it might not seem like a bad thing to slurp from a glass of wine that’s full to the brim at home, in Italy it’s a big no-no. So take your time, there’s plenty of wine to go around.

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FOOD AND DRINK

Do Italians really eat pasta every day?

Pasta is the foundation of Italian cuisine and Italians have a reputation for eating it nearly every day. But is this reality or myth?

Do Italians really eat pasta every day?

Pasta is the cornerstone of Italian cuisine and an essential staple of Italians’ diet, hence the popularity of the adage Toglietemi tutto ma non la pasta! (‘Take everything away from me except pasta’).

But there is a widespread belief among foreign nationals that people in the bel paese eat it every single day of the week. 

Is this reality or myth?

According to a survey from research platform YouGov Italia, ‘only’ 17 percent of Italians eat pasta every day or at least six days a week. 

The majority of Italians (37 percent) consume pasta two to three times a week, while 30 percent say they eat it four to five times a week. 

Finally, 8 percent eat pasta just once a week.

While the survey seems to disprove the claim that Italians generally eat pasta every day (only a minority does), does that mean that they are not as big pasta eaters as we may have originally thought?

Not really. 

Italians are still the leading pasta consumers in the world as the average person in the country eats some 23.1 kilograms of it every year (that’s nearly two kilograms a month).

READ ALSO: Ask an Italian: How do you sauce pasta properly?

For context, people in neighbouring France and Germany only consume 8.3 and 7.9 kg per capita a year, whereas the average American eats about 9 kg every year.

Further, yearly per capita consumption in the UK stands at an average of just 3.5 kg, according to a report from pasta maker Barilla.

So, while they may not have it every day, Italians do eat quite a lot of pasta over the course of a year. 

But how do they never get tired of it? 

One of the main reasons behind Italians’ unbreakable bond with the high-carb food is variety. 

Italians are extremely creative when it comes to pasta and they rarely eat the same dish twice in a row as they like to experiment with a wide range of recipes and sauces.

READ ALSO: Ten golden rules for cooking pasta like an Italian

Further, there are over 350 types of pasta in Italy, which means that you could potentially eat a different pasta shape almost every day of the year.

Another reason why most Italians have pasta multiple times a week is that they tend to eat it in moderation, steering well clear of potential carb overloads. 

While they may have a large, high-calorie pasta dish (for instance, lasagne or pasta al ragù) on weekends or on special occasions, people in the country generally go for lighter recipes and sauces on normal days, with portions generally going from 80 to 120 grams per person.

Also, Italians very rarely eat pasta twice a day, with the majority of people having it for lunch and then opting for a non-carb-based dish in the evening.

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