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Eldritch
06-16-2011, 01:07 PM
Eat this, China:

How pasta became the world's favourite food

http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/53413000/jpg/_53413775_pastacomposite.jpg

Pasta has topped a global survey of the world's favourite foods. So how did the dish so closely associated with Italy become a staple of so many tables around the globe?

While not everyone knows the difference between farfalle, fettuccine and fusilli, many people have slurped over a bowl of spaghetti bolognese or tucked into a plate of lasagne.

Certainly in British households, spaghetti bolognese has been a regular feature of mealtimes since the 1960s. It's become a staple of children's diets, while a tuna-pasta-sweetcorn concoction can probably be credited with sustaining many students through their years at university.

But now a global survey by the charity Oxfam has named pasta as the world's most popular dish, ahead of meat, rice and pizza. As well as being popular in unsurprising European countries, pasta was one of the favourites in the Philippines, Guatemala, Brazil and South Africa.

And figures from the International Pasta Organisation show Venezuela is the largest consumer of pasta, after Italy. Tunisia, Chile and Peru also feature in the top 10, while Mexicans, Argentineans and Bolivians all eat more pasta than the British.


http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/53413000/jpg/_53413989_girleatingspag.jpg

TOP FIVE WORLD PASTA CONSUMERS

Italy - 26kg per head per year
Venezuela - 12kg
Tunisia - 11.7kg
Greece - 10.4kg
Switzerland - 9.7kg


Source: International Pasta Organisation (http://www.internationalpasta.org/) (:lol:), June 2010

Global sales figures reflect the world's love affair with pasta - they have risen from US$13bn (£8bn) in 2003 to US$16bn (£10bn) in 2010. The analysts at Datamonitor predict it will hit US$19bn (£12bn) by 2015, despite rising wheat costs.

Just in the UK, retail sales of dry and fresh pasta amounted to £53m in 1987. In 2009, the figure was £282m - include pasta-based ready meals and the value rises to £800m, says consumer research experts Mintel.

So how did pasta become so popular? It's because it is cheap, versatile and convenient, says Jim Winship, from the UK-based Pizza, Pasta and Italian Food Association (http://www.papa.org.uk/). A sauce to go with it can be made from simple ingredients.

"You can create lots of different dishes with it. It tastes good and it's filling. It also has a long shelf life, so you can keep it in the larder until you need to put a meal together."

But that's only part of its success. Pasta is also relatively easy to mass produce and transport around the world, making it a popular product with food companies as well.

'Cultural phenomenon'

"It's always been an industrial product," says John Dickie, professor in Italian Studies at University College London and author of Delizia! A History of the Italians and their Food.

Tim Lang, professor of food policy at City University London, says technological advances in the 19th Century allowed pasta to be produced on a big scale. But the Industrial Revolution did that for everything else, he adds, and the reason pasta had been particularly successful was because people liked it and the Italian way of life.

"It's a cultural phenomenon, not an industrial phenomenon," he says. "People like the Italian way of life and their simple, staple foods."

Pasta has always had a global aspect as its origins are not purely Italian, which is unsurprising considering it can be made with just wheat and water.

The Greeks and Romans had pasta-like foods but they tended to be baked, not boiled. Ancient China had dumplings, but it's a myth that the Venetian explorer Marco Polo returned from China with pasta in 1295.

The most accepted theory is that the Arab invasions of the 8th Century brought a dried noodle-like product to Sicily. This early pasta was made using flour from durum wheat, which Sicily specialised in. Under Italian law, dry pasta - or pasta secca - can only be made from this type of wheat, and the vast bulk of pasta is still made in Italy.

And despite being considered a cheap meal now it was the preserve of the rich in the very beginning, says Prof Dickie.

"We tend to think of pasta like potatoes but it has never been viewed as a bland staple. It's been associated with prestige - people used to buy votes with pasta."

'Overrated gloppy stuff'

The first reference to pasta in Italy was noted in 1154 and it was about an export factory in Sicily, he says.

He says its breakthrough as a common food came in Naples in the 1700s, when it was recognised as "a good way to feed a large part of the populace".


http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/53413000/jpg/_53413988_pastamaker.jpg

TOP FIVE WORLD PASTA PRODUCERS

Italy - 3.2m tonnes per year
US - 2.6m
Brazil - 1.3m
Russia - 858,000
Switzerland - 607,000


Source: International Pasta Organisation, June 2010

But pasta popularity outside of Italy really took off at the turn of the 20th Century with large-scale Italian immigration to the New World. This is when it started to become known as Italy's national dish, he says.

Italian restaurateur Antonio Carluccio said pasta may have a long history, but the Italians made it their own by eating it with tomatoes.

He says most pasta is spaghetti outside of Italy but there are actually 600 different types and shapes and each region cooks it differently. He says its appeal is in the taste and its nutritional value.

"It is pleasurable with a good sauce, but it should just be coated, otherwise you lose the taste of the pasta. It is a complex carbohydrate which releases all the goodness slowly and you feel satisfied for a long time.

"I don't know one person who doesn't like pasta. It is very similar to bread - both are made with flour and water and they both need an accompaniment."

He's clearly not met food critic and broadcaster Giles Coren, who described pasta as "overrated gloppy stuff" that appeals only to children.

"Ask a footballer what they can cook and they always say spaghetti. It is what you reach for when there is nothing else left in the larder. It's poor people's food and it's unsophisticated. It's the same as bread - you just boil it instead of putting it in the oven."

So as popular as it is, pasta hasn't conquered everyone in the world.

BBC. (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-13760559)

Peyrol
06-16-2011, 01:14 PM
Roma 1 - Beijing 0 :laugh:

Great notice, i'm so happy of this.
If is cooked and made ​​with the true Italian method, is one of the healthiest and good-taste foods ever created.

Joe McCarthy
06-16-2011, 01:33 PM
Mostly symbolic but symbolic of cultural power and typically the sort of thing seen as a sign of ascendancy. It shows the West has some life yet.

Peyrol
06-16-2011, 02:07 PM
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_ixDJEFEM7UI/TKn2KbfG_4I/AAAAAAAACRg/RD-0rJUOrsM/s1600/amatriciana3_thumb%5B1%5D.jpg

http://www.chefmaestro.com/Images/penne_arrabbiata_pasta.jpg

VS


http://www.aromidiriso.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/riso3.jpg

http://www.dieta-dimagrante.com/img/francescabrigida/riso_pilaf.jpg



The comparison doesn't exist :laugh:

Joe McCarthy
06-16-2011, 02:31 PM
Hmmm, seems pasta may have originated in China and was perhaps brought to Italy by Marco Polo. Nevertheless, it's closely associated with Italy in the popular mind, not China.

Lucretius
06-16-2011, 02:35 PM
what about risotto alla milanese,(milanese rice):D

http://www.ilvinodimarcovercesi.it/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/risotto_alla_milanese1.jpg

Lucretius
06-16-2011, 02:37 PM
Hmmm, seems pasta may have originated in China and was perhaps brought to Italy by Marco Polo. Nevertheless, it's closely associated with Italy in the popular mind, not China.

well somebody says that beer was invented by the egyptians but nowadays is definetely closed to Germany.

Peyrol
06-16-2011, 02:40 PM
Hmmm, seems pasta may have originated in China and was perhaps brought to Italy by Marco Polo. Nevertheless, it's closely associated with Italy in the popular mind, not China.

Impossible, because pasta is a southern invention, not venetian.
If Polo have brought Pasta from Chagathai to Venezia, why isn't a typical venetian dish?

Eldritch
06-16-2011, 02:46 PM
"Clears throat"


The Greeks and Romans had pasta-like foods but they tended to be baked, not boiled. Ancient China had dumplings, but it's a myth that the Venetian explorer Marco Polo returned from China with pasta in 1295.

The most accepted theory is that the Arab invasions of the 8th Century brought a dried noodle-like product to Sicily. This early pasta was made using flour from durum wheat, which Sicily specialised in. Under Italian law, dry pasta - or pasta secca - can only be made from this type of wheat, and the vast bulk of pasta is still made in Italy.

Joe McCarthy
06-16-2011, 03:11 PM
"Clears throat"

Okay, so Muslims introduced pasta to Europe by that source's account. I feel better now.

Eldritch
06-16-2011, 03:29 PM
Well, surely finding the story that makes one feel the best is beside the point?

Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasta#History):


The familiar legend of Marco Polo importing pasta from China originated with the Macaroni Journal, published by an association of food industries with the goal of promoting the use of pasta in the United States. Marco Polo describes a food similar to "lagana" in his Travels, but he uses a term with which he was already familiar.

Durum wheat, and thus pasta as it is known today, was introduced by Arabs, specifically in Libya, during their conquest of Sicily in the late 7th century, according to the newsletter of the National Macaroni Manufacturers Association, thus predating Marco Polo's travels to China by about six centuries.

alzo zero
06-16-2011, 04:04 PM
What Arab conquest of Sicily in the late 7th century?

Libertas
06-16-2011, 04:32 PM
What Arab conquest of Sicily in the late 7th century?

It was in the 9th century.
I'm sure the Etruscans and Romans had some forms of pasta long before Marco Polo's wanderings.

Bloodeagle
06-16-2011, 04:58 PM
Pasta is delicious, but rice is a staple in my own household. I prefer to eat a natural grain than to consume a grain product, especially a wheat based one, on a regular basis. :)

Peyrol
06-16-2011, 05:59 PM
Mediterranean diet is the best, no doubt about it.
Is scientifically proven.

la bombe
06-16-2011, 06:18 PM
"I don't know one person who doesn't like pasta.


I'm not a big fan of pasta, I usually only make it when I'm cooking for other people and want to make them happy. I think rice and other grains, bread, tortillas and potatoes are all tastier carbohydrates.

Querubín
06-16-2011, 06:21 PM
Spanish version with "chorizo" and "jamon"
http://www.mis-recetas.org/foto/foto/7596/grande/DSCN0195.jpg
I :love: pasta

Eldritch
06-17-2011, 12:16 AM
Pasta is delicious, but rice is a staple in my own household. I prefer to eat a natural grain than to consume a grain product, especially a wheat based one, on a regular basis. :)

Well, I like both.

But if I had to choose between giving up rice or giving up pasta, rice would have to go. Pasta dishes, when they're well made with quality ingredients, can be divine.

Plus, there's more variety. :thumb001:

http://www.paulscooking.com/.a/6a01156fc00b70970c0120a5484ffb970c-800wi

http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1098/1487528987_a6d8dbb2cf.jpg

http://www.stockfood.de/bilder-fotos/Pasta%20nera%20con%20calamari%20(Schwarze%20Spaghe tti%20mit%20Calamare)-155008.jpg

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_izeuni8b49A/SwHHxgGNJbI/AAAAAAAAAjw/RGRYr6kmSmE/s1600/gnocchi.jpg

http://aromaterapia-esencias.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/5.jpg

:hungry: :hungry:

Sikeliot
06-17-2011, 12:18 AM
pasta > rice, except for when I am eating teriyaki chicken. :)

Bloodeagle
06-17-2011, 12:24 AM
^ That looks good, but any of those dishes would probably be just as good with rice. I am not sure if every rice dish would be good, if substituted with pasta. Could you imagine pasta sushi or pasta pudding? :D
Like la bombe I too enjoy tortillas and rice, rarely eating pasta and when I do eat noodles they are usually of the Asian variety. ;)

Treffie
06-17-2011, 12:25 AM
He's clearly not met food critic and broadcaster Giles Coren, who described pasta as "overrated gloppy stuff" that appeals only to children.

"Ask a footballer what they can cook and they always say spaghetti. It is what you reach for when there is nothing else left in the larder. It's poor people's food and it's unsophisticated. It's the same as bread - you just boil it instead of putting it in the oven."

Coren is obviously just a food snob - we can't all afford scrambled Phoenix eggs

Doesn't spaghetti grow on trees? :D

27ugSKW4-QQ

Eldritch
06-17-2011, 01:04 PM
Coren is obviously just a food snob - we can't all afford scrambled Phoenix eggs



Pasta is unsophisticated food for poor people and footballers! The horror! I can't eat that shite anymore.