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Calabria
Update: Peperoncino
Festival 2006 Part 2 of 2
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and even more Chile Peppers
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Pods
of all sorts of varieties were also available from Miceli, a
nursery from the town of Scalea, just north of Diamante. 
Their
talented staff also created wonderful chile bouquets, showing off
the potential of ornamental peppers. The pepper twigs were
assembled in florist's foam. |
Viva Habanero!
Besides
countless concoctions made with Calabrian peperoncini, we also
spotted an increasing number of habanero-powered products this year.
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Our
long-time business partners Dolci just got their brand new
chocolates ready, filled with habanero cream. They're delicious
and really, really hot. Of course we instantly added the product
to our Pepperworld
Shop which will offer the product exclusively in German-speaking
Europe. 
Sabbia d' Oro
restaurant, known for its hot & spicy gourmet creations,
dished out "habanero-perfumed tuna". Tuna is a local
catch here, fresh, tender and full of flavor. Sabbia chef Palmino
Raffo could hardly catch up with demand.
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 The
same is true for a new bittersweet chocolate made by De Bondt.
Normally chile chocolate bars are made by adding powder to the
cocoa mass in its liquid state. De Bondt adds candied habanero
chunks to the choc bars' bottom instead. Crunchy, hot and
tasty. 
"What's
the house specialty?"
"That would be me, Sir!" |
Peppery Products ...
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In
Calabria it is often pointed out these days that peperoncini may
be helpful for lovers. We just hope that this vendor of
peperoncino products won't run into trouble with the manufacturer of
those popular little blue pills ;-) Calabrian
Lanzelotti company presented honey and extra virgin olive oil.
(With the above love potion, where the heck do they find all those
extra virgins? OK, lame joke.) 
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At
Magnifici del Mezzogiorno's booth, longtime Calabrian friends
and business partners of ours, Renate discovered various new
chile-spiced pasta varieties, a hot & spicy bruschetta mix and a
fine Olio
Santo (chile-infused olive oil). During nightly brainstorming,
we also came up with various new "hot" product ideas.
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...
and Peppery Pendants In
previous years it was difficult to find decent chile pepper jewelry. A
different story this year - stores in town as well as festival booths
offered a wide variety in "hot" accessoires, with a price
range from just a few Euro to several hundred Euro. Here are just a few
examples.

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Chile
jewelry for every taste and budget. |
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... and Peppery Party Ideas
While
strolling the festival, we found some cute ideas where we said to
ourselves: "Selves, why don't we try that at home, at your next
party!"
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Peperoncino
jam is quite commonplace in Calabria, and we also sell it at our
shop. We even have our own brand manufactured in Italy, using
oranges, habanero and ginger, another one with red hot peppers and
strawberries. So if you happen to have a hot & spicy spread,
jam or marmalade, why not use it the next time you fix crepes. Should
also work great with Dave's Sweet-Hot Mulberry Jam
recipe.

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Next
time you prepare bruschetta bites or cheese cubes for your party,
why not serve them on a pumpkin - inexpensive, neat and handy!
We
also liked this decoration idea by "Ristorante Al Rudere":
If you scoop a water melon (red inside) as shown, you'll get this
attractive pattern. Decorate with hot peppers and use the removed
melon parts for a refreshing sorbet or habanero melon salsa. |
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Now, what does the ultimate party vehicle look like?
This is what it looks like. A Moto Guzzi based trike,
equipped with two barrels (pardon, barriques) of
Calabrian red wine.
We
were wondering though how this trike would behave in curves at 100 mph,
with half empty barrels. Which also brings up the question about the
open container law. When
gazing at the "Moto Gusti", the owner gave me a bottle of the
wine he was promoting. Nice!
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Restaurant Recommendation
Our
restaurant recommendation this year is the
Osteria dei Murales in
Diamante, Corso Garibaldi 5. Just a few steps from the Lungomare, you
can't miss their menu - at least during the Peperoncino Festival (in
general, off-season down here is a different story. Many restaurants are
closed then, or their offerings are limited). Stuff
we tried and liked: Penne al Arrabiata (hot and tasty), Parmegiana
(a delicious eggplant gratin - order a day ahead), Baccala (dried and
rehydrated fish), and tagliatelle with mussels and
porcini mushrooms (sounds like an odd combination but tastes great).
Their Vino rosso de la Casa was great, so was their service. We
went here three times within one week.
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Since
2005, smoking is strictly prohibited in all Italian restaurants,
with stiff penalties for both hosts and guests for violations. In
our opinion, particularly
the Mediterranian cuisine with its fresh ingredients and terriffic
wines can be enjoyed much better that way, without annoying
secondhand smoke. Regarding
smokefree environments, Germany will probably stay Neandertal
for a couple more years to come, that's why we like traveling
Italy (and the U.S., for that matter) even more. The Murales
in the restaurant's name refers to the murals, the wall paintings
Diamante is well known for (see also here).
Unfortunately, those precious pieces of art fade quickly in the
salty sea breeze, but every year, new murals appear, making
strolling historic old town Diamante always interesting. |
Capsicum Art

Various
Italian artists work with chile peppers, including watercolor paintings.
The festival managers assembled an impressive number of beautiful aquarels
dealing with capsicum species, and exhibited them in a shopping
district's passage. Here's just a small sampling of what we saw.
And finally... the Chile Eating Contest
As
every year,
the Peperoncino Festival wouldn't be complete without the Campionato
italiano mangiatori di peperoncino, the Italian Chile-Eating
Championship. Held on Diamante's Municipal Plaza, the event drew a bigger
crowd than ever and was broadcasted on national TV.
We
already reported in detail about a previous contest (see here),
and this year's competition wasn't much different: A dozen
leather-stomached fire-eaters munching down fiery-hot chopped chile
peppers, sweating, and suffering silently but witnessed by the crowd on a
big screen.
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"Chief"
Gianni Pellegrino
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As every year, the contest
was hosted by the highly
entertaining Gianni Pellegrino.This year he appeared
with an impressive Indian chief's headgear, made completely from fresh
chile pods.
The first two contestants
surrendered after eating just 20 grams. Wimps! The rest of the fearless
gang kept on munching til the bitter end, and eventually, the winner, Aurelio
Schiavo
(pictured right), had consumed 500 grams -- still 55 grams less than Mauro Ciocca,
the 2005 champion.
As always,
we wished all contestants a pleasant "day after".
Pellegrino
and 2006 Winner Aurelio Schiabo  |
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Peppers in Parma
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On
our way back home we stopped in Parma to visit another good
friend that we met through the mighty pod: Chile pepper and
tomato breeder Dr. Mario
Dadomo (see also here).
Mario's specialty are ornamental peppers, and here's just one of
the many chile varieties we saw in his hacienda's pepper fields,
an incredible flash of colors at this time of the year. 
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Ciao, see you next time...
Now
it's about time to rush home,
work is waiting. Hope
you enjoyed our little road trip
to Bella Italia.
--Harald
& Renate |
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