|
Easter Sweet
A Californian Bakes Up an Italian holiday Treat
In 1983, after two years of apprenticeship at pastry shops throughout northern Italy, Gary Rulli returned to California with
an unusual souvenir: A baker in Milan had given him a recipe for the mother dough used for many popular Italian holiday
specialties - and, more important, a sample of the starter.
Today, Gary and his wife, Jeannie, own Emporio Rulli, a pasticceria they opened ten years ago in Larkspur, California, across
the Golden Gate Bridge from San Francisco. The Rulli's sell an array of Italian treats (from gelati to zeppole) in the shop,
which is outfitted with mahogany-and-marble display cases crafted in Siena. But there's an even more authentic piece of Italy
in Rulli's kitchen: He still bakes with the starter he was given 15 years ago. Unlike common yeast, this starter imparts a
moister crumb to sweet breads like colomba pasquale (literally, "Easter dove"), a dove-shaped confection usually served with
spumante after Easter dinner. According to legend, a colomba baked by a local maidenwas presented as a peace offering to Alboin,
king of the Lombards, when he captured Pavia, near Milan, in A.D. 72. Alboin was so enamored of it (or of the baker?) that he
made the city his new capital. At least, that's one version of the story. Gary Rulli now bakes 400 of his own colombe pasquali
every spring. He allows his dough to rise three times, which means the loaves take 72 hours to make. His Italian starter, though,
is just the beginning; He uses candied orange peel from Piedmont, sugar crystals from a confectioner in Genoa, and paper molds
from a factory on the shores of Lake Como.
- By Catherine Tillman
Article Courtesy of Saveur - April 1998
|
|