4 minute read

LE TIRAMISÙ

A classic dessert in Italy, Le Tiramisù can be paired with a fresh cup of espresso.

INGREDIENTS FOR LE TIRAMISÙ:

01

Use a food processor to pulse the basil leaves and pine nuts.

1. 12 egg yolks

2. 1.1 lbs sugar

3. 2.2 lbs mascarpone

02

Whisk the egg yolks with sugar. When they’re light, blend in the mascarpone cheese. It should become a smooth paste.

02

Add the Romano or Parmesan cheese.

03 Slowly add the olive oil.

4. 60 pcs Savoiardi ladyfingers

5. Italian espresso or coffee

6. Cocoa powder (unsweetened and sifted)

03

Dip the ladyfingers into the cooled espresso or coffee. Don’t soak too much.

04

Place half of the ladyfingers in a single row on a serving plate. Add the cream over them.

05

Season with salt and pepper. 04 05

Serve over toasted bread or baked potatoes.

INSTRUCTIONS:

01

Make your espresso or coffee. Put aside to cool.

06 07

Create a second layer with the remaining ladyfingers. Cover with the cream mixture.

Dust with cocoa powder.

Refrigerate for six hours or more before serving.

By Federico Vaccari

In this global melange, places — and especially cities — become a fascinating laboratory in which the most significant changes manifest.

These are reflected in the most diversified spheres, including architecture, design, art, traditions and everyday ways of living.

Through the journey, we have the extraordinary opportunity to get in touch with these realities profoundly.

This can happen provided we put aside what sociologist Daniel J. Boorstin has defined as “The Environmental Bubble: that protective attitude a tourist can assume when visiting a community with customs and traditions different from their own, leading them to look for familiar actions and activities rather than opening up to the new, or rather, to the different.”

Locals Build Cultural Bridges With Visitors

The locals, in addition to being the active representatives and creators of the authenticity of a place, are also those who can help us get in touch with these diversities, and there are more and more cities in which many experiences emerge that serve as real cultural bridges with visitors. Milan is certainly an example in this sense.

Often known only for its image as a “business city,” and mainly linked to two events that characterize it on a global level, namely Design Week and Fashion Week, Milan has a long-lived history dating back to the Celtic era of 560 B.C. and has seen many changes.

The city is full of culture and secret places ready to be discovered perhaps simply by strolling through its streets, or riding in a vintage Fiat 500 together with a local resident, in an original and unforgettable way. Not a bad idea, right?

This is how you can, for example, discover a place deeply appreciated by the Milanese people, namely the Navigli area and the Darsena, which are some of the last remaining waterways after most of the centuries-old canals that had been in the city were removed starting from the 1930s.

Discover Places That Hide Secrets

Today, it is a place to stroll and visit the beautiful hidden courtyards where there are shops of local artisans, but also come across the smallest gin distillery in the world, as well as try the famous aperitivo, a quintessentially Milanese concept to discover.

The uniqueness of these places is because of their style of “living in the open air,” sitting along the shore of the Darsena or among the ancient Columns of San Lorenzo dating back to the

Roman period, enjoying a drink and local delicacies, lost in the sweet chatter of people nearby and the melodies of musicians who, sometimes, find in this place a way to involve people.

Walking through these areas also allows us to be surprised by places that hide truly astounding secrets, such as the fascinating and strange decorations with human bones present in the chapel of San Bernardino alle Ossa, or by the remains of the relics of the three Magi present in the Basicilia di Sant’Eustorgio.

The uniqueness of these places is because of their style of “living in the open air,” sitting along the shore of the Darsena or among the ancient Columns of San Lorenzo dating back to the Roman period, enjoying a drink and local delicacies, lost in the sweet chatter of people nearby and the melodies of musicians who, sometimes, find in this place a way to involve people.

A little further on, a stone’s throw from the crowded Piazza del Duomo, right in the center, it is possible to find the total peace of the “Quadrilatero del Silenzio,” emblem of the “Art Nouveau” or “Milanese Liberty” architecture that the bourgeois-class Milanese left us in the first two decades of the 20th century.

Here, among fascinating decorations, ornaments, courtyards and gardens of sublime beauty, it’s also possible to find an exotic oasis unimaginable for many: the flamingo garden of Villa Invernizzi, a place where these animals have lived freely since the 1970s and which fascinate people of any age.

But Milan is also the hub city of the economic boom of those years, and so our journey can continue with the beautiful colored houses of Via Abramo Lincoln, also known as the “Burano of Milan” and still unknown to most today, where seeing the colors, hearing the rustling palm leaves, and smelling the scents of jasmine in spring offer the feeling of being in the Caribbean.

And how can we fail to mention the beautiful design districts, where works and architectural icons, including the Bosco Verticale, emerge in all their majesty, creating that mix between the past and the modern that only Milan can give.

What more can be said?

Milan, considered frenetic by many Italians and calm by many foreigners, is ready to surprise us at any moment, and it’s there that it awaits to be discovered, making us a part, if we wish, of the constant change that distinguishes it.

And all of this is there at your fingertips, perhaps aboard a vintage Fiat 500.

To access links to the places mentioned in this article, scan the code below. cultursmag.com/discover-the-secrets-of-milan-