Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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Here is a typical brown bag lunch sandwich made by Italian moms of old, when we weren't allowed to eat meat on Friday.....such as today.
In high school, all the girls who had older brothers would say how their moms would either make peppers and eggs, potatoes and eggs or eggplant parm sandwiches for their older brothers and dads to take to work on Fridays............ (now it's drive through the local Dunkin Doughnuts, etc.) I still love them, esp. on a rainy day like today (again rain). Italian Pepper and Egg Sandwich Ingredients :
Directions
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#2
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I loved potato and eggs with ketchup on a wedge type bread.
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__________________
"It doesn't cost "nuttin", to be nice". ![]() I just want to do the right thing! Uncle Joe, (my hero). |
#3
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I know. Me too. I know exactly what type of bread you mean but I can't think of the name. My dad would actually have it delivered from the other side of town on Saturdays. He missed his N.Y.C. breads.
Potatoes and eggs were my favorite as well, but peppers and eggs good too. What they could all do with such simple ingredients. p.s. My dad's parents (and all their HUGE family of cousins, etc.) came from Laurenzana Potenza Basilicata Italy to New York City's "Little Italy". From there they all branched out "later". My grandmother's brother's daughters moved to West Hartford Connecticut area plus other "cousins" to that area. Some are now on Cape Cod, MA. Ditto for her husband's family (my grandfather)......many went to Connecticut for jobs. Others followed the river up to the Great Lakes region ; while others went to Canada....some stayed upstate N.Y. |
#4
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We called them wedges that came from Birratella's bakery. They came two to a package and were joined together, You just pulled them apart. You either got a half of a wedge or a whole wedge. In CT, they call them grinders and some places call them submarines, (not quite the same). Mom was a very good cook who was born outside of Naples in a town called Vitulazio, (now called Villa Fortuna). Dad was from Melo, (about 70 miles out of Lisbon, Portugal, (he didn't cook as he never lifted a pot or pan in his life). LOL
My grandfather landed in Younstown Ohio to stay with his brother and then moved to Yonkers, New York where all of my immediate family was born. All aunts and uncles were born in Italy. Dad's family landed in Bedford, Ma, and then he ran away to Newark, N.J. where my granfather followed him with the family. He then ran away to Yonkers where my grandfather tracked him down again so he gave up. At least thats the story I was told. All aunts and uncles were born in Portugal. Wish I had a potato and wedge for my lunch today. ![]()
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"It doesn't cost "nuttin", to be nice". ![]() I just want to do the right thing! Uncle Joe, (my hero). Last edited by 2BNTV; 10-19-2012 at 10:13 AM. Reason: additional comments |
#5
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YUM!!! Your post brought back memories of my youth.
Every summer we went from Upstate NY to Hampton Beach for vacation and my mother would make eggplant sandwiches on Italian bread as well as pickeled eggplant sandwiches. We would stop along the way shortly after entering NH from VT at a roadside picnic table and... mangiare! My father worked the 4-12 shift at GE Silicones in Waterford NY and his co-workers were always begging for him to have my mother make those eggplant sandwiches for them. ![]()
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ARE VILLAGERS OLD OR ARE THEY RECYCLED TEENAGERS At my age rolling out of bed in the morning is easy. Getting up off the floor is another story. "SMILE... TOMORROW MAY BE EVEN WORSE!"
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#6
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Eggplant sandwiches.
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__________________
"It doesn't cost "nuttin", to be nice". ![]() I just want to do the right thing! Uncle Joe, (my hero). |
#7
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My all time favorite Italian hero, leftover chicken cutlet and braccoli rabe with the "juice" from the broccoli rabe.
Anyone ever go to that hero place in the Bronx (Joey's ???) where they put fried eggplant and steamed peppers with all the cold cuts? I still make them, call them Bronx hero's
__________________
![]() Y'know that part of your brain that tells you "ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!" I think I'm missing it. |
#8
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Never went to Joey's in the Bronx. Sounds delicious.
![]() I went to a place called The Wedge Inn, (Bronx/Pelham line), that didn't serve wedges but wonderfully large portions of Italian food. They made the greatest zeppoles. Back to wedges and sandwiches.
__________________
"It doesn't cost "nuttin", to be nice". ![]() I just want to do the right thing! Uncle Joe, (my hero). |
#9
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![]() Quote:
I think the bread I was referring to was circular with a little "hole" in the middle..........great for cappacola (ham) sandwiches. Getting back to Naples, it is in the province of Campania . Naples is the big seaport. The "cousins" who stayed in Italy , all ended up in Naples for work. Some went up to Venice in the north. Campania is right next to the province of Basilicata where Laurenzana was, high up in the mountains........it was kind of southeast of ANZI. I have photos of World War II American soldiers who , after the war ended, on their free time, went to my grandmother's village and took a lot of photos.....these were found in her suitcase in her closet when she passed in 1965....plus pics of the old castle on the hill.........all those old villages had castles dating back from the 11th century, built by the Greeks........ If you ever saw the HGTV channel, on the international homes, they've been going to Italy and people are buying these extremely old "humble" homesteads for like $40,000 or less..........nothing has changed. It's like time stood still. This is what they call the "old town" section of the towns.....all of these mountain villages are extremely HILLY. She would have been very surprised to learn that I ended up in a mountainous state (out of New Jersey). My grandmother's family had a bakery but in the '70s it was destroyed by an earthquake in Laurenzana. I have pics of that. Totally destroyed. I sent you your sandwich. Didn't you get it????? Look in your in box. |
#10
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My great grandfather's business was fireworks. Ironically, it went out in a bang as fire destroyed the factory. My mother and father met while in Yonkers, New York and the rest is history............
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"It doesn't cost "nuttin", to be nice". ![]() I just want to do the right thing! Uncle Joe, (my hero). Last edited by 2BNTV; 10-19-2012 at 12:25 PM. Reason: ADDITIONAL COMMENT |
#11
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Lard bread?
__________________
![]() Y'know that part of your brain that tells you "ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!" I think I'm missing it. |
#12
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I adore lard bread. We have it for holiday celebrations, my husband buys it over on Smith Street in Carroll Gardens. We all would eat it daily, but it is clearly a heart attack in a loaf.
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#13
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I think it was "pisa" bread......not pita like the Lebanese or Syrian bread as this bread has more "bread inside it".......not as flat as pita. But it was circular. I think nowadays they call it artisan bread. My husband thinks it might have been made from the same dough they made pizza from; I don't think so. He calls it pizza bread. My dad called it pisa bread.....or something like that. Don't know if they put lard in it. Italians didn't cook with lard that I knew of. Now, my Polish mother in law did cook with lard and bacon grease. |
#14
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My dad's uncle Luigi (Louie) was a barber in the Bronx...... |
#15
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We also would take our own children to Hampton Beach N.H. when they were little........lately, we use it as a rest break and then head up the Maine coast on the coastal road.......takes longer but nicer than the Maine Pike. Do you remember the older roads? It took much longer. You'd go through Manchester, New Hampshire. Now, it's very fast to get from Vermont to the New Hampshire seacoast. |
Closed Thread |
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