The ANNOTICO Report
Italians have great Fashion "sense". Americans dress like
Thrift Shop
Refugees.
Italians eat Fresh, Healthy, Modest Portions. America
gobbles Maxi Sized
Deep Fried Fatty Foods.
Italians Walk, Americans have Thousands of Health Clubs.
Italy is a land of Beautiful People.America is a nation of Fat Slobs.
It must be a shock for Italians visiting the US for the
first time, if they
haven't been warned, to look around and see what the
most powerful people
in the world look like. :)
Health Care Articles
ExpressNewsline.com
February 28, 2005
Italians really know how to live. They take three hour
lunches, eat pasta
at most every meal and maintain gorgeous figures. They
are truly the most
beautiful looking people in Europe and not because of
their fashionable
clothing. Most Italians strive to cut the una bella figura
(a fine figure)
and are careful, but not obsessive, about what they eat.
The sight of an
obese Italian is rare.
Shortly after moving to Italy, I adopted the Mediterranean
diet and style
of living. It paid off. I lost 30 pounds in 3 Months
without trying. I ate
anything I wanted and was healthy. No illness or disease
had caused this
rapid weight-loss. I found, after interviewing other
new residents of this
country, that an initial quick weight loss is typical.
Breakfast – Breaking the fast with little fare.
Breakfast is never the eggs, ham, bacon, toast, or pancakes
ritual you find
in America. In fact, trying to find all the ingredients
to make such a
breakfast is difficult. Yogurt or a croissant with a
cappuccino serve the
Italians well. At 11:00 a.m., Italians take a coffee
break and eat
something more substantial, such as a pastry or small
sandwich (panino),
which is made with a single, thin slice of ham (prosciùtto)
and a single
slice of cheese served on dry bread; there is no slathering
of condiments
between the slices. This snack staves off hunger and
gives them a bit of
energy until the larger lunchtime meal is consumed.
Lunch – Lunch is typically the biggest meal of the day.
Many courses are
served over a period of time.
When I first arrived in Italy, I cursed the three hour
lunch break that
seemed to shut down most of the cities. I couldn't sit
still in a
restaurant for three hours, yet I wanted to fit in. After
I started
lingering, I observed not only what Italians eat, but
how they eat. They
consume a lot of food, eat every morsel and they do it
slowly.
One rather strange phenomenon occurred when an individual
ordered a pizza.
They ate the entire pie without sharing it. The pies
came in two sizes –-
large, which is the same size as an extra large in America,
and small,
which is about the size of a medium American pie, and
served only to
children. Their pizzas are made with 1/4 the dough of
American pizzas, and
1/4 the toppings. The sauce and cheese are spread thinly
over the crust.
The vegetables are cut larger. The second unusual sight
is the size of the
pasta courses, approximately 2 ½ cups per serving, tomato
or olive oil
based with a plethora of vegetables. Cream and cheese
sauces are rare. You
may hear the occasional ordering of a dish in a heavier
parmigiana sauce,
but also expect to hear a bit of teasing from the other
guests. Bread is
also served and consumed, but without butter. You would
think all that
starch went straight to everyone's hips. Italians are
not concerned with
such folly. The vegetable is next, if it is not served
with the pasta dish.
The salad arrives at the end of the meal. Beer and water
are the most
popular choices for beverages, with a large bottle of
water being entirely
consumed. Wine or soda is almost never served until dinner,
which is after
8 p.m. in Italy. Several minutes pass between each course
before the next
one arrives. The servers know the table rarely gets turned
(meaning they
will only have one guest at a table for the entire lunch
period), so there
is no need to present the courses simultaneously. Dessert
is usually saved,
if consumed at all, for the evening meal. Italians would
rather take a
gelato (ice cream) break at the end of the day than consume
a crème caramel
in the restaurant.
Exercise – Most Italians eschew a formal exercise plan.
They do not have
time (see “Shopping”).
After lunch, they walk. Italians are always in a rush
to get somewhere
unless it is just after lunch, then they all (finally)
slow down. Since
workers have a three hour break, the walk back to work
can be leisurely and
long. This is the way to stay fit after eating all that
food! Rome is built
on seven hills, so walking those hills keeps the inhabitants
fit around the
clock.
Shortly before dinner, Italians take the evening passeggiata
(walk). Women
will walk arm in arm, as will men sometimes. There is
much talking and much
socialization, by 8:30 p.m., most are back in their homes
preparing dinner.
Dinner – Dinner is served very late. Most restaurants
close after lunch and
reopen at 8 p.m. The typical family dinner is still a
tradition throughout
Italy.
Lighter than lunch, dinner will usually consist of a pasta
dish and at
least two vegetables. Meat is consumed only a few times
per month and may
be made into a ragù sauce (which is typically of the
Emilia-Romagna region)
or as a side dish, such as veal scallopine. Meat is usually
only a main
course at a holiday dinner. Fish is more commonly served
than meat. The
cost of fresh fish (even salmon) is less than red meat
which is probably
why the Italian diet has always contained more of the
sea inhabitants than
the land rovers. Wine is typically served as the evening
beverage along
with a large pitcher or bottle of water on the table.
Fruit is the dessert.
If a richer dessert is desired, portions are very tiny.
A small canoli, a
third of the size as those found in America, is typical
as is a thin slice
of a fruit tart. Tarts are sold in pastry shops by the
single serving.
Water – Bottled over tap
Although tap water is very drinkable and full of calcium,
bottled water is
most often consumed. Many Italians would never consider
drinking anything
other than bottled water with the choices being natural
or sparkling.
Italians also believe very cold beverages reduce the
gastric fire and cause
food not to be digested properly or completely, so they
do not refrigerate
their water, nor do they drink it with ice. Most Italians
drink at least
one liter of water per day if not more and Italian herbalists
recommend
drinking two liters.
Shopping. – A daily ritual
Food is very fresh in Italy. Many organic food products
can be found on the
supermarket shelves and most of the produce is grown
locally without
pesticides. This keeps toxics out of the Italian bodies
and helps prevent
weight gain. A few produce items are always stocked in
cans such as peas
and corn, but most Italians favor fresh over canned or
frozen. As produce
has little preservatives or chemicals sprayed on them
it rots after two
days. Italians must shop every day or every two days
for their fresh
ingredients. Daily shopping trips keep one’s legs and
arms in shape as
grocery stores are not as numerous as they are in the
States and walks to
them can be long. Italians are forced to consume a wide
variety of food
because very little is imported, so many mainstays of
the American diet are
only seasonal in Italy. Imports would have to be sprayed
with preservatives
and Italians would rather eat their food in its natural
state.
Beginning and End of the Day – Later and later
Italians begin their days later than most Americans with
many arising at 7
a.m. They also end their days much later, usually midnight.
The extended
days make their calorie burning sessions longer. The
mid-day break seems to
add to their overall energy level. There is no falling
asleep at one’s desk
or collapsing exhausted into bed at 9:00 p.m. The food
and reduced
preservatives and chemicals keep their bodies healthy
and energetic as does
the high consumption of water.
After adopting the eating and walking practices for 3
months, is it any
wonder those 30 pounds are now lost somewhere in Italy?
That's fine by me.
I hope they drown in the Adriatic.
*Most Italians typically walk a minimum of three kilometers
a day due to
daily shopping and parking difficulties.
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