"I eat everything": Stanley Tucci is back in another round of Searching For Italy

From Piedmont to Puglia to Venice, and many other delicious destinations, Tucci is back to entertain with his appetite for eating and meeting.

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Stanley Tucci in Venice. Credit: CNN

— Season 2 of Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy premieres 8.40pm Thursday 7 March on SBS, with episodes airing weekly. Episodes will also be available each week at . —

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Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy

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Stanley Tucci has the most important qualification for hosting an Italian food and travel show. It's not his Italian heritage, and his ability to chat in Italian with the cooks, chefs, bartenders, growers and others he meets. It's not his witty, entertaining way with words, nor that 'something' that makes him so compelling on screen. Those are all , of course, but there's something else that makes him exceedingly well qualified for taking us on a food-lovers jaunt.

It's his willingness to try almost anything.

In the opening episode of season two, Tucci is in Venice and immediately, his familiar voice narrating the opening shots of the water city sets the tone for another clever and highly entertaining series. "It's the fifth century. You're an urban planner pitching an idea, 'A city in the sea...' you say, '...built on stilts, canals instead of streets. You can only get there by boat.' And, incredibly, they built it.'

Soon Tucci is off to eat what the locals eat, in the places they go to eat. First up, All'Arco, a wine bar in the Rialto area (the city's fish market district). Matteo Pinto, who runs the barcaro, asks him "Is there anything you don't like"? "No, mangio tutto! (I eat everything!)", Tucci replies. And if you've watched the first series, you'll know that's true. He doesn't pretend he loves everything (unsalted Tuscan bread gets a blunt 'tastes like cardboard' comment in the first season), but he's keen to try whatever is on offer – even a raw onion, during his travels in Calabria! – and when he does love it, the enjoyment is clear.

This second season sees the award-winning actor travelling through Venice, Umbria, Piedmont, Puglia, Calabria (an area with family ties for Tucci, and his parents, who join him in the region), Sardinia, Liguria and a destination far beyond the Italian Peninsula: London, his current home, where he explores the rich Italian culinary scene.

A small group of people sit at a table near a stone building. A green field stretches to the horizon behind them. A dog sits beside the table.
Stanley Tucci enjoys a meal in Puglia. Credit: CNN

Here's a taste (and some recipes to fuel your viewing) of what's coming up in season two.

Episode 1 Venice
As well as cicchetti ("This is fast food, lagoon style. The word cicchetti means "a nothing". Ironic because it's really something," says Tucci of the creative little bites Venice is known for) at All'Arco, he also heads off with a local gondolier to try more of the small snacks at a popular boatman's hangout. Traditional snacks like sardine sour and baccalà mantecato feed his appetite for trying more modern cicchetti inventions, too. If you'd like to join the Venetian snack mood, we suggest Emiko Davies' recipes for (her favourite of all Venice's chichetti, she says) or . Or try what Tucci calls the king of cicchetti with or , a slightly different take on baccalà mantecato.
Salt cod crostini
Credit: Chris Chen
Tucci's Venetian wanderings also take him to the Rialto fish market; the popular Harry's Bar; some 30 kilometres to the west to visit wetlands where duck hunting remains popular; a restaurant on the island of Torcello where he eats a Venetian duck ragu; and back in the city, to a meeting with a local journalist to discuss the ever-constant issue of flooding in the city, while the pair try a local street food classic, a fried fish dish known as scartosso. There's also a visit to a restaurant where all the cooks are refugees, creating a menu that, appropriately, reflects Venice's history as a trading centre.

Episode 2 Umbria
While this small, predominantly rural region lives in the shadow of its more glamourous neighbour, Tuscany, Umbria has an ancient history that predates even the Romans. Here Tucci finds out more about the local tradition of wild boar hunting and eats pappardelle with wild boar ragu; visits an estate known for truffles (Umbria is the largest producer of black truffles in Italy) and enjoys a dish of spaghetti with mushrooms, beetroot and grated truffle; and visits Perugia and Orvieto. Porchetta, salami, the local no-salt bread (perfect with salami!) and pigeon are all on the menu during his travels. If you're craving porchetta after watching this one, try , or recipe.


Episode 3 Piedmont & Valle D'Aosta
Things start on a sweet note in Piedmont, when Tucci drinks bicerin, a hot drink made of layered espresso, hot chocolate and thick cream, during a visit to Turin. The episode also sees him visit Piola da Celso, a local gem that champions Piedmontese cuisine in its most traditional form as promoted by the slow food movement. Owner and Chef Elisabetta prepares the dangerously garlicky bagna càuda, a comforting cucina povera staple, in addition to veal and tuna sauce, a Piedmontese delicacy not often found in other regions. Rice often takes over from pasta in Piedmont, and Tucci visits a Michelin-starred restaurant in Vercelli that's turning rice into edible works of art. White truffles and barolo, the red wine the area is famous for, also feature on his travels here, which also include a visit to the neighbouring region of Valle D'Aosta. For viewing this episode, get garlicky with the recipe Antonio Carluccio shared with Poh Ling Yeow.


Episode 4 London

A man and two laughing women stand in a kitchen. Oneof the woman reaches into a large pot with a pair of red-handled tongs.
Stanley Tucci at La Mia Mamma in London. Credit: CNN / Will Bruce
In this episode, Tucci sets out to explore how Italian immigration has transformed the food scene in his adopted hometown of London. On the menu, risotto con ossobucco at one of his favourite Italian restaurants; then a visit to the restaurant run by the Calabrian chef who catered Tucci's wedding to Felicity Blunt, where he eats an appetiser of grilled scallops with salsa verde and ‘nduja – a spicy Calabrian sausage; San Daniele prosciutto at Britains oldest Italian delicatessen, Terroni of Clerkenwell, established in 1878; and catch-up with TV chef Gennaro Contaldo, who cooks tagliolini with Amalfi lemon and wild rocket. There's also a visit to La Mia Mamma, where Italian mothers come from different regions to cook their home-style dishes for you. Today, Mammas Angela, Rosanna and Patrizia, teach Tucci a recipe from Campania – ragù Napoletano. Perhaps the perfect recipe to eat while watching this is Gennaro Cotaldo's ! Or if you'd like to make the pasta as well, Silvia Colloca's recipe for

Ragu alla napoletana served with crusty bread and red wine
Ragu alla napoletana di Gennaro Credit: Tammi Kwok

Episode 5 Puglia
While Puglia is famous for its fragrant olive oil, beautiful vegetables, and cheeses, it is also one of Italy’s poorest regions. From Bari’s raw seafood to Cisternino’s Fornelli and Foggia region‘s burnt grain to cheesemaker Vito’s Apulian blue cheese, Tucci tastes dishes that exemplify this region’s sense of community and innovation. Humble dishes traditionally associated with poverty, known as ‘cucina povera’, are being transformed into world-class cuisine. He also makes a visit to the city of Matera, once part of Puglia but now officially part of the neighbouring region of Basilicata. In Bari, he joins in the ancient Barese tradition of raw fish; and visits 'orecchiette road' in Bari Veccia, where women sit outside their houses, making orecchiette to sell. In Foggia, the breadbasket of Italy, Stanley meets Pietro Zito, a chef who is on a mission to revive the simple flavours of Puglia’s past. He takes Tucci to meet Nicola L’Agrasta, who has developed a modern technique for recreating “Grano Arso,” a type of burnt grain that used to be produced by the poorest farmers. After harvesting, the fields used to be burned to remove the remaining wheat stalks, but this process always left some kernels on the ground, which were then collected and used to make dark flour. Now, burnt wheat is created by toasting the grain, which produces flour that Zito uses to make dark pasta in his restaurant, Antichi Sapori. Olive oil and outstanding local cheese also get a turn in Tucci's food-fascinated spotlight.
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More delicious eats, this time in Puglia. Credit: CNN


Episode 6: Calabria
All four of Tucci's grandparents emigrated from Calabria, so a visit here would be special anyway, but this time he's joined for some of his wanderings by his parents, Joan and Stan. After a visit to Marzi, the birthplace of the grandfather after whom he is named, he visits a nearby bakery, Panificio Cuti, where bread is still made using traditional Calabrian methods. For the Tuccis, baker Pina Olivetta makes moresello, a bread stuffed with meat and cime di rapa, a portable meal that was popular with farmers, hunters and even stone masons, like Tucci's grandfather.

The hands of a person in a white jacket hold two pieces of stuffed bread load above a wooden board, where another piece of stuffed bread sits.
In Calabria, Stanley Tucci visits Panificio Cuti, where baker Pina Olivetti makes morsello, bread filled with meat and cime di rapa. Credit: CNN
His Calabrian jaunt also includes a visit to Tropea to find out what makes the local onions so good; a visit to a fish auction in Scilla, then eating pasta with swordfish sauce; a trip into the mountainous area of Aspromonte; and finally a trip to Cittanova, where his mother's family come from, for a reunion with extended family, and a feast of the family's favourite dishes, include stockfish Cittanova-style, a roast goat dish and zeppole (or zippole), fried dough balls that are often sweet in other parts of Italy but savoury in Calabria. Try it yourself with Rose Agostino's recipe for her family's Calabrian anchovy-stuffed (you can also leave the anchovies out and roll in sugar once fried if you prefer) or , with anchovies and olives, from Paola Baccia.

Stanley Tucci sits at a long table with his parents on either side. More people can be seen sitting across from the trio.
Stanley Tucci and his parents at a family feast in Calabria. Credit: CNN

Episode 7: Sardinia
The food of Sardinia has a multitude of influences, from the waves of settlers throughout history. Tucci discovers the two very different sides of Sardinia - the coast, and the rugged inland. He starts in the island capital, Cagliari, with a visit to the enormous San Benedetto market, and a taste of grey mullet bottarga, also known as 'Sardinian caviar'. At a Michelin-starred restaurant, he eats a staple Cagliaritano dish, fregola ai frutti di mare, with fregola – a North African-inspired pasta - sea greens and fresh seafood. Travelling inland he meets a beekeeper and experiences his first taste of ‘bitter honey’ made from the autumnal blossom of the local corbezzolo trees. Bitter honey has caused a stir since the Roman times when Cicero was famously unimpressed by the flavour, and even now its unusual, bitter taste continues to divide. However, it's perfect on a meal of spit-roasted lamb. Also part of his Sardinian adventures: a visit to a shepherd high on a mountain and a chance to try the man's pecorino cheeses; a boat ride to an annual fishing event on the island of San Pietro; and a visit to Sardinian food expert Simonetta Bazzu at her culinary school located in her ancestral village of Battista. Bazzu is fiercely proud of her cultural heritage and is on a mission to preserve the cuisine of the past. Tucci tastes freshly baked pane carasau, an ancient unleavened bread made in a wood-fired oven, and is astonished to see how this crispy bread, once softened with warm stock, completely changes its form.

Standing in front of a traditional fireplace, beside a table with plates of pasta and bread, a man and a woman discuss something he is holding.
Stanley Tucci with Sardinian food expert Simonetta Bazzu. Credit: CNN

Bazzu treats Tucci to a zuppa Gallurese, made with pane carasau soaked in sheep broth, topped with heaps of cheese and wild mint, and baked in the oven until brown. Embrace the flavours of his adventures with recipes such as , , , or .



Episode 8: Liguria
Liguria is a crescent right on the coast of Italy bordering Tuscany and France. The angularity of its landscape determines what the people of this region eat and their narrow, terraced fields force them to be creative with what they grow and how they harvest it. To explore how Ligurian people grow the herbs that form the basis of their cuisine, Carlo Cracco – one of Italy's most famous, Michelin-starred chefs – takes Tucci to meet Iva Lavagnino, an octogenarian farmer who cultivates crops and forages for wild food. The staple of Ligurian cuisine, however, is pesto. Its key ingredient is fresh basil, but not just any type of basil. Tucci visits a special basil farm with Roberto Panizza, the king of pesto and founder of the Pesto World Championship. They discuss how the best basil must be grown and harvested in a particular way. In this “green ocean” the aroma is intense, increasing Tucci’s appetite for the marvellous trenette al pesto – one of his favourite things in the whole world. Embrace the green with , made with a traditional Ligurian pesto.

Trenette with pesto, potato and green beans
A classic regional dish, complete with Ligurian pesto. Source: Supplied
In Genoa, focaccia, the simple bread that has spread across the world after originating here, is part of his eating adventures, as is corzetti, a Genoese pasta. Along the coast, outstanding olives, coniglio alla Ligure (Ligurian-style rabbit), pasta with fish sauce, and stuffed anchovies are on the menu. Embrace the flavours with or the delight of homemade focaccia, with Andre Ursini's from Liguria.

Reaching the end of his travels, Tucci cooks a meal for his crew. "I’ve decided to cook a meal for those who have laboured so hard to help me make this series. As we prepare the meal together, I cannot help but think of the meals I have shared ... with Italians from so many different regions and walks of life.

"I’ve travelled through this peninsula searching for a definition of a country that is at once welcoming and resistant, beautiful and dark, ancient and young.

 "Yes, pieces of the country we all know as Italy are to be found in the hills, fields, homes, mountains, castles, ruins and medieval streets, but my search has led me to realise that Italy as a single, pure entity is to be found only at the table."


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SBS Food is a 24/7 foodie channel for all Australians, with a focus on simple, authentic and everyday food inspiration from cultures everywhere. NSW stream only.
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13 min read
Published 5 March 2024 5:20pm
Updated 8 March 2024 3:13pm
By SBS Food
Source: SBS


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