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Giuseppe
DiBattista, 78, in the basement of his Coraopolis home, with
the prosciutti he makes.
Guided by noses as keen as truffle-hunting
dogs,
Pittsburgh artisans use primal elements
to transform fresh ham
into a delicacy revered
the world over.
written by VIRGINIA PHILLIPS, photographs by
JOHN HELLER
In a food world
where cured pork products have been catapulted to sexy heights
of connoisseurship by chefs like Mario Batali, Pittsburghers
blithely accept, take for granted and plain underappreciate
the elegant — and bargain-priced —sausage and prosciutto
made here in a fourth-generation family business in the Strip.
“Parma is
the best kept secret in town,” says Chef Toni Pais of
Café Zao.
Pais likes to bring
visitors to the 50- year-old Penn Avenue store to taste and
schmooze over homemade wine in the cramped back office where
Parma Sausage Products founder Luigi Spinabella, 78, holds court.
Spinabella’s
daughter Rina Edwards, 48, flips a sheet of butcher paper over
the desk, not obscuring the calendar with Luigi’s ballpoint
entries charting the ages and stages of some 6,000 prosciutto
hams and a dozen classic kinds of sausages that are dry-curing
in rooms overhead.
Rina is setting
the stage for “spuntini,” little snacks, paper plates
of thin-sliced sopressata, a spicy dry-cured sausage, creamy
mortadella, a cooked sausage with sweet spice and flecks of
fat, and “rustico,” a garlicky product perfected
by her husband, Parma general manager and head sausage maker
John Edwards.
One product is a
must-taste. That is prosciutto, purest and most challenging
of Italy’s cured pork panoply. This is Parma’s Gigi
brand, short for Luigi.
Prosciutto has not
been cooked. It is fresh ham raw-cured by salting and air-drying.
Slowly, steadily, the hanging hams give up moisture and gain
flavor. After at least a year — sometimes up to three
— when the outside rind has begun to resemble a geode
and the inside has turned to silk — the ham is ready to
eat. It is served in paper-thin slices, meltingly tender and
sweetly fragrant with the slight fermented funk that time creates.
Luigi loves to serve
prosciutto with a floral white wine like the Malvasia the family
made from grapes found at the Strip last year.
“There aren’t
too many ways to make prosciutto,” the genial Spinabella
says. “The investment is time.”
With a corkscrew
motion, Spinabella shows how he pokes a long sliver of horse
bone, a sonda, into a hanging ham, sniffs the bone’s aroma,
then calls on a half century’s olfactory memory to know
just how the ham is progressing.
Pittsburgh Italians
take this mystical rite in stride. This may be because so many
have a “garage prosciutto” hanging in their suburban
homes.
One such is Giuseppe
DiBattista, 78, father of Vivo chef/owner Sam DiBattista.
“My parents’
generation arrived with what I call ‘World War II thrift,’
Sam says. They knew how to keep food without refrigeration by
canning, drying, pickling, fermenting.” They were closer
to their meat sources too. Sam remembers classmates coming home
after school, “appalled to discover a bunch of dead rabbits
hanging in the garage, the ones they’d been playing with
the afternoon before.”
DiBattista senior
no longer keeps rabbits, but the dozen or more prosciutti he
cures every year rank with the best a connoisseur may taste.
Both Spinabella
and DiBattista would be national treasures if Japan’s
reverence for artisans prevailed here.
Each has a vivid
memory of the first step on the journey: the first pig they
killed, some 50 or 60 years ago.
In Luigi Spinabella’s
office a family portrait shows the determined, bespectacled
boy he was, growing up in the town of Ranzano in Parma. With
his father away, the weather turned bitter, fatal to outdoor
animals. The pigs had to be slaughtered. The eight-year-old
didn’t wield the knife, but he gave his fathers’
helpers authority to proceed.
DiBattista was 18.
His mother’s family in tiny Madonna Della Croce in Abruzzo
owned a farm with communal oven and laundry. They owned most
of the land round about. DiBattista had a good mentor in his
maternal grandfather. This nonno, invited to a mayor’s
banquet, noted that he could certainly make better prosciutto
and sausage than what he’d been served. He was annointed
the region’s purveyor and that skill came to Pittsburgh
with Giuseppe.
At DiBattista’s
airy Dutch Colonial house on a Coraopolis hill, the retired
steelworker describes, with Sam translating, his early trial
and error.
“A leg of
pork was a serious investment, too big to risk. So at first
I over-salted. As my confidence grew, I used less.”
In the typical Italian
basement kitchen, the tools are simple: a dented salt shaker
holding one pound of salt prescribed for each 14- to 18-pound
ham. (Parma uses more salt — but they are producing hams
in the thousands, not dozens, as well as meeting commercial
regulations and contending with health inspectors looking over
their shoulder.) An ancient baby scale used for weighing the
legs. A wooden probe, porous like the horse bone, for testing.
DiBattista leads
the way past an ancient coal furnace that the family used to
fire up with wood to sear lamb shoulder chops.
He opens a door,
releasing a burst of musky perfume, part dirt floor and part
aircuring hams. The dirt moderates the allessential humidity
that keeps the hams from drying out. Sam once served this prosciutto
to a traveler from Italy who wanted to know, “Was this
earth floor?”
DiBattista senior
gives a firm friendly squeeze to a ham or two. He indicates
the steel trough where the hams spent their initial “time
on the salt.”
USDA regs say prosciutto
may be sold after 12 months, but Parma’s averages 20 to
22 months.
In the ’90s
when Spinabella got serious ly into prosciutto production, the
specialty was not yet riding the wave of national promotion
it would shortly receive. So in Parma’s inventory languished
a connoisseur’s dream—hams that had hung 3 1/2 years,
getting better and better. “They had a buttery texture
you can’t imagine,” Rina remembers.
Besides age, prosciutto,
like wine or cheese, can reveal terroir and regional style,
Sam explains.
His father aims
for the style of Abruzzo where temperatures are cooler and altitudes
higher than in Parma. We sit down with a plate of DiBattista’s
24-month-old prosciutto. The rosy slices are breathtakingly
pretty, with a sheen like a silk necktie. We roll slices and
bite. The texture is a bit firmer, more satiny than Parma’s
pure velvet. The flavor, sweet, nearly nutty, hints at Spain’s
air-cured jamon.
Both DiBattista
and Spinabella have been known to take amateurs under their
wing. There are plenty of ways a garage prosciutto can go wrong.
It must not dry out too fast. Spinabella is blunt: “If
it crusts, it’s done for.” Faulty boning or bleeding,
too little salt or too little time on the salt lead to odiferous
disaster. Some people will try things like spraying with a caramel
solution, introducing preservatives or drying with fans.
DiBattista is set
with his approach. “I no change,” he says.
it’s a guy
thing
For every Pittsburgh
prosciutto-maker there are dozens making sausage. Locals swear
allegiance to a particular fresh sausage, made with love for
the city’s discerning markets by retirement-age uncles
like Salvatore Merante, 75, and Joe Labriola, 85.
These guys have
a following.
Calabrian-born “Uncle
Sal,” makes sausage, both sweet and hot, for Groceria
Merante, on Bates Street in Oakland.
Cut into this artisan
product, uncooked, and breathe a fresh revelation. Pork, salt,
pepper, nothing more. The coarse grind is no kin to factory
mush. Merante, who boasts a travel-poster handlebar mustache,
grinds 100 pounds at a time, mixing it with his hands.
“This I make
like my mother. No preservatives.” Did you hear? “That’s
NO preservatives.”
A Butler company
processes the meat on Tuesday. On Friday Merante makes sausage.
“Fresh and nice,” he says with satisfaction. “Fresh
killin’.”
He’s been
making sausage for 52 years, 45 of them in a busy market near
Mercy Hospital, owned with his late brother Italo. His hot sausage,
famously delectable on the grill, has dried red pepper and cayenne.
Hotter, Merante warns, than Labriola’s.
Italians have a
food holiday for everything. For Pittsburgh Calabrians, a July
picnic in North Park is Sopressata Day.
“This is
when amateurs bring out the sausage they made last winter, when
pigs were cheap and fat,” says Sal’s niece, Filomena,
who runs the Groceria Merante with her sister Julie. “It’s
such a guy thing.”
And the guys do
get serious about spicy sopressata, pressata, pressed, as it
cures. Some shorten the name to “soup-ra-sot.” Even
“supersudd.” In any dialect it is a benchmark for
Italian masculinity.
Individuals make
hundreds of pounds a year to serve with homemade wine to friends
and family. The summer fest is a chance for peers to see who’s
who in the Pittsburgh sausage world. Winners are announced.
Merante admits he entered his own product under a friend’s
name to win one year.
prosciutto what?
Parma has come a
long way since the mid-’50s when sausage was made in rented
quarters on the Strip’s Spring Way alley near McDonald’s.
The family lived on the third floor. The building still bears
a faded Parma Sausage sign.
“Until 1997,
when Rich Sebak’s ‘The Strip Show’ came out,
people would come in for their 10 pounds of hot sausage for
graduation parties, Rina says. “They’d ask for ham
and baloney, which we don’t have. They didn’t even
know we made all the stuff here.
“Now they’re
looking for different tastes and textures. They want antipasto--
prosciutto, sopressata, capicolla. They’re buying tons
of pancetta to cook with.” In perhaps the biggest transition,
Parma is no longer a guy thing. Luigi recently made Rina president.
Rina, in turn, is mentoring her daughter Erin, 23. Well, who
exactly is mentoring whom? Erin and husband Darren Schumacher,
23, brought computers to Parma.
“Think about
it,” Rina muses. “Until 1995, we were cash only.”
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