Stream free On Demand
Gino's Italian Escape
series • cooking
PG
series • cooking
PG
“For Italians, the most important thing in life is food,” says Gino D’Acampo in Gino’s Italian Escape, as he kicks off one of his many journeys around the country where he was born. “Every time you go somewhere, you meet someone, there is always something new that you learn.”
Born and raised in Naples, the chef, now based in the UK, where he has six restaurants, still spends a lot of time in Italy – quite a bit of it filming his delicious food and travel shows. In the seven seasons of Gino’s Italian Escape now streaming at SBS On Demand, he travels the country top to toe, taking in its stunning coastlines, mountain views, sunny islands, small villages and busy cities, sharing the best of the local food traditions and cooking up his own recipes along the way. From “dunky dunky” meatballs to encouraging us to eat chocolate pudding for breakfast, and sharing his grandfather’s tiramisu, it’s a delicious journey. Here’s a selection of the recipe he shares, to power up your armchair travel.
In the north
Meatballs in a spicy tomato sauce (polpettine al pomodoro). Credit: Dan Jones / Hodder & Stoughton
Do you get “dunky dunky” with your meatballs? Gino does and after when serving up a meatball feast during his travels in Gino’s Italian Express (the seventh series), we’re all for it. Hand us the warm bread…
“This is the recipe that divides Italy: meatballs. Or as we say in Italian, polpette. If you go to the south of Italy, in the middle of the north, everybody has their own recipe, they add their own ingredients, some people put in onions, some people put in garlic. One thing that you need to know, though, is that Italian people do not eat meatballs with spaghetti. That is an American thing, Italian people have meatballs with tomato sauce and crusty warm bread.” The version Gino cooks up for a group of art students in Verona has pork and beef meatballs in a rich tomato sauce – perfect for mopping up with bread. “Very important to serve with loads of tomato sauce, otherwise you won’t be able to do dunky dunky with the bread,” he says.
Italian sausages and beans with garlic ciabatta (salsicce e fagioli con crostini all’aglio). Credit: Dan Jones / Hodder & Stoughton
Gino with his chocolate rice puddings. Credit: Gino's Italian Express
On his train trip through the north in Gino’s Italian Express, he travels the ancient 'rice route’ through the fields of the Mantova (Mantua) region. Italy is Europe’s biggest rice producer, and Gino times his visit to take part in a local rice festival in the village of Villampenta. After enjoying the local pork, garlic and parmesan risotto, made with an unusual two-part method, Gino cooks up his own risotto-ish dish, a chocolate rice pudding. And while this might look like dessert, it could also make a fine start to your day. “When it’s done well, you cannot beat a nice rice pudding, especially for breakfast,” he says.
Along the coast
When Gino kicked off the very first series of his Italian travels, the first episode saw him visiting the stunning scenery of the Amalfi Coast, and recalling memories of visits to the town of Amalfi as a child. “There are so many beautiful places in Italy, but this has to be one of my favourites… this is where I used to come on holiday with my family… a lot of memories of when I was a little boy, probably about ten, 11. My mum and dad used to take my sister and me here always, to swim and to have ice creams.” The area is also famous for its lemons, and after enjoying an ice-cold granita flavoured with local lemons, a visit to a local citrus grove, and discovering everything from lemon salt to lemon honey in a local shop, he prepares a .
More memories surface in the second episode of the first series, when Gino heads to the bustling southern Mediterranean city of Naples – the city where he spent his childhood. “If you ask me to name my favourite place in Italy, it has to be Naples. The food, the people and the scenery are so inspiring. Without doubt, my heart truly belongs here, he says. “This is where I was born. Where I grew up when I was a little boy. I study here, to become chef, the catering college. And it’s a lot of memories.” One of those memories is of a unique Neapolitan street food: deep-fired pizza with tomato sauce. “It’s the ultimate Neapolitan street food... I know it sounds a bit strange, but believe me, it is sensational. I grew up with it, and I want everybody to see it.” After a visit to a pizzeria that’s been making them for more than 160 years to find out some of the secrets, Gino shares his own pizza-inspired dish, something dish his mother used to make. “When i was growing up here my mum created something special, just for me. “I used to love pizza and if it was for me I would have pizza every day. So what she did, she came up with this dish, where it uses the same flavours that you would have on a pizza, but using chicken… and even today I still make the same dish for my boys”. Get his recipe for pollo a la pizzaiola, or chicken in breadcrumbs with pizza sauce, .
Gino's spaghetti with clams and mussels. Credit: Gino's Italian Coastal Escape
Gino D'Acampo with his sea bass dish.
Cucciolone (ice-cream sandwiches)
Many of the dishes from his travels are to be found in , along with other great Italian recipes. We spotted this cucciolone recipe, from his book Gino’s Italian Coastal Escape, on his FB and had to pop it in here because who doesn’t love the idea of choc-chip cookie ice-cream sandwiches?
Traditions & treasures
Gino cooks his paccheri with four cheeses (paccheri ai quattro formaggi). Credit: Gino's Italian Adriatic Escape
Gino's lemon tiramisù with limoncello. Credit: Gino's Italian Express
No-bake chocolate and hazelnut cheesecake (cheesecake a freddo alla crema di cioccolato e noccioline). Credit: Dan Jones / Hodder & Stoughton
Island hopping
Gino D'Acampo's tuna steaks in a punchy tomato and olive sauce. Credit: Gino's Italian Escape / ITV
For the third Escape series, the theme was ‘Islands in the Sun’, with Gino visiting different spots around Sardinia and Sicily. After exploring some of the coastal bounty of Sardinia (which are plentiful! “Sardinia has more than 1000 miles of shore, with turquoise waters lapping golden sand, secluded coves, and rugged cliffs with hidden caves. And with all that coastline comes a sea full of sea life!” he says), and visiting the huge San Benedetto market in the capital, Cagliari, in he cooks up tuna in punchy tomato and olive sauce. For more recipes inspired by his island travels, take a look at these recipes from his books Gino’s Islands in the Sun and Gino’s Italian Coastal Escape, which he has shared on his website: ; , which embraces Sicily’s love of chestnuts; , which he made while filming on the island of Elba; ; and Sicily-inspired .
Southern stars
Gino cooks swordfish steaks and potato. Credit: Gino's Italian Adriatic Escape.
Credit: Haarala Hamilton / Bloomsbury
Orecchiete with cime di rape and sausage
Gino with Cosima and Mimmo in Alberobello, enjoying a meal. Credit: Gino's Italian Adriatic Escape.
Family favourites
Gino D'Acampo cooks Gragnano's legendary pasta with salmon in a spicy arrabbiata sauce in a corner of an orchard. Credit: Gino's Italian Escape / ITV
In the very first series, Gino Gragnano, a town about 30 kilometres south of Naples. The town is famous for pasta – “If you ask any Italian about Gragnano, the first thing that they will say to you is pasta because Gragnano is the home of pasta,” he explains – but that’s not why Gino is here. “It’s impossible for me to return to my home country without coming to Campagna, the beautiful region where I was born and where my family still call home,” he says. And he's come to Gragnano to visit his aunt, Rita, and while he’s there he’s cooking a meal for her. “I have to admit, I’m a little bit nervous because, I know that it sounds quite strange, but I’ve never cooked for my Italian family before. And, you know, whenever I come here, they always cook for me.” Unsurprisingly, pasta is on the menu, and after learning more about what makes the local pasta so good, he cooks up pasta arrabbiata with salmon. “If you want to translate arrabbiatta into English, it means upset, when somebody gets really angry. And the reason is because in the arrabbiata sauce, you have chilli and chilli makes the upset thing. The salmon with the arrabiatta, it works perfectly,” he says. Italians wouldn’t normally cook salmon in arrabbiata sauce, he says, but his family give it the thumbs up.
Gino makes caprese salad. Credit: Gino's Italian Coastal Escape
Gino with tiramisu. Credit: Gino's Italian Adriatic Escape
Gino's grandfather's recipe of tagliatelle alla Bolognese. Credit: Gino's Italian Escape: A Taste of the Sun
Season two sees Gino , and of course, he couldn’t visit the city without finding out more about its world-famous sauce. At a local trattoria, he meets an Italian cook who has been honing her ragu la Bolognese for almost thirty years, based on a recipe passed down by her grandmother. After Gino enjoys a dish of her sauce, with hand-made tagliatelle, he heads up to the rooftops of Bologna and cooks up his grandfather’s recipe of tagliatelle alla Bolognese and shares some of the D’Acampo family’s secret sauce tips. “My grandfather showed it to me when I was a little boy, and I’ve been using the same recipe since then,” he says. (For a different family ragu recipe, try the Neapolitan recipe from his mother’s family that you can find .)
Credit: Haarala Hamilton / Bloomsbury
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