Memories in a Plate

I planted rucola instead of geraniums this year. Best decision of the season.

It’s not a lot — just a small pot’s worth — but enough to harvest a handful of the freshest, most peppery leaves for lunch. There is something quietly triumphant about that.

A year ago, in Florence, at a small restaurant just steps from Santa Maria del Fiore, I got addicted to a salad I haven’t stopped thinking about since. Rucola, shaved Parmigiano, a drizzle of good extra virgin olive oil, and — his majesty — aged Balsamic.

Simple. Healthy. Deeply satisfying.

Today, with my own rucola, I made it again. Same ingredients, different terrace, different light. But the same feeling — that particular pleasure of a dish that asks nothing of you except to pay attention.

Wonderful memories, served in a plate.

One response to “Memories in a Plate”

  1. Mike Richardson Avatar
    Mike Richardson

    A wonderfully delicious idea. But I would miss the colour and smell of those continually flowering geraniums all summer.

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Alexandra

Between the Lines moves between the political and the personal, the historical and the immediate—food, art, travel, and the long view. If that sounds wide, it is. The world is wide.

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