whitebeard

Don't curse the darkness, light a candle.

Sunday, January 29, 2006

 The baker who beat McDonald's

Slow Food "David" Slays "Goliath," the McDonald's Fast Food Giant, in Southern Italy

Richard Owen

After a five-year battle, the fast-food giant McDonald's has retreated from a southern Italian town, defeated by the sheer wholesomeness of a local baker's bread.

After a five-year battle, the fast-food giant McDonald's has retreated from a southern Italian town, defeated by the sheer wholesomeness of a local baker's bread.

The closure of McDonald's in Altamura, Apulia, was hailed yesterday as a victory for European cuisine against globalised fast food.

Luigi Digesù, the baker, said that he had not set out to force McDonald's to close down in any "bellicose spirit". He had merely offered the 65,000 residents tasty filled panini — bread rolls — which they overwhelmingly preferred to hamburgers and chicken nuggets. "It is a question of free choice," Signor Digesù said.

His speciality fillings include mortadella, mozzarella and eggs or scamorza cheese, eggs, basil and tomato, as well as fèdda, a local version of bruschetta — toasted bread drizzled with olive oil and salt and covered in chopped tomatoes.

McDonald's opened in a piazza in the centre of Altamura, 45km (30 miles) south of Bari, in 2001, infuriating devotees of traditional Apulia gastronomy such as Peppino Colamonico, a doctor, and Onofrio Pepe, a journalist. They campaigned against McDonald's as the Friends of Cardoncello, named after a southern Italian mushroom.

Altamura, founded in the 5th century BC and rebuilt in the Middle Ages by Frederick II, is famed for its fragrant, golden bread — and for Signor Digesù's victorious panini.

"There was no marketing strategy, no advertising promotion, no discounts," Il Giornale commented. "It was just that people decided the baker's products were better. David has beaten Goliath."

The queues outside the bakery grew longer while McDonald's gradually emptied, despite the best efforts of Ronald McDonald, the mascot clown, changes of management, children's parties and special offers.

In July 2003 Altamura bread was recognised by the European Union as a protected regional product after lobbying by Enzo Lavarra, Euro MP for the Bari area, Rachele Popolizio, the Mayor of Altamura, and Giuseppe Barile, head of the local bakers' association.

Signor Pepe said that he regretted the loss of 20 jobs at McDonald's, but "tradition has won". The campaign was supported by the Slow Food Foundation, founded in 1986 by Carlo Petrini, an Italian journalist incensed by the opening of a McDonald's on the Piazza di Spagna near the Spanish Steps in Rome. It has 82,000 members in 107 countries.

Despite a series of closures around the world and active opposition, McDonald's increased worldwide sales by 4 per cent last year. Jim Skinner, the chief executive, said that it was "the leading global foodservice retailer", with more than 30,000 restaurants in more than 100 countries, 70 per cent of them "owned and operated by independent local businessmen and women".

Shirley Foenander, vice-president for marketing and communication, said that McDonald's had adapted to local cuisines and tastes.

But Signor Digesu's victory was seen as more than a local setback by some. The French newspaper Libération said it showed that there was a "peaceful alternative" to the militancy of José Bové, the French farmer and anti-globalisation protester, who was given a three-month prison sentence after ransacking a McDonald's in the town of Millau in 1999.

The bread that ran the Big Mac out of town

Altamura bread was the first baking product in Europe to be granted a DOP certificate, and is so far the only Italian bread to qualify for the honour. DOP stands for Denominazione d'Origine Protetta, or denomination of protected origin, the equivalent of DOC (Denominazione di Origine Controllata, or denomination of controlled origin), used for wines. DOP products must be specific to a geographic area

The bread is made from locally grown durum wheat flour with yeast, water and marine salt, according to a recipe dating to 1500. The formula is almost certainly older, however, because Horace, the Roman poet, called the bread "the best in the world."

The flour must be ground in mills within the communes of Altamura, Gravina di Puglia, Poggiorsini, Spinazzola and Minervino Murge, all in the province of Bari. The baking process has five stages from the rolling of the dough to baking

It is baked in an open oak wood oven. It is unusually long-lasting and was originally created for shepherds and farmers who worked in the fields and hills of Apulia for days or even weeks at a time

Altamura bread is the basis of several local dishes, including a winter soup called cialda, in which slices of the bread line a pot to which are added water, onions, tomatoes, parsley, basil, potatoes, olive oil, olives, celery and lemons.

January 6, 2006
The Times (UK)

posted by: Whitebeard at 10:53 | link | comments |
italy

Sunday, January 15, 2006

TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2006
8:00 PM E.S.T.
Bring the Noise and Drown Out Bush's Lies
In large cities and town squares across the country we will rally one hour before Bush's address. At 9:00 PM let the world hear us as we symbolically drown out Bush's lies bring your own noise -- drums, pots and pans, musical instruments -- your voice. Let taxi horns blare and church bells ring, as we bring our own state of the union message: BUSH STEP DOWN!

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2006
11:00 AM, 17th & Constitution. Washington, DC. We will take our demand to the White House.  This regime is immoral, dangerous, and criminally indictable.
Bush Lied. Bush Spied. Bush Step Down.
2006. 2008. Too late. Turn your outrage into mass political action.
http://www.worldcantwait.org/

posted by: Whitebeard at 10:54 | link | comments |
us, civil rights

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

2006's wishes

 2006: Countdown to demand BUSH STEP DOWN!
 the World Can't Wait
Do many millions of people want Bush out?  Yes!  Even the conservative investment weekly, Barron's, says "Putting the president above the Congress is an invitation to tyranny" and that impeachment should be considered. The continuing conflict over Bush's secret NSA spying order could make the Bush Regime vulnerable to calls for censure and impeachment.
But this Congress won’t impeach Bush without a mass upheaval across the country.  What at important time for people to act, setting our terms that Bush Step Down.

Here

A hug from Italy.

 

posted by: Whitebeard at 09:39 | link | comments |
us, civil rights, war

 

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User: Whitebeard
Name: Urbano Cipriani
A retired teacher of history and litterature.

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