Ketti and her husband at their stall Herbs for sale
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ubdued excitement hums through the streets surrounding the Palazzo Pubblico. Local shop owners stand by makeshift wooden stalls, laden with pasta, grains, and bread. Glasses of wine and samples of olive-oil drizzled bread tempt hungry mouths. It's Friday in Cagli, the fourth in a five-Friday festival of regional food known as Venerdi di Cagli-- literally "Fridays in Cagli." Yum!
Chef Luca shows off his herbish delights

Plunging his spoon into a skillet of fragrant tomato sauce, Santoni Gieumlieu scoops up and hands over a bowl of hearty fusilli made from unbleached faro. "Next I'll make you pasta with chocolate," he teases. Beside him at their stall, Lea Luzi explains that faro is an ancient grain consumed by generations of Italians, extending as far back as the Etruscans. Lea and Santoni of the Monterosso pasta company are among the dozens of shop owners, restaurateurs, and specialty food producers in the town center promoting their products and sharing a passion for pane.
Venerdi di Cagli is a new festival with ambitions to become a biannual tradition. Each Friday event features a typical local food. From May 31 through June 28, the Cagli community hosts weekly cooking demonstrations and tastings of:

  • mushrooms
  • herbs
  • snails
  • bread
  • whole foods
Many store owners collaborated on Venerdi di Cagli. It emerged as a way to make Cagli a more popular shopping destination for out-of-towners. Luanna Santi, owner of the furniture store Mobilie Santi and co-organizer of the Friday festivals, said they developed the idea as an added enticement to visit Cagli during extended store hours; all stores participating in the event stay open until 10 p.m. on the designated Fridays. A festival showcasing traditional foods seemed, to local vendors, a good way to promote Cagli as a supplier of high quality regional products.
All featured ingredients are grown in Le Marche region, of which Cagli is the heart. Simple wheat appears in such forms as faro pasta, organic bread, and macrobiotic focaccia.
At organic restaurant Un Punto Macrobiotico's table, owner Gabriela Mancini kneads flour, water and salt into a soft dough. The result is an outstanding loaf for Le Marche, which usually bakes saltless bread--and to an American palate, bland. Saltless bread is a tradition, dating back to a time when the Papal State's tax on salt made it too expensive to use.
"It's a tradition that we have kept," says baker Giuliano Pediconi. "It makes the bread lighter."
Tastes may vary, but all vendors at the festival share an enthusiastic commitment to simple, locally grown food.

Old fashioned sheaf of wheat on a brightly colored stool

Written by Kerri-Ann Jennings, Photography and Video by Marissa Norkus & Deirdre Mullins,
Graphic Design and Design Production by Deirdre Mullins

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