International Foods
From Italy
A.G. Ferrari Foods
Paul Ferrari goes to Italy and brings back
special foods from the smaller farms. He thus does for Italian regional
foods what Kermit Lynch has long done for local French wines. (In
addition to foods, Paul also has a few specially selected Italian
wines.)
You may browse this beautiful, simply presented site by
region. Click on Sicily, for example: You find honeysuckle honey, and
(surprisingly) a special dry white wine. Visit Toscana to learn
about panforte and ancient farro, or emmer wheat.
Prices do not seem unaffordable, especially
considering the uniqueness of many of the items. This is quite an
astonishing site, all in all. Enjoy.
Olive Oil
Here is your chance to purchase the same Tuscan
olive oil used by Chez Panisse.
Click on the Chez Panisse site, www.chezpanisse.com, then Olive
Oil.
From Spain
Tienda.com
A family-operated importer, and enthusiast for
all Spanish foods. See our correspondence
with Don Harris of Tienda in the Spanish Cooking Section. www.tienda.com
Food from Spain
Buy authentic Serrano Ham, Olive Oil, Piquillo
Peppers directly from this online store. The firm exports a wide variety
of Spanish products worldwide. www.foodfromspain.com. (Retail
store owners may contact the firm's export department.)
From
Scandinavia
The Northerner: Explore Scandinavia
This site might well set a standard for what a
very large food shopping, regional website should be. Although offering
6000 products, food and much more, it somehow retains an informal feel,
with no sense of crowding. The site is a pleasure to browse. It’s easy
to find things, and the pictures are mouthwatering.
Foods include cheeses, jam, bread, cookies,
chocolate, fish, tobacco(snuff)!
We clicked on cheese, finding Preast cheese,
Your Lordship cheese, Norwegian Sweet Mountain cheese, mountain goat
cheese. We progressed to Cloudberry jam from Lapland, pale in color like
Queen Anne cherries; then saw Crisp, White Arctic Bread, used since
nomadic times
Each item is described in an informative
manner, resonate–when appropriate-- with Scandanavian history.
Consider Bothnia Cheese: "Hard gourmet cheese from the north of
Sweden. Strong and unique taste, but not too strong. You find this
cheese taste nowhere else in the world. The recipe was first developed
during the sixteenth century but was in 1871 refined by a dairy woman,
Eleonara Lindstrom, into the present flavour. The cheese is ripened for
10 months or longer before sold. An old Icelandic proverb says ‘Cultures
are born and die, but the cheese is immortal.’"
Ordering:
Prices are given in US dollars, and
you may use your credit card.
Many items here are not mass-produced.. The
site warns that for some things you may have to wait a month for the
product to be made. Sounds to us like it’s well worth it.
Non-food Items:
Food is only part of this large site. You may
buy Swedish hand blown glass from the "glass kingdom". Or
fashion items: Norwegian sweaters, Swedish clogs, fine Finnish jewelry,
Viking masks. For the home look at crafts, pottery, metalwork, toys.
There is a section on travel, with a couple of
unique Scandinavian weddings and honeymoons. Spend your wedding night on
reindeer furs by the open fire in a Sami
hut. www.northerner.com
From France
Les Delices
Les Delices is the personal expression of
Philippe Raynaud. He grew up in Madagascar, where his father managed a
sugar-cane factory. His mother was an excellent cook, and he remembers
many "original flavours" from her kitchen. Today, at 45,
he owns a shop in Paris. He offers many proprietary items that sound
most intriguing: marmalade of onion, original, with lardons, meadow
mushroom, lemon, and hazels; marmalade of beer; and sage jelly,
coriander jelly, angelic jelly, to mention only a few. www.lesdelices.com.
The site has an extensive list of links (sites
amis), international in flavor.
There are French and English versions of
the site. On my screen I can view the entire French version, but in
English only "History." However, from the History section, I
can access the catalog of products and ordering information.
In addition to individual retail orders, M.
Raynaud invites inquiries from retail stores.
From
the British Isles
Thorntons Special Toffee
Alison, Brandon's fiancée, returned recently
from visiting her grandmother in England. She brought back a little
package of toffee. This is a classic in England, the company tracing its
roots to a sweetshop in Sheffield founded by Joseph William Thornton in
1911.
We are used to a friend of ours who used to return
from Switzerland to give us a little bottle of Kirsch. This is England,
so Alison brought Thorntons toffee. To our taste, this toffee is just
fine, full-flavored and slightly chewy, what you would like toffee to
be. It is apparently not available in the US, but can be ordered from
the website www.thorntons.co.uk.
From the
Arctic
Arctic Wild Harvest Company
Get into the avant-garde of web shopping, with
food from the Canadian Arctic. Try tinned caribou meat, birch syrup, and
much more. A lovely web site. www.arcticharvest.com
Description in preparation.
From Mexico
MexGrocer.com
Unlike most site in this directory, Mex Grocer
is a large supplier. This is a nation-wide (meaning US) bilingual online
grocery specializing in traditional, non-perishable specialty foods,
household items and cookbooks from Mexico.
I checked out canned foods - lots of beans,
most available locally. But soups (menudo) sound truly Mexican, spicy
and containing inexpensive ingredients; such as, hominy, pork and
tripe(!) Tomatillos (green tomatoes) come in many forms, spiced or
unspiced.
Ingredients for Mexican cooking feature dried
chiles, corn husks, and bottled lime juice. The latter is a feature of
many Mexican dishes.
The six culinary regions of Mexico each have
their distinctive specialty. The North (La Frontera) is known for spicy
meats. Central Mexico provides the well known mole poblano and the west,
menudo and tacos.
The Gulf area, not surprisingly, features foods
with a European or Caribbean influence. The south provides the sweet
spices, cinnamon, cloves and the like. In the Yucatan Peninsula the very
air is redolent of Mayan achiote seasoning. I looked this up on the site
and found it is a paste made of Annato seeds. What they are was not
explained.
The section on Salsas is the most fun. They
make a meal dance, and the jars and bottles are dancing on the page.
There are degrees of spicyness to suit every taste. The gift baskets
feature collections of them along with other goodies, for example, a
sampler of twenty items for $24.95
There are over 50 cookbooks offered on site,
ranging from the general - "The Taste of Mexico" - to the
specific - "Beginning with Chiles." They come in Spanish or
English and sport colorful jackets, perfect as gifts with or without one
of the samplers.
MexGrocery was founded in 2000 by Ignacio
Hernandez, and headquarters is in San Diego(!) The grocery is allied
with Royal Crown Foods, the largest distributor of Mexican foods in the
U.S. The "nation-wide" referred to above, means the U.S. The
site is colorful, and easy to navigate. Each page is divided into three
parts, the index, the description of the products with color photos, and
the details for ordering. Each section has its separate scroll bar. This
eliminates the annoyance of having to click on the "back" key
several times to get to the section you
want. www.mexgrocer.com
--Nina King