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Emilia-Romagna
Emilia-Romagna is the capital of gastronomy in northern Italy.
It lies along the Po valley just to the south of Lombardy and
Veneto, and is the most fecund growing area of Italy. Most
Italian tomatoes come from here, and many are canned and exported
along with her many fruits, such as cherries and quince. Parma,
Modena, and Bologna ("Bologna the Fat," as she has been called for some
six centuries) are her greatest cities. The food here is rich,
and unlike the lighter fare to the south -- where olive
oil dominates, creamy sauces and animal fats are everyday
ingredients. Parmesan cheese, perhaps the single most utilized
ingredient in Italian cooking, is made
here, and its quality is carefully regulated. Though it is named
for the city of Parma, in fact the cheese was traditionally only
sold there. It was made in the neighboring city of Reggio. The
cheese that holds the dual appellation Parmigiano-Reggiano is
strictly regulated by Italian law. Prosciutto di Parma is the
fabulously sweet, ruby-red ham for which the city is justly
famous.
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