Iannuccilli: Eat Your Lentils

Dr. Ed Iannuccilli, Columnist

Iannuccilli: Eat Your Lentils

Dr. Ed Iannuccilli, Columnist
Most every culture celebrates the New Year, and Italy is no different. Among the many traditional customs are those that promise to bring wealth and banish bad luck.

Some years ago, we journeyed to Umbria and the Italian hill town of Castellucio (near Norcia) in the Apennine Mountains. The tranquil village lies above the plain. As we traveled above tree line, we looked up at people hang gliding and down on fertile valleys lavishly colored with red poppies, yellow rapeseed and acres of bushy, pale blue flowered lentils. Yes, lentils. The town is known for its excellent production.

I think of that beautiful village of one hundred and fifty inhabitants at New Year because of the Italian custom that reveres lentils. New Year’s Day is celebrated with those lens-shaped, high protein, high fiber legumes that denote hoped for prosperity. They symbolize little coins; the more lentils, the more coins one might realize in the year to come.

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There is another Italian tradition celebrated at the New Year. You may remember the film Cinema Paradiso and the scene wherein Salvatore (Toto) professes his love in his desperate pursuit of Elena.

"I'm in love with you."

"You're very sweet, and I like you very much. But I don't love you."

"I don't care. I'll wait for you to fall in love with me." Then Salvatore reveals his plan: "Every night after work I'll wait for you under your window.”

Salvatore begins his nightly wait in April and is still there on a snowy New Year's Eve of 1954; nine months! On New Year’s Eve, at the countdown to the stroke of midnight, while he is waiting outside Elena’s home, the Italians open their windows and with fireworks in the background, they throw out their old dishes, pots and pans. It is a custom that symbolizes the need to throw out the old and to prepare for the new. My grandmother, averse to creating a neighborhood scene, just wrapped a dish in a mopine (dish cloth), placed it on the table and smashed it with a hammer.

Love, lentils, fireworks, pots, pans and dishes; a masterful scene by Director Giuseppe Tornatore.

At the New Year’s Eve dinner, some Italians eat cotechino con lenticchie (sausages and green lentils) at the stroke of midnight.  The sausages, high in fat content, are sliced to resemble coins and marry with the lentils … un abbondanza to symbolize riches. Our dinner, eaten early in the evening, was finished off with fruit, grapes and roasted chestnuts, always chestnuts.

The New Year will come and, with eagerness and expectation, engender optimism for prosperity and good health.

I love this final stanza from Helen Hunt Jackson’s poem, New Year’s Morning.

Only a night from old to new;

Only a sleep from night to morn.

The new is but the old come true;

Each sunrise sees a new year born.

I wish a Happy, Healthy and Bountiful New Year to you and your family!

Eat your lentils.

Ed Iannuccilli

Ed Iannuccilli is the author of "Growing up Italian" and "What Ever Happened to Sunday Dinner?" and both books can be found here.


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