If memory serves correctly, it all began with hamburgers in the 2010s.
That was followed by bacon and (scrambled) eggs.
It didn’t take long before club sandwiches started to appear everywhere as well.
Today, it seems like there’s no end to the continuously growing list of classic American dishes that Italians are making and consuming.
Over on the Facebook, there was a lot of chatter after I posted a picture of chips and guacamole that I was served earlier this week in Brescia. The restaurant actually calls the dish “nachos” (although that’s not what we would call it).
Honestly, I had never even seen guacamole in Italy until this week. On Saturday, I was served guacamole at lunch and then later that evening, when I was invited to a swank spot in the heart of downtown Turin, chips and guacamole appeared again at our table!
And let’s not forget the preponderance and ubiquity of “sushi” in Italy today! That cuisine is from Japan, of course, but nearly everywhere I see it here, it’s served in the American style that we grew up with.
I’ve seen more than my share of “Caesar salad” as well in recent years. Texas-style BBQ has also become extremely popular here.
When it came to the initial wave of hamburgers, the Italians swiftly surpassed us in terms of the quality of ingredients. Where I grew up, the cheapest beef was used for burgers. Italians use top heirloom beef for theirs and they are also expert at mixing pork and beef for their patties. The quality of the bread is also an important factor.
I’m not exaggerating or kidding in any way when I say wholeheartedly that some of the best hamburgers I’ve ever had have been in Italy.
The burger above is from a wonderful, homey spot called 18B in Brescia. It was fantastic! Check out their Instagram here.
The joint is run by a lovely young couple. And even though the focus is burgers and their now famous “pulled rabbit” sandwich (a riff on pulled pork), they also have an extensive sushi menu. Incredible!
I’ve loved the burgers there. I still haven’t tried the sushi (that’s Giovanni’s sashimi above). The avocado was perfectly ripe and delicious but it was more like an avocado purée (like Americans have been spreading on toast).
I’m not really sure why Italians love American food so much. In many cases, they do it WAY better than we do (again, because of the ingredients).
But “Tex Mex” Doritos is where I draw the line! Spotted in an Autogrill the other day.
All the photos are from Italy. The burger, sushi, and chips from 18B. The bacon and eggs are from a lunch many years ago in Milan. The club sandwich is from a place on Lake Iseo from a few years ago. Today’s my first day back teaching at Slow Food U. Looking forward to meeting the students this afternoon!

Italy’s seemingly unending chamber of wonders never ceases to amaze me. 
Above: Silvia Angelozzi, winner of the “best wine shop professional” for the category “wine shop with restaurant service.”
The three winners were Silvia Angelozzi (above, far left, for “wine shop with restaurant service”), Loredana Santagati (center, for “bottle shop”), and Matteo Bertelà (right, for “best wine shop professional under 30”).
Today was my first full day on the ground in Italy.
Both were visiting Houston for the first time and both are on what will surely be an epic journey to “build” their families’ brands in the U.S.
Labor ipse voluptas.
After searching in vain for a decent translation of the Nizza DOCG appellation regulations, I finally rolled up my sleeves and rendered the text into English myself.
As my buddy Doug and I enjoyed one of the best meals of my 2023 at Chambers in lower Manhattan earlier this month, I couldn’t help but be reminded of what Susan Sontag once wrote of the 20th-century critical theorist and activist
As at least one critic has written, Sontag “yearned to be identical to her ideas, to display the punishing consistency of Weil, but her ideas jostled and sparked, exploding her sense of what she was, or wanted to be.”
If there were one person in the wine trade who has made a career of being identical to her ideas, it must be
Over the course of a career where she has created an entirely new and profoundly impactful role in the world of wine, she is at once a sommelier and activist, a restaurateur and a philosopher. But she hasn’t achieved this through high-browed essays, articles, books, or speeches. No, she has accomplished this feat through her sheer indomitable will to be identical to her ideas.
I could feel it in the way that the servers interacted with our party.
Congratulations to my longtime friend Laura Castelletti on her win as the new mayor of Brescia!