In Italy, fettuccine Alfredo is not popular for a simple reason: We make pasta with butter at home, it is a waste to order such a simple dish in a restaurant. Your videos are always very "appetizing", congratulations.
I agree, its the same for me. When I go to a restaurant, I want to eat something "complicated" or something that I cant make at home. And not a simple dish, that I can prepare at home without any problems.
That doesn't seem like a good reason to hate it. I understand the idea of not wanting to order it for the reason you stated, but to show disgust on your face when it is mentioned seems pretty asinine to me. I love Fettuccine Alfredo and I've ordered it at restaurants and made it at home. Sometimes the restaurants just taste better.
For us ordering this pasta in an expensive restaurant is like going to an expensive restaurant in the US and ordering a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and paying it $ 25.00
As a young cook in North America, I was shown Alfredo as butter, cream and parmessan cheese with a few grates of nutmeg. I was aware that the original had no cream. As I gained experience with cooking pasta, I learned that the starchy pasta water was often used to emulsify with oils like butter to make a sauce. That's exactly what we see here with the original method of cooking Alfredo sauce.
agree with you. many countries make their own recipes for many dishes. and it annoys me a little, like when someone is going to make Swedish meatballs and has spices etc. that are not in the classic recipe. milk/cream, breadcrumbs, eggs, minced meat, onion, salt and pepper, possibly a little sugar. There weren't as many exotic spices in households 60-70 years ago as we have today.
We visited friends in Rome two years ago and it’s true that Romans show a marked disdain for fettuccine Alfredo. They said, “who is Alfredo” when I asked them about it. That said, true Roman Carbonara is so much better than Alfredo ever could be.
Alfredo didn't invent anything, he just exported a very plain, easy and popular solution of homemade pasta and put his name unto it. And yes, real carbonara is something else when done properly.
I make Carbonara with fresh eggs from under my own hens, and American bacon and a good quality Parmesan. it's nearly impossible to find a decent pancetta here. love it. a special treat.
we don't call that pasta 'Alfredo' that pasta is 'Pasta burro e parmigiano - pasta butter and parmigiano' or 'Pasta in Bianco - Pasta in White' and it's not so special.. it's just for kids
@@alessandroarsuffi3062Its more to do with his personality rather than the food. Alfredo is more of a showman than a cook. He personally would show up. Make the pasta in front of guests and serve the plate himself. Kinda like why people like caesars salad. Its the novel experience people paying for. Not really the food itself.
I LOVE THESE TYPE OF FOOD TRAVEL VIDEOS. marks take on food with more of a bourdains no reservations type of vibe. really appreciate marks energy all around
Just because the food is good enough doesn't make it not a tourist trap @@MarkAbroadthis is like going to pats in Philly and raving about the cheese steak that on the whole tasty but nothing to showcase vs other places.
I have a new appreciation for Fettucine Alfredo, pasta, butter, quality Parmesan cheese makes a rich sauce, well stirred, maybe with a sprinkle of pepper & truffles when plated, delicious!
@@YeshuaKingMessiahNo, never! The real secret are ingredients (must be natural good butter and italian Parmigiano Reggiano DOP 24 months no parmesan!). The other secret is preparation which make the difference between nonna's when you are sick and this one 😂
Lol. E’ vero,molto tipico in Italia,un po’ come cibo da ospedale.😂 Pero’ devo dirti che generalmente quella di ristorante cucinate da un bravo cuoco e’ tutta un altra cosa.
@@fosterbuster2840 Non lo sparemo mai, perchè nessuno è così ritardato da andare al ristorante a prendere la pasta al burro. Poi in cosa dovrebbe essere diverso, cosa farebbe lo chef di straordinario? non scuoce la pasta bollendola meglio? scioglie meglio il burro con il pensiero? no perchè letteralmente sono le uniche due cose che serve saper fare per fare sta "ricetta" e chiamandola ricetta gli faccio un grande favore.
@@fosterbuster2840 Ma di cosa parli? saltarla, padelle il fuoco? Stiamo parlando di pasta col burro, dove la vedi la padella? dal bolitore la mettono sul piatto col burro e mischiano, punto. "non da tutti" 😂? Ci vuole la laurea in fisica per fare sti due passaggi?
I really like seeing the decorative plants with the little lights. I haven’t been inside a beautiful restaurant in years….. The pasta looks fantastic, definitely.
Pasta with butter and cheese is what Italians cook when they don't have time to make a proper sauce. Speaking as a man with Italian father from Naples.
@@ADRIAN-zh4ti or Instant Ramen. But still, I had great memory of going to a restaurant / cafe to eat instant ramen as a kid, I just wouldn't go to a fancy restaurant for that.
My dad's side came directly from Italy during WW2 to escape. We were taught to use large spoons to twirl pasta around a fork. Never a knife at Nana's house for homemade pasta. And she made a cheese sauce just like this, very simple but lightly added garlic and some olive oil with sausage and artichokes on the side. This is NOT American but very simple Italian fare from before the war and as was stated below we would never order this or marinara in a restaurant because we eat both of these at home all the time. I miss my Nana, and I miss her amazing but simple food from her homeland.
Mate, we don't hate it. Its just that.. imagine someone in USA beginning to bottle hot water and calling it "Mineral Miracle" and imagine people loving it and starting to make YT videos on it, even claiming it as a "traditional American" beverage. As an American wouldn't you feel like an idiot? I mean, everyone can easily make warm water at home.
Its how you europeans say hot dogs and burgers are an american staple dish. When most americans wouldnt say thats their favorite american dish at all. Burgers are just fast food for us
Italians do not hate it. But it is such an obvious, easy dish to cook that no one would actually pay someone to cook it. At least in Italy. That's a common dish you prepare for children at home.
Yes, it´s a dish that you won`t find in a restaurant...and we don`t looking for it when we go. I use to eat at home, when i`m sick or when i have no time to cook. That not impress anyone...except americans 😂
se sei italiano, sei onesto e vivi ancora in italia, devi ammettere che le fettuccine alfredo non le hai mai sentite nominare in tutta la tua vita (if you are Italian, you are honest and you still live in Italy, you must admit that you have never heard of fettuccine alfredo in your entire life)
lol, greasy ppl ? i would like to inform you that in italy we use 99% olive oil, maybe you should look at nordic or french cousine, but i bet you are just ignorant and call people greasy, enjoy your seeds oil noob@@kevinJ6665
@@awesomesauce8678 sono italiano, onesto ma non vivo in italia da 15 anni. Le ho sentite nominare piu´ volte, ma MAI in Italia, solo in Germania (I'm Italian, honest but I haven't lived in Italy for 15 years. I have heard them mentioned several times, but NEVER in Italy, only in Germany)
Mark, Artichokes are in the Thistle family, and if you let them Bloom (aka go-to flower) you get this Purple Flower. Also, Artichokes are mostly steamed and then baked, but you can deep fry them too. (P.S. I went to Culinary School Just for the fun of it & I love to comment about food too)
The artichokes in the appetizer belong to two different culinary traditions, the Roman one and the Roman-Jewish one "alla giudia". You should have maintained tolerance without expressing preferences😂. It is usually said that Roman-style artichokes are good every day, while Giudia-style artichokes are good during the holidays
This is made with fresh past made from scratch. That's not quick convenience food in my universe. A Bologna sandwich to me is what you eat when you are in a hurry.
I get that some people say it's dumb to buy expensive food when you can easily make it at home but as someone who don't have access to those things, this is a great info
it never got popular because you can easily do it at home. People used to go to restaurants on special occasions, not everyday and therefore looked for fancier dishes than the everyday basic pasta
i can definitely see how this would be a nourishing and helpful dish for new and nursing mothers. postpartum care and the special foods prepared for it in other cultures is so fascinating, and such a big part of food culture - i'd love to see this in one of your videos please!
What you call "fettuccine alfredo" is actually called "pasta al burro" (pasta with butter) in Italy. We usually cook it when we are sick and hence we have to eat something simple, or if we are in a rush. This Alfredo guy in Rome managed to create a legend around it and sell it to tourists for 25 euros, just because they think they are eating the original one. In an average Italian restaurant, this dish is not even on the menu because it is too simple; anyway, if you ask any chef, he or she will prepare it for children that don't want to eat anything of the restaurant proposal. So, Italians don't hate it, they just would never pay that amount of money for a dish made with butter and parmesan. But we surely hate that monstrosity proposed as fettuccine alfredo in the US which is done with chicken, garlic and I don't know what else. Anyway thumbs up for alfredo alla scrofa that was even able to put some butter and parmesan in a jar to sell 🤣
So this is like a fine NYC restaurant serving grilled cheese sandwiches with a bowl of soup to tourists as an example of fine American food. Lolz, I get it. 😋
From family stories, my great-grandmother from Mantua, as a young girl, would knead the dough on festive days and then patiently roll it out with a long, narrow rolling pin until it became as thin as a sheet. She would then fold the pasta and cut it by hand with true mastery... and guess how she would dress it? Yes, with butter and Parmesan! This happened in thousands of Italian families , long before the invention of Fettuccine Alfredo. Indeed, the amusement of Italians when it comes to Fettuccine Alfredo can be traced back to the dish’s origins and its perception in Italy versus abroad. Fettuccine Alfredo is a dish that gained fame in the United States thanks to celebrities visiting Alfredo di Lelio's restaurant in Rome in the early 20th century. The dish, in its essence - pasta coated in butter and Parmesan cheese - was a simple, traditional way to enjoy pasta in Italy, similar to the story I shared about my great-grandmother. In Italy, we call this recipe "la pasta dei cornuti" or "cuckold's pasta", because it is assumed that a husband coming home and seeing such a simple dish would think that his wife had been busy with her lover during the day and did not have time to cook a more elaborate meal upon his return. This is one of the reasons why we Italians laugh at the American praises for this dish. Absolutely, despite the humorous cultural anecdotes surrounding it, the dish itself - when made with quality ingredients and care - is undeniably delicious.
In Italia le fettuccine burro e parmigiano me le faceva mia nonna quando avevo 3 anni. Nessun italiano, al ristorante, ordinerebbe le fettuccine Alfredo anche perchè non esistono se non nei ristoranti turistici.
For any Americans wanting to make the real deal, get some real parmigiano reggiano, American parmesan cheese is way lower quality. Real parmigiano will be labeled with DOP and be more expensive since it's imported overseas. Don't forget to get good natural butter.
Excellent timing! We’re heading to Rome in a few weeks and would definitely love to try where the dish originated! Thanks for sharing! We have lunch reservations for our first full day in Rome!!
Such enjoyable and informational content. Thank you Mark for always bringing the best videos to me and my family. Blessings upon blessings to you and your beautiful family.🙏🏼🤍🌶️😁
I love how you weren’t using the spoon correctly then just decided the pasta couldn’t be twirled 😂 the spoon is there to twirl it in, not just to push it around lol
Hey Mark, love all your videos :) may I ask why you do not use the spoon to twirl your past on? I have noticed a few times and it does make it much easier. Keep up the great videos.
I found this on the Internet: In 1943, di Lilio sold the restaurant to a new owner, who kept the restaurant’s name (Alfredo alla Scrofa), menu, and all the photos on the wall. In 1950, Alfredo and his son Armando opened another restaurant, Il Vero Alfredo, “the true Alfredo,” which is now managed by Alfredo’s grandchildren. Both restaurants claim to be the originator of the dish.
As melting some butter in pasta is something you can claim as an invention. As italian, this is just ridicolous, everybody was doing that since...ever.
Well it was created under the Alfredo alla Scrofa roof so makes sense that both of them can claim it to some degree, don't think people actually care that much as long as the dish is done right
Italian HERE! I try to clarify: Fettuccine Alfredo is an american dish born from italian-americans in USA. We dont "hate", simply it's not an Italian recipe. But is an american recipe with Italian sounding and Italian ingredients. If you want to taste the original pasta that we do in Italay and is really a part of our tradition unlike "fettuccine alfredo" is simply Pasta Burro e Parmigiano, that is probably what those italian amrican were tryiong to reproduce in USA when the recipe born. Then surely you can find lot of stories and legends, but i ensure you , you can ask any italian, we never prepare fettuccine alfredo. Hope it clarify
It's such a simple, straightforward dish. Why would I go to a fancy restaurant to order something I can make at home for very little money. I love this dish, and I make it at least every month here in the Bronx.
I love Mark's videos. He has a real passion for good food. I once saw one of his videos where he literally ate for hours at an Amish buffet. My question is, HOW THE HECK DOES HE STAY SO THIN? 😆
Italians don't know what Alfredo pasta is, and don't know what the American version is. Also, this dish isn't famous around the world, only in the US. However, everyone in Italy knows the dish you had in the video. It's just called butter pasta, or pasta with butter and parmesan (pasta al burro). In Italy it's a quick and easy dish, and also something you give to someone who is sick. It's about as common in Italy as a grilled cheese sandwich in the US. It's tasty, but Alfredo didn't invent it.
@@tardigrado_irriverente Davvero? Non mangi mai la pasta con una cremina di parmigiano e burro (mantecato con un po' di acqua di cottura)? Qualcosa di simile al cacio e pepe?
@@tardigrado_irriverente Neanche burro e salvia (per esempio con pasta farcita)? Io conosco soprattutto il nord-ovest dal paese mentre Aosta e Milano, lì mangiano spesso il burro. Esistono anche i pizzoccheri della Valtellina (pasta di saraceno) conditi con burro, salvia e formaggio. Altrimenti, in Toscana fanno i pici con pecorino e burro, e in Puglia mi sembra che fanno piatti simili, ma non conosco molto bene il sud, ci sono solo stato una volta... Assaggia una volta il burro e parmigiano, e delizioso! Devi però fare attenzione alla temperatura per evitare i grumi.
the most important ingredient is a high quality parmesan. don't need the broth, the milk or cream, extra butter or anything beyond salt and pepper and that starch water. if you're making it at home from Wal-Mart or a local market, find a block and grate it yourself. BelGioso is a solid low budget choice.
I've never been a fan of alfredo sauce as we know it in the States (the creamy cheese sauce from bottles). Now butter noodles with parmesan cheese on the other hand I eat all the time and love. I never knew that the original recipe for fettuccine alfredo was just that. So simple and so good.😋
Mark! I have been Going to Thailand the past three years and I stay at the Red Planet hotel on Sukhumvit. I had no idea your restaurant was literally around the corner from the hotel. Going there this summer and will definitely be eating there.
This dish is famous in America but not in Italy. 95% of people make this when don't have time to cooke, this is the true. Anyway in his simplicity is e good dish
Exactly, how is this a popular thing in America??!! This is what Italians quickly make a home in 15 min, they just mix butter and cheese with pasta and some water hahaha. This being popular in America just shows how incompetent Americans are with cooking, they actually sell this in jars and label it Alfredo sauce, but there is no such thing, that jar of Alfredo sauce has nothing to do with this technique of mixing butter and cheese, it's just destroying Italian food culture
Poor Mark..when he finally realized if the fork went on the right and and spoon on the left..he soon gave up so he is holding the spoon without even using it and he is twirling the fettuccine on the plate..then he got rid of the spoon all together.. If an Italian gentleman goes to this restaurant with a Versace Suit and a silk tie there is no way he would not use the spoon ! It would be like a hunter goes hunting without a rifle! LoL 😂
If you come in Rome to eat this you haven't understand what to eat in Rome. This is the dish we Italians calls "burro e parmigiano" and we eat it only when we have stomach sickness.
@@erzsebetkovacs2527 i don’t think you know what “heavy meal” means for us Italians, especially in the south region. You will not stand the appetizers. 😂 This is when you want to stay light.
We went there just two weeks ago because of this video! My girlfriend is Asian and I introduced her to Italian food 12 years ago. I’ll never forget that she asked the waiter for chopsticks that first time, Lol! Anyway, her favorite pasta dish is Fettuccine Alfredo and when I first watched this video months ago, I put this on our list of places to visit on our upcoming trip. Very hard to get into, we waited in the “No Rez” line for about an hour. The food was very good & the ambience & presentation were awesome. I thought the Alfredo was… meh (not my favorite pasta-too mushy) but my girlfriend loved it! The virtual, “Who’s Who” photos on the wall of prior customers is very impressive, so the people here who are pooh-poohing the place don’t get that it’s not necessarily popular for just one dish. I highly recommend eating here and even more highly recommend reservations!
Born and raised in Queens NY. I went to catholic school and majority of my friends were Italian Americans. What I learned is Italian American cuisine is nothing like what is eaten in Italy. When Italian immigrants came to the US it was mostly poor working class from southern Italy. When they first arrived the abundance of meat was a shock to the immigrants. They started to incorporate heavy meat into their diet. Italians in Italy tend to eat on the lighter side and do not mix meat with cheese. Popular Italian products are all primarily from the northern richer region Lombardy , Tuscany , Emilia- Romagna etc.
My grandparents were Sicilian and came to Canada in the 60s and became obsessed with meat as it was scarce in Italy at the time (particularly in Sicily) I was in Sicily last summer for 2 weeks and barely had any meat 🤣
@@devadii24a lot of fish right? My boy whose family was from Sicily. He could speak Italian and goes back to Sicily a lot. When I ate at his house, it was mostly fish never any meat. It was all delicious though.
Pasta burro e parmigiano is a dish we make at home when we are sick. Not something you’ll spend money for at the restaurant, unless you have an upset stomach.
This is considered kids food in italy, that's probably why Americans are obsessed with this because Americans have the pallet of a toddler. This is what Italians make at home when they don't have much time and just want to cook something quick in 15 min. The fact that this is big in America is so strange to me, the simplest cheapest meal you can make at home for 2 dollars. And in America they sell it in jars as a sauce, doesn't make sense as this is a quick technique you do when the pasta is cooked, it's not possible to put this in a jar, it has to be made on the spot. The Alfredo sauce in USA has nothing to do with Italian food culture sorry. Americans eat like children, they eat chicken strips and stuff like this, stuff that toddlers eat that have no concept of food
Yeah, I'm surprised they don't smother this dish with that crappy orange pre-sliced processed cheese product (AKA American cheese). Americans seem to be obsessed with that garbage. Every time I see a decent burger video or Facebook post, it's oozing with that horrible fake cheese. Even their own FDA does not recognize it as a cheese, and refers to it as a cheese product. This is because it only contains 50% cheese, and the rest filler.
I was taught you combine almost half a stick of butter with maybe a cup of half a half.When that mix is tepid not boiling add drained hot pasta, enough for 2. The measurement was as much parmesan as you could hold in one hand. Once smooth, stir in an egg yolk.
In realtà parli a vanvera, La pasta all'uovo di qualità costa 18 euro al chilo e li erano quasi 2 etti. Il burro se è di qualità cosa 4 euro ogni 100 grammi e li ne hanno usato almeno una confezione piccola, il parmigiano era più che abbondante, almeno 100 gr e sono altri 3 euro. Fatti due conti e aggiungi le spese di un locale storico e di qualità come quello. I fessi non sono certo loro che fanno bene il loro lavoro...
@@donatellaborciccibelloni5328 Tu quanti italiani conosci che vanno al ristorante a mangiarsi la pasta in bianco? Nessuno ovviamente. Tocca ripetermi: solo un fesso va al ristorante per mangiare pasta con burro e parmigiano. Ma il mondo, si sa, è pieno di fessi...
I don't think Italians have a problem with the dish when it is made just with butter and parmesan. I think the problem is when people add cream. They have that issue (quite rightly) with other dishes too. Double (Heavy) Cream makes the pasta "clingy" on the pallet and adds an unwelcome dairyness. (is there such a word?). The spoon and fork is a nice touch!
Mark you make me want pasta now ha! I've never seen artichokes made like that! Both look delicious! Safe travels, can't wait for the next adventure! ❤😊
Pasta Alfredo is nothing but a joke on Americans. In Italy we call it “pasta in bianco”, or “pasta al burro”, and would never order something so simple in a restaurant! Also most Italians have never heard of this name “Alfredo” used for pasta al burro. Pretty ridiculous.
I can make carbonara at home easily, I guess getting carbonara at any restaurant in italy is a scam. I mean, why would you pay for something you can make at home /s
Hi Mark, it's simple, in Italy we made Fettuccine Alfredo directly in home, 'cause it's made with 3 ingredients, all Italian have in home, it's not necessary to go in a Restaurant and pay more of 30€, you can do this dish in your hotel room with 10/15€. Anyway your video is made with love for the Italy. Wish you the best, best regards. Marco
I used to work at Alfredos in NYC (Rockefeller Centre) in 2000/2001, I started when it opened. The chef would cook a staff meal everyday so I ate this 6 days a week and General Tsao's chicken in Chinatown on Sundays lol. I do remember it being really simple < just pasta and tonnes of butter, being a NZer I remember telling the chef he should use Fernleaf butter to improve his recipe lol.. I'm sure there were no truffles though.. Anyway THE best pasta Ive had til this day.. PS love the NZ pie videos, I miss those too haha
Hi Mark fettuccine Alfredo doesn’t really exist in Italy, it’s more of an American invention. In Italy it’s common to eat pasta with a sauce known as “al burro” (with butter) its pasta served with melted butter that's sometimes infused with fresh sage, as well as grated Parmigiano.
u probably haven't watched the video till the end. Alfredo's restaurant existed way back before the americans came to italy, way before even world war. If there is any pasta dish that has an american influence then its carbonara, not pasta alfredo. The dish name "Fettucine Alfredo" might not be widely used in Italy like "al burro", but the fact that Alfredo was a real person, and that he is worldwide known for exactly that particular dish, makes it a real italian dish. If you still claim it doesn't exist, I urge you to watch the video again. Small hint: The Alfredo restaurant is literally located inside Italy FYI! Matter of fact, they made the entire video shoot in Italy XD
@@marcotd7923 Ma quello che io volevo dire, se tu vuoi usare il cucchiaio, usalo almeno in maniera giusta. Giralo dalla parte giusta e non come lo tiene lui in mano qui nel video. Nella maniera come lo tiene lui, è ridicolo. O Io lasci stare oppure se vuoi usarlo, usalo come si deve. Qui adesso non c’entra se gli italiani usino o meno il cucchiaio con gli spaghetti. Ognuno fa come gli pare. Io ad esempio ho sempre usato il cucchiaio con gli spaghetti e continuerò sempre ad usarlo. Non c’è una “legge” che me lo vieta. A casa sua ognuno fa quello che vuole.
Mine is done in a similar fashion. I make the noodles and also a pat of about a half stick of Plugra butter. I get my cheese from Roberta at ParmaShop and typically use 3/4 of a cup. Fresh noodles are ready within a couple of minutes. Add some of the pasta water and voila, you have a dish every bit as good as what you pay $40 U.S. for in Rome. Crack open a good bottle and you're in heaven! Gerald Lee
Italians do NOT hate (as the title of this video says) the original Fettuccine Alfredo, which by the way in Italy has always been called “Fettuccine burro e parmigiano” (Fettuccine butter and parmesan), or simply “Fettuccine al Burro), but they do hate the fake version that Americans in America have made by completely changing this simple dish, putting in various things that do not exist in the original version created by Chef Alfredo, in the Alfredo restaurant in Rome.
Now I see the correct way to do it. That butter on the plate, the pasta and then the pecorino cheese. That's heaven. I am going to try this at home. YUM, thanks for this video.
Hi Mark, we consider this type of pasta a bit trivial (unless you add truffle :-)), perhaps for a fast meal at home or when you are sick. However, we are not hating it: surely it's very good ! You convinced me: I will try this reasturant when in Rome. Thanks. Enjoy !
It's not that we hate it, it's just that no one knows it as "Alfredo", it is "pasta al burro" (butter pasta) with cheese (usually Parmigiano) and it's a no-fuss, homely dish that you serve to kids that won't eat anything tastier. It's a "kids menu" pasta dish that is a waste of time and money to order at a restaurant...
From what I can gather, the main reason people "hate" this is because it's just pasta and butter, a staple of Italian home cooking. It's like going out to a fancy restaurant just to order a turkey sandwich. Yeah, it's gonna be better made than most sandwhiches you've had, but it's just a turkey sandwich. People go out for pasta because they want stuff they can't easilly make at home.
What a blessing to be doing what you love and in the process enjoying the best dishes in the world.
Yes, but we really need a behind the scenes video about how Mark actually makes this happen.
In Italy, fettuccine Alfredo is not popular for a simple reason: We make pasta with butter at home, it is a waste to order such a simple dish in a restaurant.
Your videos are always very "appetizing", congratulations.
I agree, its the same for me. When I go to a restaurant, I want to eat something "complicated" or something that I cant make at home. And not a simple dish, that I can prepare at home without any problems.
Makes sense. I love cooking Italian and rarely find it better outside of my house so I rarely go for Italian out.
That doesn't seem like a good reason to hate it. I understand the idea of not wanting to order it for the reason you stated, but to show disgust on your face when it is mentioned seems pretty asinine to me. I love Fettuccine Alfredo and I've ordered it at restaurants and made it at home. Sometimes the restaurants just taste better.
i hope with not that amount of butter otherwise your life will be significantly shorter lol
@@Lemmy4555But that shorter life will have been significantly more fun!
For us ordering this pasta in an expensive restaurant is like going to an expensive restaurant in the US and ordering a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and paying it $ 25.00
And wearing a black offer jacket at the table. 😂
...and calling it the most traditional American dish ever! 😅😅😅😅
Why would i pay a sandwich?
As a young cook in North America, I was shown Alfredo as butter, cream and parmessan cheese with a few grates of nutmeg. I was aware that the original had no cream. As I gained experience with cooking pasta, I learned that the starchy pasta water was often used to emulsify with oils like butter to make a sauce. That's exactly what we see here with the original method of cooking Alfredo sauce.
agree with you. many countries make their own recipes for many dishes. and it annoys me a little, like when someone is going to make Swedish meatballs and has spices etc. that are not in the classic recipe. milk/cream, breadcrumbs, eggs, minced meat, onion, salt and pepper, possibly a little sugar. There weren't as many exotic spices in households 60-70 years ago as we have today.
Gotta have garlic
That cream n garlic
Omg 🤯
In Italy doesn't exist a sauce called Alfredo... it's "pasta al burro" and it's not a recipe, it's something we eat when we are in a hurry...
No cream
@@PUTDEVICE Originally the meatballs were thought to be juicier if they were made by a young girl spitting in the patty...
We visited friends in Rome two years ago and it’s true that Romans show a marked disdain for fettuccine Alfredo. They said, “who is Alfredo” when I asked them about it. That said, true Roman Carbonara is so much better than Alfredo ever could be.
Alfredo didn't invent anything, he just exported a very plain, easy and popular solution of homemade pasta and put his name unto it. And yes, real carbonara is something else when done properly.
I make Carbonara with fresh eggs from under my own hens, and American bacon and a good quality Parmesan. it's nearly impossible to find a decent pancetta here. love it. a special treat.
@@kathleenhensley5951 guanciale not pancetta
we don't call that pasta 'Alfredo' that pasta is 'Pasta burro e parmigiano - pasta butter and parmigiano' or 'Pasta in Bianco - Pasta in White' and it's not so special.. it's just for kids
@@alessandroarsuffi3062Its more to do with his personality rather than the food. Alfredo is more of a showman than a cook. He personally would show up. Make the pasta in front of guests and serve the plate himself.
Kinda like why people like caesars salad. Its the novel experience people paying for. Not really the food itself.
I LOVE THESE TYPE OF FOOD TRAVEL VIDEOS. marks take on food with more of a bourdains no reservations type of vibe. really appreciate marks energy all around
this looks incredible. your energy is great, must have been nice for the staff to witness someone so hyped to be there experiencing what they do best
i bet it's impossible to eat without that wine to cut through how rich it is haha
Is mark me tally deficient. The guy can’t read cursive and keeps blaming the font?
you know its a restaurant for tourists when the first page of the menu is written in english lol
😢
Yes, I mean because of its history and story, that's what it's come down to. But it's still a Italian dish original.
I wouldn’t mind that at all.
Just because the food is good enough doesn't make it not a tourist trap @@MarkAbroadthis is like going to pats in Philly and raving about the cheese steak that on the whole tasty but nothing to showcase vs other places.
Then? Lol
I have a new appreciation for Fettucine Alfredo, pasta, butter, quality Parmesan cheese makes a rich sauce, well stirred, maybe with a sprinkle of pepper & truffles when plated, delicious!
Yes, me too!
So no creammmmmm?
@@YeshuaKingMessiahNo, never! The real secret are ingredients (must be natural good butter and italian Parmigiano Reggiano DOP 24 months no parmesan!). The other secret is preparation which make the difference between nonna's when you are sick and this one 😂
@@user-xo9pz7fd3j cream is key for me
Isn’t it a grand world we live in?
Try the roman "cacio e pepe". After then you'll never eat Alfredo anymore.
10/10 to Mark for gobbling such a loaded fork full of pasta without a trace of that molten cheese left sticking around the mouth. Bravo!
pasta with butter and parmigiano (pasta burro e parmigiano) is something you eat when you're sick or when you don't have anything else in the fridge
Lol. E’ vero,molto tipico in Italia,un po’ come cibo da ospedale.😂 Pero’ devo dirti che generalmente quella di ristorante cucinate da un bravo cuoco e’ tutta un altra cosa.
@@fosterbuster2840 Non lo sparemo mai, perchè nessuno è così ritardato da andare al ristorante a prendere la pasta al burro. Poi in cosa dovrebbe essere diverso, cosa farebbe lo chef di straordinario? non scuoce la pasta bollendola meglio? scioglie meglio il burro con il pensiero? no perchè letteralmente sono le uniche due cose che serve saper fare per fare sta "ricetta" e chiamandola ricetta gli faccio un grande favore.
It's a good comfort food.
LA PASTA DEI CORNUTI is what we call it here in Rome 😊
@@fosterbuster2840 Ma di cosa parli? saltarla, padelle il fuoco? Stiamo parlando di pasta col burro, dove la vedi la padella? dal bolitore la mettono sul piatto col burro e mischiano, punto. "non da tutti" 😂? Ci vuole la laurea in fisica per fare sti due passaggi?
I really like seeing the decorative plants with the little lights. I haven’t been inside a beautiful restaurant in years….. The pasta looks fantastic, definitely.
"The golden fork and spoon for you sir RUclipsr" lol 😂
Pasta with butter and cheese is what Italians cook when they don't have time to make a proper sauce. Speaking as a man with Italian father from Naples.
yep is like going to a restauran to eat a peanut butter sandwich
What about aglio e olio?
@@ADRIAN-zh4ti or Instant Ramen. But still, I had great memory of going to a restaurant / cafe to eat instant ramen as a kid, I just wouldn't go to a fancy restaurant for that.
Same thing mostly but there are a few variations on that one so some people actually really like it. @@prvtthd401
All that matters is that it's made fresh, and with love
My dad's side came directly from Italy during WW2 to escape. We were taught to use large spoons to twirl pasta around a fork. Never a knife at Nana's house for homemade pasta. And she made a cheese sauce just like this, very simple but lightly added garlic and some olive oil with sausage and artichokes on the side. This is NOT American but very simple Italian fare from before the war and as was stated below we would never order this or marinara in a restaurant because we eat both of these at home all the time. I miss my Nana, and I miss her amazing but simple food from her homeland.
Thank you so much for sharing your insights!
Mate, we don't hate it. Its just that.. imagine someone in USA beginning to bottle hot water and calling it "Mineral Miracle" and imagine people loving it and starting to make YT videos on it, even claiming it as a "traditional American" beverage.
As an American wouldn't you feel like an idiot? I mean, everyone can easily make warm water at home.
Hahaha yes exactly
Still tastes good tho lol, but yeah I get the useless idea of going to a restaurant for it. Just make it at home.
Its how you europeans say hot dogs and burgers are an american staple dish. When most americans wouldnt say thats their favorite american dish at all. Burgers are just fast food for us
Great history lesson as well as showing the great food. Love your videos!
Thank you very much!
History ? Don't even exist in italy
Famose spiegà la storia e come se magna dalli americani, mi raccomando.
This guy delete the comments in 2024, poor donkey
Italians do not hate it. But it is such an obvious, easy dish to cook that no one would actually pay someone to cook it. At least in Italy. That's a common dish you prepare for children at home.
Greasy people really.
Yes, it´s a dish that you won`t find in a restaurant...and we don`t looking for it when we go.
I use to eat at home, when i`m sick or when i have no time to cook.
That not impress anyone...except americans 😂
se sei italiano, sei onesto e vivi ancora in italia, devi ammettere che le fettuccine alfredo non le hai mai sentite nominare in tutta la tua vita
(if you are Italian, you are honest and you still live in Italy, you must admit that you have never heard of fettuccine alfredo in your entire life)
lol, greasy ppl ? i would like to inform you that in italy we use 99% olive oil, maybe you should look at nordic or french cousine, but i bet you are just ignorant and call people greasy, enjoy your seeds oil noob@@kevinJ6665
@@awesomesauce8678 sono italiano, onesto ma non vivo in italia da 15 anni. Le ho sentite nominare piu´ volte, ma MAI in Italia, solo in Germania
(I'm Italian, honest but I haven't lived in Italy for 15 years. I have heard them mentioned several times, but NEVER in Italy, only in Germany)
Mark, Artichokes are in the Thistle family, and if you let them Bloom (aka go-to flower) you get this Purple Flower. Also, Artichokes are mostly steamed and then baked, but you can deep fry them too. (P.S. I went to Culinary School Just for the fun of it & I love to comment about food too)
Nice to have some more tips about food! I didn’t know that about artichokes.
Great, thank you for the information!
The artichokes in the appetizer belong to two different culinary traditions, the Roman one and the Roman-Jewish one "alla giudia". You should have maintained tolerance without expressing preferences😂. It is usually said that Roman-style artichokes are good every day, while Giudia-style artichokes are good during the holidays
YOu are talking about *THE FLOWER OF MY COUNTRY, SCOTLAND!*
I love them in with the pasta lol
I also often pour the sauce over broccoli (& artichokes) and no pasta
I’m not a pasta fan
Mark, I absolutely loved your pause and voice over during your fettuccine experience... explaining the history behind it. Made my day!
mmmmmmmmm
Mark trio's your video is unremarkable I love them. You provide history, education, enjoyment and entertainment all at one time!!!💕😍😋
Thank you very much!
9:58
😆
Unremarkable?
I think you meant to say 'remarkable' because unremarkable means you're dissing that place. 😮
That is just perfect. It may be comfort food in Italy but to me it's a perfect meal anytime.❤
Mark! Your videos never cease to amaze me! Thank you!
Appreciate your support!
Nobody cooks "fettuccine alfredo" at home because... it's "pasta burro e parmigiano" a dish that we usually eat when we are in a hurry...
Italian ramon
This is made with fresh past made from scratch. That's not quick convenience food in my universe. A Bologna sandwich to me is what you eat when you are in a hurry.
@@brockreynolds870you bake fresh bread in a hurry?
@@flimtok you can buy fresh fettuccine in a pasta-shop that sells fresh made pasta... this doesn't change the things: it's "pasta al burro", period
@@brockreynolds870 I have no idea of what a Bologna sandwich is, and I have worked in Bologna for a wuile
My dad and mom ate their three days in a row in Rome ! That's how good it was
No curiosity to try something else…😢
I get that some people say it's dumb to buy expensive food when you can easily make it at home but as someone who don't have access to those things, this is a great info
it never got popular because you can easily do it at home. People used to go to restaurants on special occasions, not everyday and therefore looked for fancier dishes than the everyday basic pasta
Actually this is the one dish that i always order at an Italian restaurant because I can cook all the other dishes better at home
@@hum-dinger2453this is much easier than carbonara or even ragu pasta
@@hum-dinger2453😂😂😂😂 what?😂😂
@@hum-dinger2453no italiam Restaurant selbst this excpet this one. Where do you order this all the time?
@@hum-dinger2453 If we read this dish on a menu in a restaurant we run away because it's a tourist trap.
i can definitely see how this would be a nourishing and helpful dish for new and nursing mothers. postpartum care and the special foods prepared for it in other cultures is so fascinating, and such a big part of food culture - i'd love to see this in one of your videos please!
What you call "fettuccine alfredo" is actually called "pasta al burro" (pasta with butter) in Italy. We usually cook it when we are sick and hence we have to eat something simple, or if we are in a rush. This Alfredo guy in Rome managed to create a legend around it and sell it to tourists for 25 euros, just because they think they are eating the original one. In an average Italian restaurant, this dish is not even on the menu because it is too simple; anyway, if you ask any chef, he or she will prepare it for children that don't want to eat anything of the restaurant proposal.
So, Italians don't hate it, they just would never pay that amount of money for a dish made with butter and parmesan. But we surely hate that monstrosity proposed as fettuccine alfredo in the US which is done with chicken, garlic and I don't know what else.
Anyway thumbs up for alfredo alla scrofa that was even able to put some butter and parmesan in a jar to sell 🤣
So this is like a fine NYC restaurant serving grilled cheese sandwiches with a bowl of soup to tourists as an example of fine American food. Lolz, I get it. 😋
From family stories, my great-grandmother from Mantua, as a young girl, would knead the dough on festive days and then patiently roll it out with a long, narrow rolling pin until it became as thin as a sheet. She would then fold the pasta and cut it by hand with true mastery... and guess how she would dress it? Yes, with butter and Parmesan!
This happened in thousands of Italian families , long before the invention of Fettuccine Alfredo.
Indeed, the amusement of Italians when it comes to Fettuccine Alfredo can be traced back to the dish’s origins and its perception in Italy versus abroad. Fettuccine Alfredo is a dish that gained fame in the United States thanks to celebrities visiting Alfredo di Lelio's restaurant in Rome in the early 20th century. The dish, in its essence - pasta coated in butter and Parmesan cheese - was a simple, traditional way to enjoy pasta in Italy, similar to the story I shared about my great-grandmother.
In Italy, we call this recipe "la pasta dei cornuti" or "cuckold's pasta", because it is assumed that a husband coming home and seeing such a simple dish would think that his wife had been busy with her lover during the day and did not have time to cook a more elaborate meal upon his return.
This is one of the reasons why we Italians laugh at the American praises for this dish.
Absolutely, despite the humorous cultural anecdotes surrounding it, the dish itself - when made with quality ingredients and care - is undeniably delicious.
In Italia le fettuccine burro e parmigiano me le faceva mia nonna quando avevo 3 anni. Nessun italiano, al ristorante, ordinerebbe le fettuccine Alfredo anche perchè non esistono se non nei ristoranti turistici.
Infatti, ma questo che parla nel video non capisce una mazza di cibo italiano, poverino
For any Americans wanting to make the real deal, get some real parmigiano reggiano, American parmesan cheese is way lower quality. Real parmigiano will be labeled with DOP and be more expensive since it's imported overseas. Don't forget to get good natural butter.
Il PARMIGIANO REGGIANO!
I am always amazed at the amount of food you are able to put in your mouth at once
Excellent timing! We’re heading to Rome in a few weeks and would definitely love to try where the dish originated! Thanks for sharing! We have lunch reservations for our first full day in Rome!!
Such enjoyable and informational content. Thank you Mark for always bringing the best videos to me and my family. Blessings upon blessings to you and your beautiful family.🙏🏼🤍🌶️😁
Thank you, appreciate it!
Been to Rome countless times. The food is always wonderful. But those carciofi alla giudia are heaven.
I love how you weren’t using the spoon correctly then just decided the pasta couldn’t be twirled 😂 the spoon is there to twirl it in, not just to push it around lol
I'm not even white and I know that lol
Yes exactly 😊
They honestly should have taught him to use it.
How can he not know that? I'm a 53 year old Swede. When I was a child spaghetti wasn't even common here, but I always knew how you use the spoon.
Simple, but not easy to do.
The cutlery is from the King of Hollywood..
Mark, I would take a little on the fork at a time just to enjoy it longer. It looks so wonderful and I am glad you brought this cusine to us.
yeah that first mouthful I think he felt the pressure of people watching him
ohhh...i totally forgot about this channel! So relaxed! Love it ! :)
TRUFFLE!!???!?! The original recipe calls for TRUFFLE?!?!?!?
I have never dropped my jaw so low.
Grazie, Marco!
I love having butters and noodles with parmesan from leftover spaghetti noodles 🍝 ❤!
Wow super easy to make, Gonna try this at home, Rome is to far from NYC 😂
One day, One day I will Visit Rome.
Don't forget a bit of pasta water, it makes the dish silky.
I'm Roman and in my opinion many Italians think this is an American dish. Maybe this is the reason. Almost a sensation of pizza with pineapple😅
pizza with pineapple is Canadian
But I see that you fail to recognize that Pizza with Pineapple IS Canadian, NOT everything comes from the USA, but you can't stand the fact!😉
Cuz they called Pizza with Pineapple Hawaiian Pizza
@@albertsallis5929 thats called marketing. pineapple on pizza was first made by a greek immigrant in canada.
Pizza with pineapple Is delicious!
Hey Mark, love all your videos :) may I ask why you do not use the spoon to twirl your past on? I have noticed a few times and it does make it much easier. Keep up the great videos.
I found this on the Internet:
In 1943, di Lilio sold the restaurant to a new owner, who kept the restaurant’s name (Alfredo alla Scrofa), menu, and all the photos on the wall. In 1950, Alfredo and his son Armando opened another restaurant, Il Vero Alfredo, “the true
Alfredo,” which is now managed by Alfredo’s grandchildren. Both restaurants claim to be the originator of the dish.
As melting some butter in pasta is something you can claim as an invention. As italian, this is just ridicolous, everybody was doing that since...ever.
Well it was created under the Alfredo alla Scrofa roof so makes sense that both of them can claim it to some degree, don't think people actually care that much as long as the dish is done right
Italian HERE! I try to clarify:
Fettuccine Alfredo is an american dish born from italian-americans in USA.
We dont "hate", simply it's not an Italian recipe. But is an american recipe with Italian sounding and Italian ingredients.
If you want to taste the original pasta that we do in Italay and is really a part of our tradition unlike "fettuccine alfredo" is simply Pasta Burro e Parmigiano, that is probably what those italian amrican were tryiong to reproduce in USA when the recipe born.
Then surely you can find lot of stories and legends, but i ensure you , you can ask any italian, we never prepare fettuccine alfredo.
Hope it clarify
Famous around the world? I've only heared Americans talk about it...
Mark is a douche
So what if they do?
Great video. I did a history of Alfredo video but I love how you went to the restaurant!!!!
It's such a simple, straightforward dish. Why would I go to a fancy restaurant to order something I can make at home for very little money. I love this dish, and I make it at least every month here in the Bronx.
Most people don't take the time and effort to make the fresh pasta from scratch. That is the main reason people go to Italian restaurants.
@@brockreynolds870 great point. And to enjoy the fresh pasta you don't need to go crazy on the sauce.
@@brockreynolds870 I totally agree.
@@biohead66 butter, cheese magic.
@@brockreynolds870 Can't you buy fresh pasta in the US? Here in Sweden you can buy it at the equivalents of Walmart.
I love Mark's videos. He has a real passion for good food. I once saw one of his videos where he literally ate for hours at an Amish buffet. My question is, HOW THE HECK DOES HE STAY SO THIN? 😆
Italians don't know what Alfredo pasta is, and don't know what the American version is. Also, this dish isn't famous around the world, only in the US.
However, everyone in Italy knows the dish you had in the video. It's just called butter pasta, or pasta with butter and parmesan (pasta al burro). In Italy it's a quick and easy dish, and also something you give to someone who is sick.
It's about as common in Italy as a grilled cheese sandwich in the US.
It's tasty, but Alfredo didn't invent it.
Deve essere qualcosa di tipico del sud, perché io non ho mai mangiato pasta con burro in tutta la mia vita e non ho mai sentito nessuno parlarne.
@@tardigrado_irriverente Davvero? Non mangi mai la pasta con una cremina di parmigiano e burro (mantecato con un po' di acqua di cottura)? Qualcosa di simile al cacio e pepe?
@@BakerVS Davvero. Quando non c'è niente faccio la pasta aglio e olio, ma non ho mai messo il burro nella pasta
@@tardigrado_irriverente Neanche burro e salvia (per esempio con pasta farcita)?
Io conosco soprattutto il nord-ovest dal paese mentre Aosta e Milano, lì mangiano spesso il burro. Esistono anche i pizzoccheri della Valtellina (pasta di saraceno) conditi con burro, salvia e formaggio. Altrimenti, in Toscana fanno i pici con pecorino e burro, e in Puglia mi sembra che fanno piatti simili, ma non conosco molto bene il sud, ci sono solo stato una volta...
Assaggia una volta il burro e parmigiano, e delizioso! Devi però fare attenzione alla temperatura per evitare i grumi.
@@BakerVS Mi piacciono molto i tortelloni burro e salvia. Ma per il resto, meglio evitare di mangiare burro spesso
I’m so hungry right now. Thanks Mark great video.
We will always support you, Mark. Keep working hard.
Жрать на камеру реально тяжелая работа, ага.
Bot
Thank you!
the most important ingredient is a high quality parmesan. don't need the broth, the milk or cream, extra butter or anything beyond salt and pepper and that starch water. if you're making it at home from Wal-Mart or a local market, find a block and grate it yourself. BelGioso is a solid low budget choice.
I've never been a fan of alfredo sauce as we know it in the States (the creamy cheese sauce from bottles). Now butter noodles with parmesan cheese on the other hand I eat all the time and love. I never knew that the original recipe for fettuccine alfredo was just that. So simple and so good.😋
Italian recipes are usually very simple with only few ingredients. Important is just technique and quality of the ingredients
I eat it that way all the time too
Yes I've always made butter spaghetti and parmesan, especially when money was tight, I didn't realise I was making fettuccine alfredo to an extent.
So you nevee checken it out what for a sauce it is? 😂😂😂😂 so american
sorry, your reply made no sense. Try again.@@pipo4158
Mark! I have been Going to Thailand the past three years and I stay at the Red Planet hotel on Sukhumvit. I had no idea your restaurant was literally around the corner from the hotel. Going there this summer and will definitely be eating there.
This dish is famous in America but not in Italy. 95% of people make this when don't have time to cooke, this is the true. Anyway in his simplicity is e good dish
Exactly, how is this a popular thing in America??!! This is what Italians quickly make a home in 15 min, they just mix butter and cheese with pasta and some water hahaha. This being popular in America just shows how incompetent Americans are with cooking, they actually sell this in jars and label it Alfredo sauce, but there is no such thing, that jar of Alfredo sauce has nothing to do with this technique of mixing butter and cheese, it's just destroying Italian food culture
Poor Mark..when he finally realized if the fork went on the right and and spoon on the left..he soon gave up so he is holding the spoon without even using it and he is twirling the fettuccine on the plate..then he got rid of the spoon all together..
If an Italian gentleman goes to this restaurant with a Versace Suit and a silk tie there is no way he would not use the spoon ! It would be like a hunter goes hunting without a rifle! LoL 😂
If you come in Rome to eat this you haven't understand what to eat in Rome. This is the dish we Italians calls "burro e parmigiano" and we eat it only when we have stomach sickness.
👍🏼 bravo
How do you mean stomach sickness? With that amount of butter and cheese, it is a heavy, rich dish, surely.
@@erzsebetkovacs2527 i don’t think you know what “heavy meal” means for us Italians, especially in the south region. You will not stand the appetizers. 😂 This is when you want to stay light.
@@VincenzoDelVino :D Okay, but what sort of stomach sickness did you mean?
@@erzsebetkovacs2527 something like sense of vomit or in case of diarrhea.
We went there just two weeks ago because of this video! My girlfriend is Asian and I introduced her to Italian food 12 years ago. I’ll never forget that she asked the waiter for chopsticks that first time, Lol! Anyway, her favorite pasta dish is Fettuccine Alfredo and when I first watched this video months ago, I put this on our list of places to visit on our upcoming trip. Very hard to get into, we waited in the “No Rez” line for about an hour. The food was very good & the ambience & presentation were awesome. I thought the Alfredo was… meh (not my favorite pasta-too mushy) but my girlfriend loved it! The virtual, “Who’s Who” photos on the wall of prior customers is very impressive, so the people here who are pooh-poohing the place don’t get that it’s not necessarily popular for just one dish. I highly recommend eating here and even more highly recommend reservations!
the waiters are clearly professional waiters. not high school kids.
Fresh pasta and that cheese that has been aged. Delicious! The professional and friendly service is beautiful too.♥
he doesnt know how to use the golden spoon ^^
Born and raised in Queens NY. I went to catholic school and majority of my friends were Italian Americans. What I learned is Italian American cuisine is nothing like what is eaten in Italy. When Italian immigrants came to the US it was mostly poor working class from southern Italy. When they first arrived the abundance of meat was a shock to the immigrants. They started to incorporate heavy meat into their diet. Italians in Italy tend to eat on the lighter side and do not mix meat with cheese. Popular Italian products are all primarily from the northern richer region Lombardy , Tuscany , Emilia- Romagna etc.
My grandparents were Sicilian and came to Canada in the 60s and became obsessed with meat as it was scarce in Italy at the time (particularly in Sicily) I was in Sicily last summer for 2 weeks and barely had any meat 🤣
@@devadii24a lot of fish right? My boy whose family was from Sicily. He could speak Italian and goes back to Sicily a lot. When I ate at his house, it was mostly fish never any meat. It was all delicious though.
As an Italian, I have never heard of "fettuccine alfredo"....
Pasta burro e parmigiano is a dish we make at home when we are sick. Not something you’ll spend money for at the restaurant, unless you have an upset stomach.
This is considered kids food in italy, that's probably why Americans are obsessed with this because Americans have the pallet of a toddler. This is what Italians make at home when they don't have much time and just want to cook something quick in 15 min. The fact that this is big in America is so strange to me, the simplest cheapest meal you can make at home for 2 dollars. And in America they sell it in jars as a sauce, doesn't make sense as this is a quick technique you do when the pasta is cooked, it's not possible to put this in a jar, it has to be made on the spot. The Alfredo sauce in USA has nothing to do with Italian food culture sorry. Americans eat like children, they eat chicken strips and stuff like this, stuff that toddlers eat that have no concept of food
Yeah, I'm surprised they don't smother this dish with that crappy orange pre-sliced processed cheese product (AKA American cheese). Americans seem to be obsessed with that garbage. Every time I see a decent burger video or Facebook post, it's oozing with that horrible fake cheese. Even their own FDA does not recognize it as a cheese, and refers to it as a cheese product. This is because it only contains 50% cheese, and the rest filler.
😊😊😊😊😊😊
Red alert Italian food snob. Well Italy has no clue on how to cook a good steak or BBQ. America has the most Italians outside of Italy why that?
Great video, loved it, thank you
Mark don't put so much food at the time in your mouth , love what you do
I'm surprised he didn't get a smack in the back of the head... eating like that is disrespectful.
He finished that plate in 4 fork fulls. Food and wine is meant to be savoured and enjoyed, slowly. Typical tourist. Lol.
@@skeena59tbf I think it's dumb but to each their own
Lionfield was been there before... I am glad you loved that beautiful dish. :)
Use the spoon to help twist the pasta?
Yes exactly
Didn't want to scratch it
I was taught you combine almost half a stick of butter with maybe a cup of half a half.When that mix is tepid not boiling add drained hot pasta, enough for 2. The measurement was as much parmesan as you could hold in one hand. Once smooth, stir in an egg yolk.
Perchè solo un fesso va al ristorante per mangiare pasta con burro e parmigiano e pagarla magari 15 euro...
Te la fai a casa con 50 centesimi!
I turisti sono così ingannati che non provano mai le cose deliziose che raramente si mangiano a casa in Italia, ma solo al ristorante
In realtà parli a vanvera, La pasta all'uovo di qualità costa 18 euro al chilo e li erano quasi 2 etti. Il burro se è di qualità cosa 4 euro ogni 100 grammi e li ne hanno usato almeno una confezione piccola, il parmigiano era più che abbondante, almeno 100 gr e sono altri 3 euro. Fatti due conti e aggiungi le spese di un locale storico e di qualità come quello. I fessi non sono certo loro che fanno bene il loro lavoro...
@@donatellaborciccibelloni5328 Tu quanti italiani conosci che vanno al ristorante a mangiarsi la pasta in bianco? Nessuno ovviamente. Tocca ripetermi: solo un fesso va al ristorante per mangiare pasta con burro e parmigiano. Ma il mondo, si sa, è pieno di fessi...
@@donatellaborciccibelloni5328 Tu quanta gente conosci che vada al ristorante per mangiarsi la pasta in bianco? appunto...
I don't think Italians have a problem with the dish when it is made just with butter and parmesan. I think the problem is when people add cream. They have that issue (quite rightly) with other dishes too. Double (Heavy) Cream makes the pasta "clingy" on the pallet and adds an unwelcome dairyness. (is there such a word?).
The spoon and fork is a nice touch!
too bad that mark doesn't know how to use a spoon with pasta even if Italians never do it, for some tourists it would be very convenient
Mark you make me want pasta now ha! I've never seen artichokes made like that! Both look delicious! Safe travels, can't wait for the next adventure! ❤😊
Italy will be on top of my bucket list,when i travel to europe.i loveeee pizza n pasta.oh can't wait!
NAH CHINESS FOOD JAPAN korea FOODS IS BETTER SPANISH FOOD IS BETTER ITALY BORING
@@Sammy-34079so do t eat it. No one one is forcing you.
Pasta Alfredo is nothing but a joke on Americans. In Italy we call it “pasta in bianco”, or “pasta al burro”, and would never order something so simple in a restaurant! Also most Italians have never heard of this name “Alfredo” used for pasta al burro. Pretty ridiculous.
Bravo 👍🏼 giusto ✅
Kinda like chicken parm!
Italians do not hate thus pasta starting from scratch is a perfect food for the one who's in love of a simple food
Mark this is a tourist scam…my mother used to prepare me this when I was sick😂
It's still the original Italian recipe!
Did you have to pay for this? Seriously. This is beyond ridiculous.
I can make carbonara at home easily, I guess getting carbonara at any restaurant in italy is a scam. I mean, why would you pay for something you can make at home /s
@@MarkAbroadIf you put butter on a bread slice, maybe can be original for someone, but still isn't a recipe.
@@MarkAbroad recipe for something that doesn't even exist in the first place so...
Hi Mark,
it's simple, in Italy we made Fettuccine Alfredo directly in home, 'cause it's made with 3 ingredients, all Italian have in home, it's not necessary to go in a Restaurant and pay more of 30€, you can do this dish in your hotel room with 10/15€.
Anyway your video is made with love for the Italy.
Wish you the best, best regards.
Marco
Thanks for the great videos on delicious food and food history!
GENIUS M.R. MARK ,THANKS BRO,YOU ARE EXTREMELY APPRECIATED.
Pasta Alfredo is a 100% Italian dish, but it isn't Italian, it is American. Ok, got It.
I used to work at Alfredos in NYC (Rockefeller Centre) in 2000/2001, I started when it opened. The chef would cook a staff meal everyday so I ate this 6 days a week and General Tsao's chicken in Chinatown on Sundays lol. I do remember it being really simple < just pasta and tonnes of butter, being a NZer I remember telling the chef he should use Fernleaf butter to improve his recipe lol.. I'm sure there were no truffles though.. Anyway THE best pasta Ive had til this day.. PS love the NZ pie videos, I miss those too haha
Hi Mark fettuccine Alfredo doesn’t really exist in Italy, it’s more of an American invention. In Italy it’s common to eat pasta with a sauce known as “al burro” (with butter) its pasta served with melted butter that's sometimes infused with fresh sage, as well as grated Parmigiano.
u probably haven't watched the video till the end. Alfredo's restaurant existed way back before the americans came to italy, way before even world war. If there is any pasta dish that has an american influence then its carbonara, not pasta alfredo. The dish name "Fettucine Alfredo" might not be widely used in Italy like "al burro", but the fact that Alfredo was a real person, and that he is worldwide known for exactly that particular dish, makes it a real italian dish. If you still claim it doesn't exist, I urge you to watch the video again. Small hint: The Alfredo restaurant is literally located inside Italy FYI! Matter of fact, they made the entire video shoot in Italy XD
I watched it and thank you for that.@@zirchsoft
Who ya gonna believe, her or your lying eyes?
pastina isn't it almost the same?
@@zirchsoft "american influence then its carbonara" WHAT? AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
Love the food origin stories you do Mark!❤
ma in italia le fettucine alfredo non esistono e una pasta invenventa in america. alfredo in italia e il postino 🤣🤣
😂 Che cazzu
I am going to totally make this. Yes, I have made my own pasta.
Man this looks lush!
8:12 But the spoon is not used that way. You have to turn the spoon ! 😀
Italian s don't use the spoon. It's useless to roll spaghetti
@@marcotd7923 Ma quello che io volevo dire, se tu vuoi usare il cucchiaio, usalo almeno in maniera giusta. Giralo dalla parte giusta e non come lo tiene lui in mano qui nel video. Nella maniera come lo tiene lui, è ridicolo. O Io lasci stare oppure se vuoi usarlo, usalo come si deve. Qui adesso non c’entra se gli italiani usino o meno il cucchiaio con gli spaghetti. Ognuno fa come gli pare. Io ad esempio ho sempre usato il cucchiaio con gli spaghetti e continuerò sempre ad usarlo. Non c’è una “legge” che me lo vieta. A casa sua ognuno fa quello che vuole.
Mine is done in a similar fashion. I make the noodles and also a pat of about a half stick of Plugra butter. I get my cheese from Roberta at ParmaShop and typically use 3/4 of a cup. Fresh noodles are ready within a couple of minutes. Add some of the pasta water and voila, you have a dish every bit as good as what you pay $40 U.S. for in Rome. Crack open a good bottle and you're in heaven!
Gerald Lee
Italians do NOT hate (as the title of this video says) the original Fettuccine Alfredo, which by the way in Italy has always been called “Fettuccine burro e parmigiano” (Fettuccine butter and parmesan), or simply “Fettuccine al Burro), but they do hate the fake version that Americans in America have made by completely changing this simple dish, putting in various things that do not exist in the original version created by Chef Alfredo, in the Alfredo restaurant in Rome.
Americans haven't changed anything. Italian immigrants adapted the dish in America. The native Americans didn't do it.
Now I see the correct way to do it. That butter on the plate, the pasta and then the pecorino cheese. That's heaven. I am going to try this at home. YUM, thanks for this video.
No, it's parmigiano not pecorino
@@bluesman1947 Thanks for letting me know. I missed that. 😎
@@joelbuchanan471 👍
You also need to add a bit of the pasta water, otherwise you won't get a creamy sauce
PARMIGIANO REGGIANO, no Pecorino!
E pasta fresca all' uovo, NON una qualunque pasta industriale!
You need to use the spoon under the fork to get the pasta when you're twisting
No, you don't. You will NEVER see an Italian using the spoon under the fork... NEVER!!!!
My daughters could eat their pasta only with a fork at the age of 3! And we are Austrians!
Hi Mark, we consider this type of pasta a bit trivial (unless you add truffle :-)), perhaps for a fast meal at home or when you are sick. However, we are not hating it: surely it's very good ! You convinced me: I will try this reasturant when in Rome. Thanks. Enjoy !
It's not that we hate it, it's just that no one knows it as "Alfredo", it is "pasta al burro" (butter pasta) with cheese (usually Parmigiano) and it's a no-fuss, homely dish that you serve to kids that won't eat anything tastier. It's a "kids menu" pasta dish that is a waste of time and money to order at a restaurant...
It looked good there thought
I love Rome Mark, and went to some of the soccer games in Rome to … I enjoyed the food immensely have a great rest of the day.
This is slander against the true creator, Marie Calender.
Very funny
😂😂
From what I can gather, the main reason people "hate" this is because it's just pasta and butter, a staple of Italian home cooking. It's like going out to a fancy restaurant just to order a turkey sandwich. Yeah, it's gonna be better made than most sandwhiches you've had, but it's just a turkey sandwich. People go out for pasta because they want stuff they can't easilly make at home.
I'm favoured $130k every 4 weeks! I now have a good house and can afford anything and also support my family
@JonLawrence-it4lq Thanks to Mrs Thelma Charlotte Ruff. She's a licensed IAR here in the states.
😱Sounds familiar, I have heard her names on several occasions.. And both her success stories on Wall Street journey!
If you would like to get in touch with her, I recommend searching for her name online.
So nice to see Thelma Charlotte Ruff talked about here, her good works are speaking already and like wide fire spreading.
Her good reputation already speaks for her $ 110k last month
I spent eight years in Italy (Air Force). Some of the best years in my life. The food! The people! The clothes! The cars! The weather! The history!