Here's a gig: working on a small farm in Corsica for a week in exchange for sampling some of the local fare. A reporter from the Sydney Morning Herald has contrived the assignment, and an account of the work is subsumed to descriptions of the food: beans "simmered in sage, rosemary, homemade olive oil, then slipped into a bed of polenta; wild boar; brocciu -- a versatile, ricotta-like cheese; cured meats, "considered some of the best in the world, attributed not only to the maquis but to the abundance of acorns and chestnuts that the local porkers fed on"; beignets made with chestnut flour; a fish soup called aziminu; and shots of a home-brewed acquavita. Due to timing, he misses the chance to taste casgiu merzu, a rotten cheese -- "a mass of rank slime crawling with maggots" which are introduced to help with fermentation. He's not sure he regrets the lost opportunity.
Foodies will like this one.






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