
This isn’t just a collection of recipes; it’s a seat at our family table.
For Nana and Nunno, food was a language of its own. Whether it was the slow, rhythmic simmer of a Sunday Red Gravy or a quick meal shared between busy shifts, every dish told a story of where we came from and where we were going. I created The Pasta Tempo to honor their legacy preserving that unwritten intuition and capturing the classic Sicilian traditions we aim to master.
The Family Table
In our house, Sunday wasn’t just a day of the week; it was an event. By 12:00 PM sharp, the house would be filled with the scent of Sunday Gravy and the sound of at least 15 family members spilling through the front door. It was a beautiful kind of chaos.
The adults claimed the heavy wooden table in the dining room, while we kids had our own kingdom at a massive setup in the living room. There was always plenty of food, but the real highlight was when my Uncle would walk in, arms loaded with enough cannoli to ensure no one left without a powdered sugar smile.
“It was more than a meal; it was our weekly anchor”
Sicilian Teamwork
Our kitchen ran on a rhythm that never missed a beat. Long before the sun was up, Domenic would start the gravy, filling the house with the scent of garlic and basil before heading out for his long commute, taking the bus, the train, and finally the trolley to reach his barber shop in Boston.
Once the “torch” was passed, Margaret took over. She was the guardian of the stove, watching the sauce with a practiced eye while hand-rolling pasta and baking the kind of Italian cookies that became legend in our neighborhood.
They were a team in the truest sense; he set the foundation, and she brought the feast to life.
Today, I carry those traditions forward, documenting the foundational steps, the scent of the soffrito, the timing of the sear, and the liquid ratios, ensuring we preserve the soul of the dish while translating their unwritten intuition into recipes you can rely on at your own table.




