Stanley Tucci said eating his friends' attempts at homemade Italiancooking was "horrifying."- Speaking on the "River Cafe Table 4" podcast, Tucci recalled disliking
Italian food made by friends.
Stanley Tucci said whenever his American friends would cook Italian
The 61-year-old actor and host of CNN's travel and food show, "Searching for Italy," spoke with Ruthie Rogers, the host of the "River Cafe Table 4" podcast, on Tuesday's episode.
Tucci, who told Rogers that his grandparents both emigrated to the US from Calabria, Italy, when they were young, recalled eating his American friends' attempts at home-cooked Italian meals and not enjoying their interpretation of the cuisine.
"When I would go to friend's houses and have what they thought was Italian food, it was horrifying," he told Rogers. Tucci added that the food was bad "because the ingredients were lousy and they didn't really understand it."
Touching on Italian-American food as a whole, he said there's a tendency for recipes to veer towards excess. "A lot of that Italian-American food came out of suddenly having access to large amounts of meat, having access to more, so more was added, right?" Tucci said, adding that Italians don't typically put a lot of sauce in their pasta and opt for minimal recipes.
"Whereas in
Tucci's "
In the first season of the show, Tucci examined dishes such as a cacio e pepe, a cheese and pepper dish local to Rome, and spaghetti alla Nerano, a zucchini dish featured in the episode exploring Naples and the Amalfi Coast. The dishes, when made authentically, are famously simple and require very few ingredients.