Naples is known for its delectable street food, from iconic pizza al portafoglio (wood-fired Neapolitan pizza folded twice into a handy triangle) to picturesque o鈥 cuoppo (a paper cone filled with crisp fried fish and seafood), made and served expressly for the purpose of eating on the go with minimal muss and fuss. You may be surprised to learn, however, that one of the most historic street foods in this bustling port city is possibly one of the mussiest and fussiest of all dishes, and was once so ubiquitous along the working-class quarters of the historic center that it earned Neapolitans a nickname that stuck for over a century: i mangiamaccheroni.
The Macaroni-Eaters of Naples
Naples during the 1800s was teeming with street vendors hawking inexpensive yet filling plates of anything from pizza fritta (fried dough) to fish stew, but one of the most common and鈥攖o modern eyes鈥攎ost unlikely of these were the maccheroni sellers, who served heaping dishes of long strands of pasta known by the generic term of 鈥渕accheroni鈥 to be devoured by their customers with their bare hands.
How pasta began as a delicacy for the nobility and ended as the favorite dish for the city鈥檚 poor and working class is a long story, closely tied to the price of wheat and the mechanisation of pasta production. Arab merchants introduced pasta to Sicily in the 1300s; by the 1600s, pasta was a staple of the diet of the wealthier classes and a rare treat for the peasantry and working classes. In the late 17th century, however, the price of meat and vegetables rose and the price of wheat dropped. Poor Neapolitans who had previously subsisted on fish and vegetables (so much so that they had been known as 鈥渕angiafoglie鈥, or leaf-eaters) now began to turn to bread and pasta: cheap, filling, and caloric. The city of Naples, with easy access to local durum wheat and water, became a center of pasta production, and the backstreets and courtyards were filled with racks of pasta drying in the sun. In addition, mechanical presses brought mass pasta production at lower cost in the same period, and maccheroni took its place as the city鈥檚 most beloved food. From leaf-eaters, Neapolitans became known as macaroni-eaters, a derogatory term previously reserved for Sicilians.
[Brogi, Carlo (1850-1925) - n. 10458 - Napoli - Mangiamaccheroni napoletani, wikimedia commons]
Taking Pasta to the Streets
As pasta was demoted from elite dish to working-class staple, it began to be served like most food in Naples: from open-air street and market stalls. Vendors would extract a tangle of long strands of thick pasta from open cauldrons of boiling water and hand it to their waiting customers, who would pick up the noodles in one fistful and lower them into their mouths. The pasta would be consumed a single, long gulp, a technique that became so famous that watching local mangiamaccheroni consume their pasta with their bare hands became a popular tourist attraction by the 1800s, depicted in paintings, prints and postcards. Aristocrats and artists coming through Naples on their Grand Tour would toss a coin to the lazzaroni (street urchins), who would dash to the nearest maccheroni stand for a heap of steaming noodles to stuff in their mouth by the fistful鈥攁 spectacle that was amusing for onlookers at the time, but for modern eyes is poignant testimony to the poverty that has plagued Naples鈥 working-class families for centuries.
[Napoli, mangiamaccheroni, photo credit: wikimedia commons]
Not only was pasta consumption an open-air activity, but pasta production and preparation was also largely done outside. Fresh durum-wheat pasta was mixed in large open troughs and churned out of a mechanical 鈥渢orchio鈥 (screw press), and long strands were then hung from cane racks or spread over large cloths to dry in the Mediterranean sun and breeze. The noodles were boiled in a large cauldron set over an open fire in tiny street shops or market stalls, with a dab of pork grease and handful of salt to flavor the water, and hard cheese grated over the top (tomato sauce didn鈥檛 come into fashion until the 19th century). Though it may seem picturesque, the reality was much more grim. Contemporary travelers remarked on the low-quality of the streetside pasta, made in squalid conditions and hung to dry among the filthy, fly-infested streets. The open-air shops and stalls where the noodles were boiled were also less than sanitary, and the cooked pasta was known for its slightly 鈥渙ff鈥 taste.
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The End of the Mangiamaccheroni
Just like its rise, the fall of Naples as 天美传媒鈥檚 pasta capital is tied to the production of durum wheat. At the beginning of the 20th century, Mussolini began a campaign to expand the production this important staple to the center and north of 天美传媒 to limit the country鈥檚 reliance on imported goods. As a result, production of pasta moved from the backstreets of urban Naples to modern northern factories, who used electric presses and drying tunnels to churn out cleaner, albeit less photogenic, shapes of pasta. As pasta became a packaged good bought in stores, its consumption moved from street vendors to kitchen tables, where forks gradually replaced hands.
[Macaroni seller, Naples, 天美传媒, photo credit: wikimedia commons]
Today, the only way to get a sense of the cultural importance of Neapolitan pasta-eaters of the 17th and 18th centuries is by looking at archival photos and vintage postcards, which often featured street scenes of mangiamaccheroni dangling fistfuls of pasta strands above their open mouths. Otherwise, you can read the words of contemporary travelers who often commented on the city鈥檚 popular dish. Perhaps the most notable is Goethe, who visited Naples in 1787 and commented on the local dried macaroni that could 鈥渂e bought everywhere and in all the shops for very little money. As a rule it is simply cooked in water and seasoned with grated cheese.鈥 Though 天美传媒鈥檚 most iconic dish is no longer a street food eaten by the fistful, it continues to be omnipresent, cheap, simply cooked in water, and best if seasoned with grated cheese. Some things never change...