Bangkok Post

Italian rice puts pasta in the shade during pandemic

- FRANCK IOVENE FRANCESCO GILIOLI

ROBBIO: Europe’s top rice producer Italy has seen consumptio­n of the staple rise throughout the coronaviru­s pandemic, putting even pasta in the shade.

It’s not just popular at home either — China itself has even signed a deal to import Italian rice.

The Chinese have their eyes on varieties used to make typical risotto dishes such as medium-grained Carnaroli, Arborio, Roma or Baldo.

“It is because our rice is better quality than that cultivated in China,” said Stefano Greppi, Pavia province president at Italy’s main agricultur­al union Coldiretti.

Himself the owner of a nearby rice farm, Greppi welcomes the recent signing, during the pandemic, of an agreement allowing Italy, which produces more than half of European rice output, to export rice to China.

That is a boon for producers in the provinces of Pavia, Lombardy, Vercelli and Novara (both in Piedmont) which account between them for 95% of national production.

“It’s a bit like selling ice cream to the eskimos,” quipped daily Il Corriere della Sera the day after the export protocol was signed in April.

“The doors of the huge Chinese market are opening to rice (and risotto) cultivated in the countrysid­e around Pavia,” added the newspaper, explaining that “native imitations of Italian risotto” already exist in China.

Spread over 220,000 hectares (545,000 acres) and cultivated by 4,200 producers in all, Italian rice production totals an annual 1.5 million tonnes. The country boasts more than 200 varieties in all, each with its own peculiarit­ies.

Even so, Europe is a mere lightweigh­t when it comes to global production. It has just 0.4% of the total world output of 500 million tonnes a year, 90% of that

Asia-based.

With the wind in its sails internatio­nally, Italian rice is also making good headway at home. Consumptio­n soared 47% during the first six weeks of the coronaviru­s pandemic — sometimes outstrippi­ng demand even for pasta in that period, according to Coldiretti.

“During the Covid-19 emergency, people rediscover­ed rice and also risotto, which has always been a bit snubbed in Italian cuisine,” Stefania Buffa, a 27-year-old rice farmer from Robbio in Lombardy, told AFP.

Sergio Lombardi, 63, who owns a farm in the same area, explains that “the region can count on water reserves and a constant supply throughout the duration of rice cultivatio­n, which is not possible in many regions of Italy.”

Sown in spring, Italian rice is harvested between September and October.

Rice was introduced into the country’s north in the 12th century by Cistercian monks, who took upon themselves the task of improving what was then unsanitary and wooded terrain prone to malaria outbreaks.

The rice crop benefited from the arrival of canals, whose layout Leonardo da Vinci designed. Mechanisat­ion then brought further crop advances.

Up until the 1950s and 1960s, people came from the south of Italy, particular­ly women, dubbed “mondine” or seasonal pruners, to cultivate the Po plain.

Their harsh working conditions inspired the famous protest song “Bella ciao” as well as neo-realist films including “Bitter Rice” (Riso Amaro, 1949) notably featuring Silvana Mangano and Vittorio Gassman.

 ?? AFP ?? An aerial picture taken on May 8 shows a tractor sowing rice in a water submerged plantation near Robbio, Lombardy.
AFP An aerial picture taken on May 8 shows a tractor sowing rice in a water submerged plantation near Robbio, Lombardy.

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