Rione X1 and "Roman-Jewish Ghetto Cuisine" in Toronto's Wychwood Park/Hillcrest Village
Rione X1 and "Roman-Jewish Ghetto Cuisine" in Wychwood Park/Hillcrest Village BY BRYAN LAVERY As anyone who reads my columns regularly is aware, I have been a student of the Italian kitchen for the last thirty years, so genuine regional Italian cooking resonates with me. Until the unification of Italy in 1861, one could not speak of a national cuisine. The reality of Italian cookery is an amalgamation of distinct regional cuisines more diverse than anywhere else in Europe. Like the rest of Italy, Rome is made of many districts, each with distinctive traditional specialities. Additional subsets of cuisines remain both strongly regional and localized. The self-proclaimed "Roman-Jewish Ghetto” cuisine, a form of cucina povera (literally meaning the impoverished kitchen) distinguishes the newly opened Rione X1, from a number of other Italian-inspired restaurants on the Wychwood/Hillcrest Village restaurant strip in Toronto. The