Recipes, Guides, Lifestyles by GRATSI

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EPISODE 7

Nonno Alberto, the Recipe for Love and Potato Pie

By Gianina Rose

July 23, 2025

Today we’re in Salento, between Taviano and Nardò, at nonno Alberto’s home. We find him in the garden, busy tending to his plants. He’s doing a bit of maintenance, with his usual care and quiet pride. He offers us a strawberry — sweet, sun-warmed — and tells us how the land still has so much to teach the younger generations. He moves slowly, with thoughtful gestures, and as soon as he starts speaking, we realize he’s not your average grandfather: his mind is sharp, his words precise and warm. He’s cultured, curious, articulate; the kind of person you could listen to for hours. He says he doesn’t care about being famous, but truth be told, he has everything it takes. And maybe he already is, in the eyes that matter most: his family, his grandchildren, and anyone who has the pleasure of spending time with him.

An older man with white hair, wearing a plaid shirt and suspenders, smiles outdoors on a sunny day. Green trees and a blue sky with clouds are in the background. Text on the image reads, This is my passion,. An elderly man with white hair and a plaid shirt holds hands with a young woman with long dark hair in a white shirt, standing together outside near green trees and sunlight.

After the garden, we head to his trusted greengrocer Andrea. They greet each other the way people do in the South: with jokes, warmth, and familiarity. Together we choose the best vegetables for the dish we’ll be cooking later. Back home, we’re welcomed by the scent of good things and the hiss of the moka pot on the stove. Alberto puts on his apron,a gift from his grandchildren, embroidered with the words: “Today I thought I’d cook this recipe.” He laughs as he shows it to us, while his wife ties it gently behind his back. She prefers to stay off camera, but her presence is everywhere. He tells us it was his grandchildren who signed him up for Instagram, and since then nonno Alberto has become a bit of an online sensation. “I want to be more famous than they are,” he jokes. But when we see how they look at him — with admiration, pride, and so much love — we know he already is. He’s the grandfather everyone wishes they had.

Small boats float on calm, sunlit water near the shore, with orange and white buoys scattered around. Tree branches partially frame the scene in the foreground. The mood is peaceful and serene. A woman with dark curly hair and a man with white hair and suspenders walk together outside a building on a sunny day, both smiling. Green bushes are visible on the left.

After the garden, we head to his trusted greengrocer Andrea. They greet each other the way people do in the South: with jokes, warmth, and familiarity. Together we choose the best vegetables for the dish we’ll be cooking later. Back home, we’re welcomed by the scent of good things and the hiss of the moka pot on the stove. Alberto puts on his apron,a gift from his grandchildren, embroidered with the words: “Today I thought I’d cook this recipe.” He laughs as he shows it to us, while his wife ties it gently behind his back. She prefers to stay off camera, but her presence is everywhere. He tells us it was his grandchildren who signed him up for Instagram, and since then nonno Alberto has become a bit of an online sensation. “I want to be more famous than they are,” he jokes. But when we see how they look at him — with admiration, pride, and so much love — we know he already is. He’s the grandfather everyone wishes they had.

A woman places produce into a woven basket at an outdoor market, while an older man and woman stand beside her. A vendor works at a stall under a yellow canopy in the background. An elderly man with white hair, wearing a plaid shirt and suspenders, sits at a table in a cozy kitchen and drinks from a small brown cup. Warm sunlight comes through a wooden wall beside him.

We start preparing “Pitta di patate, a savory potato pie that tastes like home and Sunday lunches.
Before we dive into the steps, here’s what you’ll need to make it:

Ingredients (for a medium-sized baking dish, serves 4–6)

  • 2.2 lbs potatoes (boiled, peeled, and mashed using a potato ricer — about 4–5 medium potatoes)
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 cup grated Parmigiano cheese
  • 1 small bunch fresh mint (about 2 tablespoons, finely chopped)
  • 1 medium onion (finely diced)
  • 2 cups cherry or grape tomatoes (halved)
  • 5 oz sliced cooked ham
  • 7 oz semi-aged cheese like scamorza (or provolone, sliced — will melt during baking)
  • ½ cup pitted black olives (halved)
    ⅓ cup breadcrumbs (for the top crust, more if needed)
  • 2–3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • Salt and pepper to taste
A frying pan with food sits on a gas stove next to a stainless steel sink in a kitchen with patterned tile walls and a sheer curtain covering a small window above the sink. A square baking tray filled with a yellow dough, topped with black olives and strips of cheese, sits on a table beside a fork, a blue bowl, and some food ingredients.

In a pan, we sauté the onion with olive oil, then add the tomatoes for a quick, fragrant sauce. Meanwhile, we mix the mashed potatoes with the eggs, Parmigiano, chopped mint, salt and pepper. In a baking dish, we layer the seasoned potato mixture as a base, followed by the tomato sauce, slices of ham, scamorza cheese, and black olives. Then another layer of potatoes, a sprinkle of breadcrumbs to create a crispy crust, a generous drizzle of olive oil and into the oven it goes, at 180°C (350°F) for about 40 minutes. The scent quickly fills the house, and we already know we’ll have a hard time waiting.

A person sprinkles cherry tomatoes, ham, cheddar cheese, and black olives over an uncooked, rectangular pizza with parchment paper in a baking tray; kitchen tools and ingredients are visible nearby.

While the pitta bakes, we move to the living room, and that’s when Alberto starts telling us a story. We travel back to his younger days. He worked as a barber in Turin starting in 1953, never taking a single vacation since 1960. But one summer, he finally returns to his hometown for a short break. That’s where he sees her: a girl in a red floral dress, a look, and he knows. It’s her. The one. Back in Turin, he writes her a letter every single day for a year and a half. When he returns to the South for good, they get married. He tells the story with the calm elegance of another era, and then smiles: “If I could live it all again, I’d do it the same way. With the same person. Love changes, transforms, but it stays. Now it’s love for our children, for our grandchildren. But it’s still love.”

A person flips through a photo album showing pictures of a young boy in formal attire holding white lilies and two group photos, one outside a building and one indoors at a celebration.

By now, the scent of pitta has filled the air. We take it out of the oven, and soon the daughters and grandkids join us. The table fills up, voices rise, there’s laughter, tasting, and toasting. It’s one of those seemingly ordinary moments that somehow stay with you forever. Alberto slices the pitta, pours the wine, and soaks in the joy. And we — here to film, listen, and learn — can’t help but wish that whoever is reading this could be here with us, sitting at that table, feeling what we feel.

This is the beauty of Nonna Wisdom: not just collecting recipes or traditions, but truly living them. Stepping into homes, gardens, kitchens and hearts to capture memories you don’t want to forget. Every encounter teaches us something. Every dish becomes a way to celebrate life. And each time we leave, we feel it deeply: we are exactly where we’re meant to be.

An elderly person wearing an apron and checked shirt holds a large baking tray with food, standing in a warmly lit home with wooden furniture and decorative shelves in the background. A smiling elderly man wearing an apron raises a glass at a dining table, surrounded by several people also toasting with drinks. Plates of food and a family photo are visible in the cozy, homey setting.

The market