ROME — Italian food is known and loved around the world for its fresh ingredients and palate-pleasing tastes. The U.N.'s cultural agency gave foodies on Wednesday another reason to celebrate their pizza, pasta and tiramisu by listing Italian cooking as part of the world's ''intangible'' cultural heritage.
UNESCO added the rituals surrounding Italian food preparation and consumption to its list of the world's traditional practices and expressions. It's a designation celebrated alongside the more well-known UNESCO list of World Heritage sites, on which Italy is well represented with locations like Rome's Colosseum and the ancient city of Pompeii.
The citation didn't mention specific dishes, recipes or regional specialties, but highlighted the cultural importance Italians place on the rituals of cooking and eating: the Sunday family lunch, the tradition of grandmothers teaching grandchildren how to fold tortellini dough just so, even the act of coming together to share a meal.
''Cooking is a gesture of love, a way in which we tell something about ourselves to others and how we take care of others,'' said Pier Luigi Petrillo, a member of the Italian UNESCO campaign and professor of comparative law at Rome's La Sapienza University.
''This tradition of being at the table, of stopping for a while at lunch, a bit longer at dinner, and even longer for big occasions, it's not very common around the world,'' he said.
Premier Giorgia Meloni celebrated the designation, which she said honored Italians and their national identity.
''Because for us Italians, cuisine is not just food or a collection of recipes. It is much more: it is culture, tradition, work, wealth,'' she said in a statement.
Many gastronomic cultures get recognition