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    • Insalata Caprese
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    • Lemon Meringue Pie
    • Leo’s Bagna Cauda
    • Leo’s Mother’s Stuffed Eggs
    • Louis’s Apricot Chutney
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    • Pan-fried Noodles, with Duck, Ginger, Garlic and Scallions
    • Pesto
    • Pesto
    • Pickle Relish
    • Poached Pears
    • Polenta Cuncia
    • Pumpkin Sformato with Fonduta and Frisee
    • Rustic Hearth Bread
    • Sicilian Salad
    • Soused Hog’s Face
    • Spotted Dick
    • Swedish Tea Wreaths
    • The Captain’s Salsa Cruda
    • Tomato Aspic
    • Vongerichten’s Spice-Rubbed Chicken with Kumquat-Lemongrass Dressing
    • Winter Squash or Pumpkin Gratin
    • Zucchini Raita

An Ex-Expatriate

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An Ex-Expatriate

Category Archives: Italian recipes

Adriana’s Amazing Pineapple Dessert

09 Sunday May 2010

Posted by farfalle1 in Desserts, Italian recipes, Uncategorized

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Candied orange peel, Pineapple dessert

Wait!   Before you say, “I don’t much care for pineapple,” (and I’d have to agree with you), take a look at this:

Ha! Did you think it was a big plate of prosciutto? That’s what we thought when our friend Adriana presented it at the end of a lavish luncheon last week. Imagine our surprise when we learned it was pineapple. I approached it with some caution, but it was so delicious I went back for seconds twice (I’m on a diet; there are no thirds).

The recipe is so simple you don’t have to go to a separate recipe page; I’m just going to tell you how to do it right now.  Note: you’ll want to either have candied orange peel on hand or make it ahead of time.

First, squeeze a bunch of blood oranges (2, 3…) and reserve a few skins to make candied peel (below).

Second, peel and cut a pineapple into impossibly thin slices (Adriana used a meat slicer; I think a mandolin would work well, or any tool for shaving food).

Third, pour the blood orange juice over the pineapple and garnish with the candied orange peel.

I really don’t see how it could be any easier. Or tastier. The bitterness of the candied peel cuts the cloying pineapple sweetness, and the juice gives just the right amount of acidity.

Here’s how to candy the peel.  Use a vegetable peeler to peel strips of the orange part of the skin (or yellow, if you’re doing lemon). Cut the peel into very thin slices.  Briefly boil in three changes of water to take out the bitter oils.  Then make a heavy sugar syrup – I used about 1/4 cup sugar in about 3/4 cup water.  Toss in the peels and boil them til the water has evaporated.  Remove the somewhat sticky peels and roll them around in granulated sugar.  Set out on waxed paper to dry.  It keeps very well for quite a while, better in the refrigerator.

‘Mbriulata

06 Wednesday Jan 2010

Posted by farfalle1 in Food, Italian recipes, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

'Mbriolata, 'Mbriolate, 'Mbriulata, 'Mbriulate, Sicilian recipes

The holiday decorations have been put away for another year, the leftovers have been eaten (including ALL the cookies); now is the season of remorse.  But before embarking on the inevitable diet, let’s revisit one of the greatest holiday treats of all – ‘mbriulate (pronounced um-bree-you-lah’-tay), a cross between pastry and bread, laced with bits of pork, sea salt and heavily peppered.  It is one of those things of which you say to yourself, ‘Oh, I’ll just try one little bite,’ and half an hour later realize that you’ve eaten a whole turban.  It’s impossible to stop!

The Captain’s family is Sicilian, and he learned to make this dish from his mother many years ago.  It is a dish which is found in the Sicilian province of Agrigento and has, most probably, Roman origins. The only other people we know personally who make it are his cousins, who have an interesting variation I’ll tell you about later.  What does ‘mbriulata mean?  We don’t really know, although the cousins surmise it may come from the word ‘miscuglio’ – a mix, a confusion of things, or perhaps from the Italian word ‘imbrogliata,’ a muddle.

Be warned: you will not find this in the AMA guide to heart-healthy eating. But for a special occasion you can not do better than start the meal with ‘mbriulate, either with your drinks beforehand or after you’ve moved to table – and you always want it in the plural. One ‘mbriulata might satisfy a lonely solo reveler, but no more than that.

The Captain’s recipe is simplicity itself, calling only for a filling of pork, Crisco, salt and pepper.  The cousin’s recipe eschews the Crisco (which doesn’t exist in Italy) and adds onions, pitted black olives and bits of cheese.

You can find the recipe for both variations here.

The Best Thing We Ate Last Week – Baked Stuffed Peaches

15 Thursday Oct 2009

Posted by farfalle1 in Desserts, Food, Italian men, Italian recipes, Piemonte

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Leo, pesche ripiene, Stuffed pea, stuffed peaches

pesche ripiene - stuffed peaches

Our friend Leo made Pesche Ripiene (stuffed peaches) for dessert when we visited in Piemonte last week.  They are amongst the best things I’ve eaten, ever, in my whole life.  And they are easy to make.  In fact, they are so easy I will give you the recipe here rather than send you off to another page for it.

Here’s what you’ll need:  peaches, amaretto (or amaretti) cookies (about 3 per peach half, depending on size of cookies and size of peaches), marsalla, sugar, butter

Cut firm but ripe free-stone yellow peaches in half – Leo recommends Elberta. (They are widely available here but nowadays are not as common in the U.S. as they once were).  Chop up the cookies, add some sugar (+/-  1/2 tsp per peach half), and add enough marsala wine to make the cookie stuffing hold its shape.  Overfill each peach half with the cookie mixture and top with a dab of butter.  Put in a preheated (350) oven and bake until done.  The peaches are delicious with this stuffing, and somehow there is a by-product of excellent caramel sauce that can be drizzled over the top (Leo says it comes from the moisture the peaches throw off mixing with the sugar).

Next time you need an easy dessert and peaches are in season, try making stuffed peaches, and then when everyone tells you how fantastic they are, send a silent thank-you to Leo.

leo

The Best Thing We Ate This Week – Melanzane alla Parmigiana

31 Monday Aug 2009

Posted by farfalle1 in Food, Italian recipes, Uncategorized

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

antipasti, Eggplant alla Parmigiana, Eggplant Parmesan, Eggplant parmigiano, Eggplant recipes, Melanzane parmigiana, Melanzane ricette

antipasti

Our new friends G and G invited us to dinner the other night, along with a group of others from our palestra (gym).  What a meal we had!  Giorgio, it turns out, is a superb cook.  For antipasti (pictured above) he served grilled zucchini, onion focaccia, bagna cauda and melanzane alla parmigiana (front left in the photo).  I’ve never been a huge fan of what I think of as ‘eggplant parmesan,’ but Giorgio made his in the form of a light and delicate torta.  There was not an excess of heavily spiced sauce, or great long strings of melted mozzarella, both of which are great in the right places but better omitted here.  No, this was flavorful, but not at all heavy.  In fact, it was so good that it got the nod for The Best Thing We Ate This Week.  Giorgio has been kind enough to share the recipe, which you can find here, or over on the right under Good Recipes.

Tom-Toms

09 Sunday Aug 2009

Posted by farfalle1 in Food, Italian recipes, Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Basil, Mozzarella, Pasta Recipes, Tomatoes

No, jungle drums aren’t talking – it’s the tomatoes out in the garden and they’re yelling to be picked.  The ripening started a few weeks ago, one here, one there, then a few more; now we have the full chorus, fortissimo, and we can barely keep up.  The Captain has already started canning what we can’t eat.

In addition to his delicious canned sauce, he makes a couple of things with fresh tomatoes that are quick, easy and a joy to eat: insalata caprese:

insalata caprese

and pasta with a fabulous fresh tomato and herb sauce, about which I wrote a year ago:

pasta fresh tom sauce

The Caprese makes great use of fresh basil, which has also been growing like mad in pots on the terrace (much happier in pots than in the garden).  Which brings to mind another of the Captain’s quick and easy summer treats: the bruschetta that he learned to make from his Sicilian mother:

bruchetti

Recipes for the three dishes above can be found here, here and here and over on the right under ‘Good Recipes’.

Here’s one of my very favorite summer treatments for tomatoes:  go out to the garden with a paring knife and a salt shaker.  Find the plumpest, ripest tomato you can and pick it.  Cut it in half, salt liberally, and eat it right there in the garden.  This is best done on a hot day when the tomato has been gently heated by the sun.  Yum.  Summer tomatoes and basil.  What could be more delicious?

Sgabei

25 Monday May 2009

Posted by farfalle1 in Desserts, Food, Italian habits and customs, Italian holidays, Italian recipes, Liguria, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Assado, Sagra, Sgabei

What do “Sgabei!  Gesundheit!!”  and “Who doesn’t love a party?” have in common?  This weekend it was San Maurizio di Monti.

Sgabei (it’s an odd word, pronounced pretty much the way it’s spelled) is a typically Ligurian treat that originated in the Val de Magra on the eastern end of Liguria, on the border with Tuscany. While it is not often found on menus, it is not an unusual offering at a Sagra, a local festival which often involves food and some other kind of entertainment or a sporting event.  Sagras are very popular – it’s a rare weekend when you can’t find a sagra somewhere nearby with its attendant food specialty.

San Maurizio, our little town, just held its third annual Sagra degli Sgabei.  Why Sgabei?  Well, it is a typical food, but also most of the other regional specialties had already been taken by other nearby towns – Santa has fritters, Camoglie has a huge fish fry (fish are cooked in the World’s Largest Fry Pan), and there are several Trofie al Pesto shindigs.  So, for whatever reason, the Comitato Amici di San Maurizio, the volunteers who work hundreds of hours to make it all happen, decided to make Sgabei the main draw of their Sagra.  In addition to the food there were two dance bands, one on Saturday evening, the other on Sunday.

There are always treats other than the signature dish at a Sagra, frequently porchetta, assado and usually some kind of pasta.  Our choices included Trofie al Pesto (also a Ligurian specialty) or Ragu, porchetta, assado, sausages, beer or wine, and of course the highly touted Sgabei themselves.

Assado has its origins in Argentina, where the cowboys would find themselves hungry and far from any source of food… other than their cows.  So they would slaughter a cow and eat it.  Assado is the part of the animal around the stomach – that is, not the guts themselves, but the flesh and muscle that holds them in.  It is marinated, cooked on a big rack near an open fire for about six hours, then sliced off.

sgabei assado marinade

Each Assado chef has his own secret marinade recipe, but it will usually contain at least thyme, salt, pepper, hyssop (which grows wild in the woods here).  My sources tell me that most chefs put something alcoholic in the marinade as well: grappa, wine, or…

sgabei assado

After all those hours cooking the meat is tender (sort of) and ready to be eaten.  A chef with a big knife takes slices from the side away from the flames, and voila – your Assado is ready to serve:

sgabei assado-1

They say that a lot of the tastiness of food has to do with the spirit and energy that the chef puts into the preparation.  That could explain why the Assado at the San Maurizio Sagra was so darned good:

sgabei assado cooks

They told me they are the best, and I believe them.

So, what about the famous Sgabei?  A secret: I don’t much care for them.  I’ve never been a great donut lover, and to me Sgabei is simply a torpedo shaped donut that’s been sliced lengthwise and filled with something – in the case of this weekend’s sagra either strachinno (a very runny cheese), cherry jam or Nutello.  No thanks, I’ll pass, though I will take some of that cherry jam.

For the same reason that the assado is so good, I’m sure the sgabei are the best this side of Genova:

sgabei cooking

Here’s what they look like before they’ve been stuffed:

sgabei

As Fred McGourty used to say, Highly regarded by people who like that sort of thing.

If you’re interested in reading more about other Sagras, hop over to Rowena’s blog and read her section called 100 Ways to Celebrate Italy (there’s a link about halfway down the front page on the left).  She’s up to 35, which is way more than we’ve been to.

I’d love to know more about the Sagra – what do they do with the money, for instance?  We assume it’s a fund-raiser, but for what?  And most of all, how can I get one of these great Staff tee-shirts??

sgabei kitchen

The Best Thing We Ate This Week – Pizzoccheri della Valtellina

25 Tuesday Nov 2008

Posted by farfalle1 in Food, Italian recipes, Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Pizzoccheri della Valtellina

img_70661

The night before we left Italy our friends Elena and Michela gave us dinner.  Pictured above is the Pizzoccheri della Valtellina (pronounced peets-och’-air-eee della Vahl’-tell-ee’-nah) that Elena prepared.  I had never heard of this dish, but judging from the number of recipes on the internet it must be rather well-known.  It is one of the best cold-weather dishes I’ve ever eaten.  The first thing you will have noticed is that the pasta is not white; it is a buckwheat pasta (the pizzoccheri of the dish’s name), which is readily available in Italy.  It may not be so easy to find where you are, but it is easy to make, as you will see from the recipe over on the right.  This is a dish open to infinite variety depending on your taste, what you’ve got on hand or what’s in season.  Elena made hers with spinach, but you may use many different greens.  I have chosen the recipe that best seems to match what Elena gave us, but you may want a different one – there are a bunch of choices. But if you want to try Elena’s, click here or over on the right under Recipes.

The Best Thing We Ate This Week – Risotto Bolognese

11 Tuesday Nov 2008

Posted by farfalle1 in Food, Italian recipes, Rice, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Bolognese sauce, Risotto

Actually it was last week, and, alas, there’s no photo of this delicious dish.  You will simply have to imagine a steaming bowl of slightly golden risotto, with a big dollop of meaty bolognese sauce nestled in the center, the whole topped with a light dusting of freshly grated parmigiano cheese.  Neither component is especially original, but the combination is something a bit more unusual. As I write the rain is beating against the windows and it is chilly outside.  Many parts of the US and of Italy are preparing for the cold dark months ahead; there’s no better winter comfort food than a perfectly cooked risotto. With the Bolognese sauce, a salad on the side and a good bottle of wine this dish will restore your good will and sense of well-being.

The Captain has always used Marcella Hazan’s recipe for bolognese, but a couple of times ago when he made it he discovered we had none of the called-for celery, so he simply made it without. We discovered we preferred it that way.  The celery announces itself with just a bit too much emphasis in a bolognese we think.

As for the risotto, try to find carnaroli rice; it is the best variety.  If you can not find it, use the best arborio you can find.

As mentioned in an earlier post, Arborio is the most ordinary-looking little farm town you can image.  I had always imagined a sweet little fancy village filled with restaurants.  No.  Here is Arborio:

autostrada-sostegno-autogrill-permesso-papers-076

As always, the recipes are over on the right (not above). Buon appetito!

The Best Thing We Ate This Week – Barley Mushroom Casserole

05 Sunday Oct 2008

Posted by farfalle1 in Food, Italian recipes, Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

barley mushroom casserole, barley recipes, fall food

Do you find the cooler autumn weather gives your appetite a big boost?  I do!  These days it seems I can’t stop eating, and there is no end of good food here, alas.

Yesterday I was charged to bring home potatoes to go with the Saturday Night Steak.  But a friend and a glass of wine detained me, so the Captain was left with only his imagination and what was already on hand for the starchy part of our meal.

What he came up with was the perfect dish for the season, combining ease of eating and the wonderful Fall flavors of mushrooms and grain.  It does take a bit of planning ahead as there is a fair amount of let-it-sit time in this recipe.  But if you don’t need to whip something up in five minutes this dish is the perfect accompaniment for any meat you may be serving.  I think it would be great at Thanksgiving. If you’re not a meat eater this can be used as a healthy main course. Barley retains its bran and germ, which are nutritious.  (According to the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, eating whole grain barley can regulate blood sugar for up to 10 hrs after consumption compared to white or even whole-grain wheat, which has a similar glycemic index.)

So there it is: good for you, satisfying to eat, filling and, most importantly, yummy – you’ll find the recipe here or over on the right under recipes, *starred* as a Best.

The Best Thing We Ate This Week – Tagliatelli al Frutti di Mare

15 Monday Sep 2008

Posted by farfalle1 in Italian recipes, Italy, Liguria

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

clams, mussels, seafood pasta, tagliatelli al Frutti di Mare

Spring cleaning around here happens in August, if at all.  I don’t know why I wait until just before the mice move in to clean the house from stem to stern, but that’s what I do.  Like clockwork, I finished the Deep Clean of the kitchen last week, and the first mouse walked into the live trap three days later.  Bah!

While cleaning, though, the Captain and I went through all the cookbooks in the kitchen to see if there were any we could live without (there were three).  We stumbled upon a very slim magazine called “Primi Piatti, Speciale Pasta Corta” that was languishing on the top shelf.  Neither of us can remember where on earth it came from.  But it was great fun to rediscover it.

The Captain is a meat eater, first and always.  But on Fridays he frequently cooks up something yummy from the sea.  Lately we seem to have been on a fresh tagliatelli kick – well, perhaps I should say ‘fresh’ as we’ve been buying packaged fresh pasta at the grocery store.  It is not, perhaps, as fresh-fresh as from the pasta fresca shop, but it is a lot fresher than dry pasta. Although the recipe from our funny magazine is for farfalle (all the recipes are for short pasta), we substituted tagliatelli with no ill results.

This is easy to fix, and a joy to eat. It’s almost a meal in itself, but we followed up with a tomato and red onion salad, and then nectarines. The recipe is over on the right under recipes.

Buon appetito!

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