Sunday, October 23, 2011

Tortellini and a history lesson

I spent some time with my good friend, pig farmer and professional olive oil taster, Daniele Barufaldi, and, as Italians are wont to do, in the course of the day we started talking about food, our favorite dishes and how to make them. Daniele is originally from Emilia Romagna, the region north of Tuscany, and while he has lived near Siena for over 20 years with his Venetian wife and sons, he still maintains a freezer full of homecooked specialities, lovingly made by his mother.



As he says it, he's from Emilia.

United as one region today, Emilia and Romagna were separate regions until the 1860’s when the unification of the country of Italy took place. But the people still think of themselves as either “Emiliano” or “Romagnolo”. Divisions run deep in Italy and people relate more to their hometowns and families, and less to the regions they live in. What is oftentimes so difficult to understand about regional Italian cooking is, it isn’t regional. It’s local. It’s so local that neighboring towns will go to war about the right way, the only real way, to make a particular dish. Any dish. I have learned about Italian cooking from both working with the old ladies in the kitchen as well as listening to the old men at the table, who don’t actually do the work but are there to critique it. Or should I say I have gleaned what I can about Italian cooking from talking with the people.


So it should have come as no surprise when Daniele started arguing with me about the correct way to make tortellini. Tortellini in brodo is the pride of the Emilia Romagna table and one of my favorite dishes. The broth is satiny and complex tasting, yet simplicity at its most earnest. The pasta is rich and silky, stuffed with meat and redolent of nutmeg and pepper. Cooked in the broth and served with a dusting of parmigiano reggiano on top, it is heaven on a spoon.

Now, I’ve made tortellini many times. Learned to make them in Bologna years ago and the recipe I use is from a friend’s mother who was born and raised outside Bologna. Yet when I tell Daniele that I cook the pork and veal before pureeing it with mortadella, prosciutto, parmigiano and nutmeg, he raises such a fuss you would have thought someone peed in the ragu.

“NO!” he yells, “the pork and veal must be raw in the stuffing!”

“OH, Calmati!” I yell back at him. That’s the only way to hold your own in a food discussion with an Italian: you have to yell back. And there’s no better way to get a discussion going than to yell at the other person to Calm Down. “That’s how I was taught by two old women from Bologna who have made more tortellini in their lives that you have!” I rush to the defense of my education and honored teachers.

“Well, obviously your teachers were Romagnolan”, he concedes, “that’s how they make it in Romagna. In Emilia - where they REALLY know how to cook - the stuffing is raw before making the tortellini.”

I did not know that.

Then he puts the loaded question to me, with the raise of an eyebrow: “And how big do you make them??”

“Very small”, I answer. "A square inch of pasta wrapped around a tiny amount of meat stuffing and formed around your littlest finger.”

“No!”, he yells. “There can be no less than five (5) tortellini on a soup spoon!”

“Oh”, I say, really getting into the argument, “and how big is this spoon? Soup spoons come in all different sizes!”

“No! All soup spoons are the same size!”

Really??? I go to his cupboard, pull out the drawer and fish out three different sized soup spoons. “There”, I say, laughing. “You didn’t think that in Italy tortellini would be all different sizes but all the spoons would be the same!?”

We ended by agreeing that very soon we have to share a plate of tortellini in brodo. I hope he pulls out his stash of his mom’s tortellini. And if I can’t get five on my spoon, there’ll be hell to pay!


Tortellini in Brodo

This recipe, given to me by Grazia's mother, cooks the meat with celery and onion before pureeing it with the other ingredients. If you use raw meat, as they apparently do in Emilia, leave out the celery and onion.

½ onion, chopped

1/2 stalk celery, chopped

½ lb veal in chunks

¼ lb pork in chunks

1 tbsp vegetable oil

1 cup white wine

1 slice mortadella

2 slices prosciutto di parma

½ cup grated parmigiano

¼ teas nutmeg, freshly grated

1 bay leaf

Salt, pepper

Saute the onion, celery, veal and pork in the oil until cooked through, add the bay leaf and white wine and cook off completely. Let cool. Place the mix in a food processor with the mortadella, prosciutto, nutmeg and parmigiano and puree completely. If mixture is too dry to mix, add a small amount of milk. Salt to taste.

Brodo

½ chicken

2 large beef short ribs

2 carrots, cleaned and cut into large pieces

2 celery stalks, cut into large pieces

1 onion, cut in quarters

1 whole tomato

3 parsley sprigs

10 whole black peppers

2 bay leaves

2 whole cloves

Cover all vegetables with fresh water and bring to a boil, add the chicken and beef and simmer for two to three hours, covered. If any foam rises to the top, skim off and continue cooking. After an hour you can add a tbsp of sea salt to taste.


Sunday, October 9, 2011

Wild Fennel Pollen


Autumn is finally here and it gets cool as soon as the sun goes down, but the days are still bright blue and sunny. This summer and fall we haven't had rain at all and that means no excursions into the woods to hunt mushrooms. But there's always something to harvest in Tuscany and right now the countryside is loaded with bright yellow wild fennel flowers turning to seed. I know that if I wait a month there will be a great crop of wild fennel seed, but as soon as it gets cool I start thinking about roasted pork and pancetta, how great they would be dusted with fresh fennel pollen and I can't wait.

For the rest of the article, go here : http://www.eccolacucina.com/?p=1084

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Culatello di Zibello

If you like prosciutto, you gotta try culatello. Formally known as Culatello di Zibello, it is a luscious cured meat that’s literally the culo (that’s Italian slang for butt) of the pig. Whereas when making prosciutto, the entire leg of the pig is salted and dried in cool air at a high altitude, in making culatello only the largest, choicest muscle of the leg is used, turning a simple ham into a sublime experience.

For the rest of the article, go here: http://www.eccolacucina.com/?p=1121

Monday, September 19, 2011

Summer Zucchini Flowers

The summer is winding down but the garden is still pumping out zucchini flowers. My neighbor had a bumper crop after returning from vacation and she gave me a bunch this morning. As the Tuscans say “Even a slipper is good fried,” so I fried them up and managed to take a picture just before we devoured them for lunch! While the flowers themselves don’t have a lot of flavor, once batter dipped and fried in hot oil, they’re delicious!

To read more, click here: http://www.eccolacucina.com/?p=1125

Friday, September 16, 2011

Anchovies and Colatura - Italian Umami

They eat a lot of anchovies in Italy, in fact, they love them. Abundant, delicious and versatile, the anchovy is high in omegas and essential fatty acids and is easy to cook or to preserve in salt or oil. The fresh anchovies, or alici, are eaten deep-fried and crunchy or soaked in vinegar and dressed with olive oil and parsley for antipasti.

Cured anchovies, or acciughe, are made by salting and curing the fish for several months and are widely used for pizza and pasta. Tuscans like the strong flavors of anchovy and capers together, and many dishes finish with both ingredients for a powerful and salty punch.

To read more, go to: http://www.eccolacucina.com/?p=1079

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Making Limoncello!!

One of the liquors that is most popular with visitors to Italy is limoncello, a delightful after dinner drink that originated on the Sorrento coast, where the landscape is abundant with olive and lemon trees and the cuisine relies heavily on fish and seafood from surrounding waters . At best it refreshes the palate and leaves a bright lemony taste in your mouth, while warming you all the way to your toes. At worst it can be an industrial product packed with artificial coloring and flavoring, tasting heavily of alcohol.

I recently returned from a trip to Naples and came back with the car loaded with lemons. We have a saying in Tuscany: “The best fruit is stolen fruit” and while I didn’t steal the lemons for this particular batch of limoncello, I have to say that the two best batches I ever made were made with stolen fruit! It’s important that the lemons you get aren’t treated so either grow your own or get organic.

Most of the stuff you buy in the stores is mass produced with lots of sugar syrup and artificial lemon flavoring. But if you can get your hands on the right lemons, making up a batch is quick and easy. It does need to age for a few months, so this is not something you’re going to whip up for dinner next Saturday night.

There are only four ingredients: lemons, alcohol, water and sugar, the most important ingredient being obviously the lemons. In Napoli and the Sorrento coast, as well as the northern region of Liguria, there is a particular variety of lemon that is double the size of a normal fruit with a thick skin that has large pockets of oil. Only the peel is used and it is very important the fruit hasn’t been treated with anything.

First the lemons: wash the fruit, lightly brushing any dirt away. Next take a paring knife and remove the peel, putting as many peels as will fit in a large jar covered completely with alcohol. I use 4 large lemons to one liter of alcohol. Leave the lemon peel soaking in the alcohol for 4-7 days.

Then the sugar syrup: make a simple syrup of 1:1 sugar to water (ie. 4 cups sugar to 4 cups water). Combine both in a pan and bring to a boil, boil the mixture for one minute then turn off, remove from heat and allow to completely cool.

Strain the lemon/alcohol mix into a container large enough to hold twice the amount of liquid. Add an equal amount of the simple syrup, mix together and place into bottles with secure tops. Leave the limoncello to age for at least 3 months, the longer it ages in the bottle the smoother it becomes.

Chill the limoncello before serving and enjoy! This stuff goes down easy, a little too easy, and it is high alcohol so beware!