Crab Cioppino

Tim Dineen

  • 4 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 1 medium onion, chopped fine
  • 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • 1 green bell pepper, chopped
  • 1 tablespoon red-wine vinegar
  • 750ml bottle Red wine
  • 1 teaspoon oregano
  • 1 bay leaf
  • a 28-to 32-ounce can whole tomatoes including juice, pureed coarse
  • 1 tablespoon tomato paste
  • 1 lb fresh tomatoes, coarsely chopped
  • 2 live Dungeness crabs
  • 12 small hard-shelled clams
  • 1/2 pound medium shrimp
  • 1/2 pound sea scallops
  • 1 pound scrod or other white fish fillet, cut into 1-inch pieces
  • 2 tablespoons minced fresh parsley leaves

In a heavy kettle cook garlic in oil over moderate heat, stirring, until pale golden. Add onion and cook, stirring, until softened. Add pepper flakes and bell pepper and cook, stirring, until softened. Add vinegar and boil until evaporated. Add wine, oregano, and bay leaf and simmer 15 minutes. Stir in tomato puree and tomato paste, fish stock or water and bring to a boil. Add tomatoes.

Add crabs and clams and simmer, covered, 15 to 20 minutes, transferring clams as they open to a bowl (discard unopened ones).

Transfer crabs to a cutting board and remove top shells, adding any crab liquid to soup. Halve or quarter crabs (depending on size) and reserve, with any additional liquid, in a bowl.

Add shrimp, scallops, and fish to soup and simmer, covered, 5 minutes, or until seafood is just cooked through. Stir in crabs, their liquid, and clams and sprinkle with parsley.

Serve with warm, crusty sourdough french bread.


A Food Fest

We have friends in town.  It's 6pm...  We've been eating since yesterday...  There's still more to come!

It started with New England Clam Chowder yesterday.  I was so excited to have them here I forgot to put the potatoes in the chowder.  So much for pretending I know what I'm doing!

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And I forgot the cukes for the salad...

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Breakfast this morning was our spin on Eggs Benedict - poached eggs on whole wheat English muffins, with andouille sausage and langostino, topped with a jalapeno hollandaise sauce...

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We skipped lunch so we could start dinner at 3pm. We invited Victor's mom over to meet the girls and have dinner with us; Brasiole, Italian sausage, meatballs, pork, rigatoni and sauce, salad, tomato basil bread... and later tonight a puff pastry and apple dessert...

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Brasiole...

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Meatballs and the homemade Italian sausage

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Pork

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Rigatoni

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The simmering sauce...

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Fresh-baked croissants and omeletes tomorrow for breakfast...

We are having so much fun!


Sunday Supper and Saturday's Dessert

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Instead of cooking, today, I spent a few hours putting in a new screen door in the front of the house.  Actually, it's a "storm" door.  But what do I know - we don't have screen-or-storm doors where I come from.  Or air conditioning, either.

I actually liked the old pitted metal screen/storm door.  Totally 1950.  What I didn't like was unscrewing the screen and hauling it down to the basement and getting the 987 pound (at least) pane of glass up the stairs and screwed in.  Twice a year I had to do it.  Pretty strenuous.  Twice a year.  And rescreening.  Can't forget that.  And whatever spline I had was always the wrong size.

So... with a new roof, dry rot gone, and a new paint job, it just seemed fitting that we do an upgrade.  We looked online to see what was out there and headed off to the local home improvement store to see them in person.  Found what we were looking for, put it into the back of the truck - and off to home we went.

While it wasn't difficult to install, it was tedious.  It was a big box of pieces.  Not a hole was drilled not a thing attached.  And I'm not a picture/icon person.  I want to see the parts and see how they fit together.  Little blow-up line drawings of one corner just do not make sense to me.

But I persevered...

And got it done except for a trim piece and the self-closer.  Tomorrow is another day...

So...

While I was playing My Favorite Drill Bit, Victor decided it would probably be a smart move if he made dinner tonight.  (He's very perceptive - just one of the reasons I love 'im!)

Out of the freezer came a small container of sauce he has made a while back, and a couple of sausages.  Some papardelle pasta, a mini loaf of bread from Panera, and dinner was served.

Just in time.  I was almost starting to get cranky.

++++++++++++++++++++

And speaking of cranky...  can anyone tell me what's wrong with this recipe for Pumpkin Bread?!?  It's from Bon Appetit.

Pumpkin-Walnut Bread

Yield: Makes 1 loaf

ingredients

  • 2 cups all purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, room temperature
  • 3/4 cup plus 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 2 large eggs, room temperature
  • 1 cup canned pure pumpkin
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons grated lemon peel
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/2 cup sour cream
  • 1/2 cup whole milk
  • 1 1/2 cups chopped walnuts

Position rack in center of oven; preheat to 325°F. Butter 9x5x3-inch metal loaf pan. Sift first 7 ingredients into medium bowl. Using electric mixer, beat butter in large bowl until light. Gradually beat in 3/4 cup sugar. Beat in eggs 1 at a time. Beat in pumpkin, lemon peel and vanilla. Whisk sour cream and milk in small bowl. Beat flour and sour cream mixtures alternately into batter in 2 additions each. Fold in nuts. Transfer batter to pan; smooth top. Sprinkle with 1 tablespoon sugar.

Bake bread until tester inserted into center comes out clean, about 1 hour 10 minutes. Cool in pan 10 minutes. Turn out onto rack; cool. (Can be made 2 days ahead. Wrap in foil; store at room temperature.)

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It was intriguing.  Lemon zest and sour cream in a pumpkin bread.  The only change I made was to use half walnuts and half raisins.

And it ooooozed out of the pan all over the oven...  what a mess.

I've done my share of baking and can throw together a quick bread fairly quick-ly.  But I also get tired of making the same ol' thing and decided to waste some time looking through old magazines.  This one won.

There was way more batter than I would normally put in a bread pan, but... I let the printed page over-rule experience.  Dumb move.

I actually went back into the kitchen after about 15 minutes and it was already too late.  Disaster had already struck.

I put a foil collar on the pan to contain the rest and it helped - but the 1 hr and 10 minute baking time was way off.  I left it in the oven for about an hour and 40 minutes.

The smell of burnt cake batter and smoke billowing through the kitchen just added to my pleasant disposition.  After letting it cool a bit, I took it out of the pan - it was hot and... soggy is not really the right word... extremely moist.  I left it on the cooling rack, turned off the light and decided to deal with it later.

That later came this evening.

It had a great flavor, although it was still a little more moist than I like.  Not underbaked, just a bit... gummy...

With so many fabulous recipes out there, there's just no reason to make this one.


Panorama, Parmesan and Panini

Friday night saw us in Old City Philadelphia to meet friends for dinner.  We had a fantastic dinner at Ristorante Panorama on Front Street.  They bill themselves as "... contemporary, authentic Italian with influence that leans toward the Northern Italian region and features homemade pastas, authentic veal dishes, and fresh seafood specialties." They came through!

Alas, I forgot the camera, and trying to explain all of the food we ate would be nigh on impossible at this point.  We had five different appetizers, five different entrees, five different desserts, and walked out with stomachs smiling.  It was a great time.  Here's the menu!

chicken-parmesan

Still in an Italian mode, Victor made dinner while I was at work, yesterday.  Chicken parmesan and ravioli.  We still have those huge chicken breasts I picked up at the farmer's market, so he sliced them thin, pounded and breaded, fied, and finished off with sauce and cheese.

Two more of the cutlets went to today's lunch!

pannini

Santa brought us a Panini Press/Grill/Griddle for Christmas and I broke it in for lunch today!  Breaded chicken breasts, cranberry sauce, bacon, herbed chevre, and vidalia onion relish on thick slices of raisin walnut bread brushed with garlic butter.  Can we say "gastronomic heaven" boys and girls?!?

Dayum, it was good!

Tonight I'm going all out with a really fun dinner - individual beef wellington's!

The diet's start January 6th.


Pork Chops with Pears

I always like it when I have a semblence of a plan for dinner when I leave the house in the morning.  I had pulled pork chops out of the freezer before going to bed last night and had an idea I might make Lidia's Pork Chops with Pears and a balsamic reduction.

Lidia's Pork Chops with Pears and Caramelized Red Onions

  • 2 cups balsamic vinegar
  • 3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
  • 6 garlic cloves, peeled
  • 4 center-cut pork rib chops, each about 12 ounces and 1 1/4 inches thick
  • 1 large red onion, cut into 8 wedges
  • Salt
  • Freshly ground pepper
  • 2 ripe but firm Bosc pears, peeled, cored and each cut into 8 wedges
  • 1/4 cup red wine vinegar
  • 2 tablespoons honey

In a small saucepan, bring balsamic vinegar to a boil over high heat. Adjust the heat to a gentle boil and boil until the vinegar is syrupy and reduced to about 1/3 cup. Set aside.

Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Heat the oil in a large, heavy skillet with a flameproof handle over medium-high heat. Whack garlic cloves with the flat side of a knife and scatter over oil. Cook, shaking the skillet, until brown, about 2 minutes. Lay the pork chops in and cook until the underside is browned, about 6 minutes. Remove and reserve the garlic cloves if they become more than deep golden brown before the chops are fully browned.

Turn the chops, tuck the onion wedges into the pan and continue cooking until the second side of the chops is browned, about 6 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. About halfway through browning the second side, tuck the pear wedges in between the chops.

Stir the red wine vinegar and honey together in a small bowl, until the honey is dissolved. Pour the mixture into the skillet and bring to a vigorous boil. Return the garlic cloves to the skillet if you have removed them. Place the skillet in the oven and roast until onions and pears are tender and the juices from the pork are a rich, syrupy dark brown, about 30 minutes. Once or twice during roasting, turn the chops and redistribute the onions and pears. Handle the skillet carefully -- it will be extremely hot.

Remove skillet from the oven. Place a chop in the center of each warmed serving plate. Check the seasoning of the onion-pear mixture, adding salt and pepper if necessary. Spoon the pears, onion and pan juices around the chops. Drizzle the balsamic vinegar reduction around the edge of the plate.

Makes 4 servings.

While at work, though, I thought that some gorgonzola cheese instead of the basamic reduction would probably be good, so, when I got home, I followed the basic premise of the recipe - the pork chops, red onions, and pears, but when juuuuust about done, I crumbled some gorgonzola over everything and then drizzled some 10 year old balsamic over all.

WOW!  The gorgonzola really played off the pears and onions well.  And the little hint of balsamic brought it all together.  It was yummy.

Fresh green beans and Carolina Plantation Aromatic Rice finished the plate.

The Carolina Rice is a bit of an un-wedding gift from our friends Mike and Barbara down in South Carolina.  It should have been thrown at the wedding-that-wasn't (even though we explained to them that at our advanced ages, the last thing we needed were fertility rituals.)  It's a medium grain rice with a great flavor.  Definitely better eaten than thrown.

They also sent up a nice big bag of Carolina Plantation grits.  I'm working on a Sunday Breakfast idea...


Tiella

Tiella

We were watching Lidia on TV on Saturday, and she was making a Tiella.  It's a thin-crusted deep-dish pizza stuffed with any combination of seafood and/or vegetables and/or meats.  The most famous (and the ones her son-in-law's grandmother makes) come from Gaeta, but they can be found throughout Italy.

The dough is a combination of semolina and all-purpose flours, with a bit of salt, sugar, yeast, and olive oil.  Simple.

It's baked in a cast iron skillet and can be served in the pan or out.  I really should have started this earlier.  It takes 45 minutes to bake and another full hour to cool in the pan before serving.

And I'm hungry now...

So I didn't wait the hour.  It was out of the pan and on my plate in less than 15 minutes.  It just smelled too damn good to let sit any longer.

I can't even begin to describe this one!  WOW!  I can just imagine a bazillion and one different fillings!  The crust is light, yet hearty and the fiulling was superb!

Tim's Tiella

The crust was made using Lidia's recipe:

  • 1 pkg yeast
  • 1/4 cup warm water
  • 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 cups semolina flour
  • 1 tsp coarse salt
  • 1 1/2 tsp sugar
  • 3/4 cup water
  • 5 tbsp olive oil

Dissolve the yeast in the warm water.

Add dry ingredients to food processor or heavy-duty mixer.  Mix or pulse to mix ingredients.  Mix water and 3 tbsp olive oil with yeast mixture and pour into feed tube of processor and mix about 30 seconds.  You should have a soft dough that cleans the side of the bowl.  Add more flour or water if necessary.

Knead briefly to form a smooth ball and place in lightly oiled bowl to rise and double.  Punch down, reform ball and let rise, again.

After second rise, pinch off 1/3 of the dough for the top crust.  Roll out to fit 12" cast iron skillet or baking dish. (I used a Le Cruset pan and it worked perfectly!)

Roll out top crust to fit top.

Add filling and press down slightly to compact.

Place top crust and fold and pinch seams together to seal.  Brush top with olive oil.

Bake in preheated 375° oven for about 45 minutes.  If you have a baking stone, preheat it in the oven and place the pan on top to bake.

The Filling:

Lidia's book has a couploe of great-sounding fillings, but on the show she pretty much said to do what you want.  I always have a lot of that in the house, so I did:

  • 1 bunch broccoli rabe, chopped
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 4 Italian sausage links, casings removed
  • 3 cloves garlic
  • salt and pepper
  • quattro formaggio cheese

I sauteed the onions with the crumbled sausage.  When they looked good, I added the garlic, then the broccoli rab and S&P.  I cooked it all down until it was quite dry and then cooled it completely.

Placed it in the pan, pressed it down, covered with cheese, added the top crust, and then baked for about 45 minutes.

The recipe calls for allowing it to cool for an hour in the pan before turning out.  I let it maybe cool for 15 minutes.

It was damn good!


Baked Pasta

It is so nice to have another cook in the house!  Really, really nice!

My main computer decided not to play nice the other day and I've been spending a lot of time getting things moved to the backup disk.  I auto-backup every couple of days, but... I wanted to transfer some stuff onto the laptop.  And I wanted to reformat the main computer - just in case - before bringing it in for service.  Believe it or not, I can get rather narrowly focused when working on the ol' computer.  It was fantastic knowing that someone was taking care of the culinary needs.

And Victor - fantastic cook that he is - took care of them with style!

He made a baked tortellini that was to die for!  OMG YUM!

He made a great meat sauce, with fresh herbs from the garden, mixed in tortellini, and quattro formaggio... added more sauce and baked.

And a basket of garlic bread made from the Puglia rolls I made the other day and dinner was served!

It was a perfect meal and it gave me the strength to make that phone call to {{{shudder}}} Circuit City.


Pane Italiano, parte due

 

Okay... so it was a day later than anticipated, but OMG!  what a fantastic bread!  I've been making this particular bread for years, and it never disappoints.  It is just perfect every time.

It is a crusty, crusty bread with a really light interior.   There's no fat - just light, fresh, crusty, crunchy goodness!

Pane Pugliese

  • 1 packet dry yeast
  • 1/4 cup Warm water
  • 1 1/2 cups Water; room temp
  • 1/2 cup Biga
  • 4 cups All-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons Salt

Proof the yeast in the warm water. Add 1 1/2 c water and the biga, mix till blended. Add flour and salt, mix till dough comes together and pulls off the sides of the bowl. Knead 3-5 minutes in a mixer, longer by hand. Dough will be very soft and elastic. Let rise about 3 hours, shape into 2 small round loaves or 1 big flattish one. If you have baking stones, place loaves on baking peel or on baking sheets sprinkled corn meal. Let rise about 1 hour. Preheat oven to 450F, and 5 to 10 minutes before baking flour the loaves' tops and dimple them with your fingers. Bake 50-60 minutes for big loaves, 30-35 minutes for small. Tap the loaves to test for doneness (hollow=done) and cool on a rack.

Victor is making a pasta dish right now that he saw on Lidia's TV show yesterday.  It's made with almonds, cherry tomatoes, and garlic... And it's from Pulia!  How perfect is that?

My stomach is smiling. :)

I'm back.  I'm stuffed.  My stomach is really smiling!  WOW!  What a great pasta!  The sauce is almonds, cheese, cherry tomatoes, fresh basil, olive oil, garlic, fresh oregano... All ground up in the food processor.

It was really fantastic.

YUM!


Italian Easter Bread (Pinza)

Having never made something before has never stopped me from 1) making it, and 2) serving it to a large gathering of people.  My thought process is the worst thing that can happen is it's inedible and I throw it away.  Since that really hasn't happened in 30 or so years, I don't worry about it.

And on that note, I started making Lidia's Easter Bread.  Her Pinza.

I love Lidia's cooking.  For the most part it is simple mixing of simple flavors to get anything-but-simple results. But every once in awhile she throws a curve-ball.  And the Pinza is one...

Reading through the recipe, I realize that this is going to be a process.  I didn't have the probably 12 hour stretch the bread needs to make, so I figured I'd break it up over a couple of days.  It worked, more or less (actually, the flavor of the bread came out fantastic!) but I do think that I 1) needed more yeast, and 2) really should have let it rise more.

The recipe calls for 4 ea 3/5 oz cakes of fresh yeast or 4 ea 1 oz packages of dry yeast.  Basic dry yeast comes in 1/4 oz packages and I haven't used fresh yeast in 45 years - since I worked at The Donut Center.  Having done a considerable amount of baking in my time, I thought that even using 4 packages of yeast for three loaves of bread was a lot.  I figured the 1 oz was a typo.  But I put in 4 packages, nonetheless.

So...  Friday after work I started the bread.  It doesn't take much work, but there is a lot of wait time.  At $3.50 a gallon for heating oil, our house is not exactly a baker's paradise.  It easily took 2 1/2 hours for the first risings.  I completed the next step - the 5 cups of flour, and then placed it in the fridge.  (It was late and I didn't want to leave it out overnight.  I probably should have...)

When I got home from work on Saturday, I took it out and started where I had left off.  Again, not the warmest place in town.  It took forever just to reach room temperature.  It sat out while we all colored eggs.

I finally got it formed into the three balls and late Saturday night and it went back into the fridge.  Early Sunday morning, it was back out, again.

I made the traditional cuts along the top and set it out to warm and rise.  I turned on the heat, I turned on the oven.  I set them in the sun. S-L-O-W-L-Y they were rising.  Very slowly.  They had not completely doubled in size when I had to get them in the oven.  We had to be at Steve and Marie's at 2.  It was 12:30pm.  The bread had been out for almost 6 hours.

They came out delicious!  Having never made them before, I still don't know exactly how they should have turned out, but I do think they should have been a bit lighter.  They were absolutely wonderful the way they were, but... I don't think they were quite right.  Folks raved about it and everyone was going back for more so I know it wasn't folks just taking a 'polite' piece - they really did like it!

I'm going to make it again one of these days - when I have the time to complete them start-to-finish in one day.

I'll let ya know how they come out!

Easter Bread

Lidia Matticchio Bastianich

  • 1 1/2 cups golden raisins
  • 1/2 cup dark rum
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 cup granulated sugar plus 2 tablespoons
  • Four 3/5-ounce cakes fresh yeast, crumbled (1/3 cup), or four 1-ounce packages instant dry yeast
  • 9 cups unbleached all-purpose flour, or as needed, sifted
  • 3 large eggs, at room temperature
  • 6 large eggs yolks, at room temperature
  • 1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, at room temperature, plus more for the bowl of dough
  • 1/2 cup Vin Santo, Verduzzo, or other sweet white wine
  • Grated zest (yellow part only, without the underlying white pith) of 2 large lemons
  • Grated zest (orange part only, without the white pith) of 1 orange
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
  • 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 2 tablespoons water

Combine the raisins with the rum in a small bowl and toss to mix. Let soak, tossing occasionally, while preparing the bread.

In a medium-size saucepan, heat the milk over medium heat to lukewarm, about 100°F.

Pour the warmed milk into a large bowl and add 1/2 cup of the sugar and the yeast. Stir until they are dissolved. Add 1 cup of the flour and stir until the mixture is smooth.

Cover the bowl with a kitchen towel and let it rise in a warm, draft-free place (such as on top of the refrigerator or in a gas oven with the pilot light on) until frothy. (If it doesn’t get frothy, that means the yeast is no longer active and you will have to start again with fresh yeast.)

Stir the dough with a fork to deflate it, then let it rise and froth two more times, stirring it down thoroughly and covering it again after each time. Depending on the environment, these three risings can take from 20 minutes to 45 minutes each.

In the bowl of a heavy-duty electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, whip 2 of the whole eggs, 2 of the yolks, and the remaining 1/2 cup sugar together at medium speed until foamy and pale yellow.

Add 1/4 cup (1/2 stick) of the butter, the wine, zests, salt, and vanilla. Beat until only small pieces of butter remain. Scrape the yeast mixture into the mixer bowl and beat until blended.  Change to the dough hook attachment of the mixer and reduce the speed to low.

Add 5 cups of the remaining flour, 1 cup at a time, beating until the mixture forms a sticky dough. Wait for each cup of flour to be incorporated before adding the next and stop the machine occasionally to scrape any unmixed ingredients from the sides and bottom of the bowl into the dough. The dough will be quite sticky; form it into a rough ball, clean the sides of the bowl, and cover the bowl with a kitchen towel. Let the dough rise in a warm, draft-free place until doubled in bulk, 1 to 2 hours.

Return the bowl of dough to the mixer fitted with the dough hook.

Mix the dough at medium-low speed until deflated. Add the remaining 4 egg yolks and 1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter and beat until incorporated. Gradually add enough of the remaining flour — about 2 cups — to form a firm but slightly sticky dough, stopping the mixer occasionally to scrape any unmixed ingredients from the bottom of the bowl into the dough. Add the raisins and rum and mix until incorporated. Dough will be quite wet and sticky at this point.

Turn the dough out onto a well-floured surface.

Knead the dough, adding as much of the remaining 1 cup flour as necessary to prevent the dough from sticking to your hands and to the table, until the dough is smooth, soft, and only very slightly sticky if left to rest a minute.

Place the dough in a large lightly buttered bowl and turn the dough to butter all sides of it.

Cover the bowl with a kitchen towel and set the dough to rise in a warm, draft-free place until doubled in bulk, 1/2 to 2 hours, depending on the environment.

Turn the risen dough out onto the floured work surface and knead until deflated.

Cut the dough into three equal pieces and knead each into a ball, gathering and pinching the seam side of the dough together to form as smooth a ball as possible. (These formed loaves can be tightly wrapped in plastic wrap and refrigerated overnight.  Allow extra time for refrigerated loaves to rise in the following step.)

Line two baking sheets with parchment paper.

Place two loaves on one of the baking sheets, leaving as much space between them and the edges of the pan as possible. Place the third loaf in the center of the other baking sheet. With a pair of kitchen scissors, make three 1 1/2-inch-deep, 3-inch long intersecting cuts that meet at the center to form a six-pointed star pattern on the rounded top of each loaf. The cuts should be quite deep — at least halfway through the loaf — to allow the dough to rise up from the center and form the traditional crests on the loaf.

Cover the loaves lightly with kitchen towels and let rise in a warm, draft-free place until doubled in bulk, 1 to 2 hours.

Preheat oven to 325°F.

Bake the bread for 35 minutes. Whisk the remaining whole egg with the remaining 2 tablespoons sugar and the water until very smooth and the sugar is dissolved. Brush the pinze with this egg mixture, return them to the oven, and continue baking until very deep golden brown and a knife inserted into the center of the loaves comes out clean, about another 20 minutes.

Cool the pinze completely on a wire rack before slicing.


Pasta in 15 Minutes

Ravioli

Dinner tonight was a snap.  I had picked up some port0bello ravioli at work the other day and decided tonight was the night for 'em.  It's a bit wet and chilly outside.  Definitely a pasta night!

Set the water on to boil and chopped up 2 shallots, half a green pepper, a handful of mushrooms, and tossed them into a skillet with a bit of garlic and olive oil.  Cooked them down for a few minutes and then added 4 fairly small  yellow and orange tomatoes I had on the counter.  A bit of salt and pepper and a bit of Italian seasoning, and the sauce was ready.

I put the cooked ravioli into the pan with the sauce for a few minutes to finish them off and then onto the plate.  A shredding of fresh parmesan cheese finished it off.

Fresh food in 15 minutes, start to finish.  It doesn't get any better...


Cooking Magazines

I finally did it. I let every cooking magazine lapse. No more Bon Appetit's or Vegetarian Times or any other food-related mags cluttering up the house. This past September, we even donated close to 200 cookbooks to the Tredyffrin Library. Dust collectors, all.

I haven't stopped cooking, and I haven't stopped looking for new recipes, but it seems like the same stuff is being rehashed in these magazines, or they're redoing recipes using "convenience" foods. Not my cup of tea.

So, in picking up the mail this afternoon, I find an unsolicited copy of Cuisine At Home Magazine. My first instinct is to toss it into the recycle bin. I don't want another magazine. But I notice on the bottom that there are recipes from Mary Ann Esposito - The Ciao italia cook! I lik Mary Ann, because she uses simple foods and lets flavors speak for themselves.

She had a recipe for Pappardelle with Chicken, Mushrooms, and Wine that sounded really good, and since I was actually planning to do something with chicken and mushrooms for dinner tonight, anyway, I thought I'd give it a go.

The recipe:

Saute in 2 tbsp butter:
1 lb mushrooms, quartered

Stir in:
1/2 cuup dry red wine

Combine/Dredge:
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1 tsp salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1 chicken or rabbit (4lb) cut up, washed, and dried

Brown Chicken in:
2 tbsp butter
2 tbsp olive oil

Saute/Stir in:
4 oz pancetta or bacon, diced
1 medium red onion, diced
1/2 lb fennel, bulb only, cut into strips
3 tsp garlic, minced
1/2 cup red wine
1 tbsp minced fresh sage
Cooked mushrooms with liquid

Return chicken and bake at 325 about 40 min; Stir in:
2 tbsp balsamic vinegar

Prepare according to directions:
1 lb dry pappardelle or egg noodles

Easy enough! I thought I had some pappardelle, but I had used it a while back, so my first substitution was 24" long spaghetti.

I had presliced mushrooms, so I used those. No red wine, but lots of white, so I used that, instead. I didn't have any fennel, but I had 2 Belgian Endives in the fridge, so I used them. Oh - and no red onion. I used yellow.

It came out great! And the possibilities are endless.

And the magazine?!? Into the recycle bin. I really didn't care for the way the recipes were written, and while I did get one good recipe, I just don't need another magazine coming into the house.

But thanks for a great dinner, Mary Ann!


Happy 104th Birthday, Little Grandma!

Mary Ferrante (nee Taormina) was born this day one hundred and four years ago. A hundred and four...

Little Grandma is still active, still cooks, still cleans house. She's still sharp as a tack and still speaks her mind. She's great. And a great cook!

Here is one of her recipes we make all the time:

 

Little Grandma's Eggplant Appetizer

  • 1 Med. eggplant
  • 1/2 cup chopped celery
  • 1/2 cup chopped green olives (black optional)
  • 1 1/2 cups thin spaghetti sauce
  • 3 TBS. Vinegar
  • 1 1/2 TBS. Sugar (less ok)
  • Chunks of Locatelli - to taste

Cut eggplant the size of French Fries. Place in colander salting each layer. Cover and weigh down to press out water.

Sauce:

Boil celery about 10 minutes. Add olives and boil 5 min. more. Set aside.

In sauce pan add 1 cup Spaghetti Sauce - thin with water from celery. Make 1 1/2 cups all together.

Add vinegar, Sugar and boil 4 min. Add cheese.

Dry eggplant on paper towel. Fry in very hot deep olive oil. To keep oil hot put a few eggplant in then after that put 1 piece in as you take each browned piece out. When all are fried, put in sauce. When sauce comes to a boil remove from heat. When cool, garnish with basil and mint.

(We made this at Easter and the first thing out of her mouth was "I usually add a little mint to this." We hadn't added it that time...)

Happy Birthday, Little Grandma. We're having eggplant tonight in your honor!