Mushroom soup/pâté

zuppa di funghi

Well, I love mushrooms, any and all kind! As I live in Italy, in autumn is quite normal to find fresh porcini at the market, altogether with many other wood mushrooms. Of course the most widespread mushrooms that you can find everywhere, all year long, are champignon. And as we produce so good dried porcini, the most simple way to have a porcini taste even when porcini are not available, is to mix champignon with some dried porcini. And so I did for this soup.

2 celery stalks
1 carrot
1 onion
30 g of dried porcini, soaked in hot water for 30 minutes (do not throw away the water)
500 g of champignon
3 potatoes
2 tablespoon of extravirign olive oil
1 glass of Marsala wine or Porto wine
Thyme

Clean and slice the champignon. Pell the potatoes and cut them in chunks.
Clean and mince celery, carrot and onion. Stir fry them in the oil. Add the drained porcini, then the sliced champignon and the potatoes. Add the Marsala, the drained water form the porcini, the thyme and cook for 30-40 minutes, until the potatoes are tender.
Serve it straight away (upper pic) or blend it (like under here) to make an interesting pâté for your appetizers!!!

Vellutata di funghi

Cozze e broccoli

Rigatoni cozze.jpg

I had this idea in mind: a nice dish of pasta with mussels and broccoli. The problem was, as you can understand from the picture, that I cooked broccoli too much and all I end up with were just the stalks, while the nice green flowers were all over my sink… So, in the recipe, you will find the time you should cook the broccoli, and not the time I actually cooked them… Mess happens, even in the “best kitchens” (Ah! Ah! Ah!)…

1 kg of Spanish mussels
250 g of macheroni, mezze maniche, rigatoni or penne
1 broccoli flower
extra virgin olive oil
chilli pepper
garlic
parsley
1 glass of white wine (plus more for your lunch and while you are cooking!)

Begin by preparing the mussels. clean them under running cold water and discard all the open shells. Heat 2 tablespoon of oil in a heavy sauce pan and add garlic, chilli pepper and parsley (as much as you like for everything), then add mussels, let them stir fry a bit, add the wine and let them cook, covered, for 5-10 minutes, until all the shells are wide open.
Bring to the boil a big sauce pan filled with salted water and once it’s boiling add the pasta. Five minutes before the pasta is cooked (al dente, remind you! So if on the package is stated 14 minutes, cook the pasta for 12), add the broccoli flowers. Drain everything and add it to the pan with the mussels and let it cook for other two minutes, stirring constantly. Serve, sprinkled with some minced parsley.

Banana, pear and chocolate crumble

Crumble pera banana ciocco

It was ages I wanted to try this recipe from the wonderful book Crumbles by Camille Le Foll. And then one merry day I had all the ingredients in the house and some friend to dine with, so I though it was the right moment!

3 pears
2 bananas
3 pieces of candied ginger

For the crumbles:
100 g of butter
100 g of flour
100 g of sugar
60 g of grained hazelnut
2 tablespoon of cocoa
Ginger powder

Crumble all the ingredients for the crumble in a food processor.
Peel pears and bananas and cut them in thick slices. Dice the candied ginger.
In a oven dish layer pears, banana and candied ginger. Cover with the crumbles and cook in a preheated oven for 15-20 minutes.
Serve warm.

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Warning: this post is not (mainly) food related, but rather a silly post and absolutely NOT serious!

Today I was in the underground heading back home from work and there was a lady reading Pride and Prejudice, one of my favourite books. For one second I thought: “Now I ask her if she’s in love with Mr. Darcy”… I didn’t, mainly because I thought that, of course, she was in love with him, who isn’t??? And then I thought: and if she answers me no, what can I possibly say??? I was in love with him the first time I read Pride and Prejudice, and I was in love the second time I read it! I blushed with Elisabeth when she saw him on the other side of the garden. I was outraged like Elisabeth for the way he was treating her in the beginning, but then my heart was beating with her heart every time she saw him, and I was beaming with joy when they finally got together! He’s a dream man, not the ideal, but a dream man for sure! And my favourite on screen Mr. Darcy is of course the one and only Darcy for the Bridget Jones generation: Colin Firth! Perfect in the BBC drama!!! Ah, how much can someone miss BBC???
And now, the food related part of this post: Jamie Oliver and his podcast!
Yesterday, a lazy Sunday mainly devoted to the recovery after one long dinner with friends on Saturday night (one pic at the end of the post: sorry about the light, but it was a candlelight dinner!), I was messing around in front of my Mac, and I decided to have a look at some food podcast. An entire universe opened in front of my eyes!
First of all the podcast of the Culinary Institute of America: I haven’t had enough time to explore them in the way they deserve, but just watching a brief part of the video dedicated to northern Spanish cuisine I was absolutely delighted!
Then a silly podcast, for cooks who can’t cook: ctrl-alt-chicken! Just hilarious!!!
And then, my favourite of all, the only, the unrivalled, the wonderful podcast by Jamie Oliver! There are only three video podcast by him (the rest are just audio), but he’s so cute while he tastes beetroot that you wish you could taste it too, with him, alone in the kitchen, maybe some candlelight, some nice music, a bottle of red wine… Ok, sorry, sometime I forget I’m a married woman! And Jamie is a married man father of two!
Heading back to Jamie’s podcast, it’s just like watching him in one of his famous shows: hilarious, everything made in front of your eyes, no fuss no muss, easy, simple, with no ostentation. He makes you think that even a 2 year old can do it! And that’s exactly what England (and the world) needed and still needs! Enjoy his freshness and the wonderful mood he’s able to broadcast all over the net!
Jamie Oliver you’re the best!

P.S. Explore all the links: they are worth it!!!

The ultimate cake

Hermè cake close up

I really have to say it: he’s the best, without any doubt, with no regrets and no reserves… I own three of his books, made two of his recipes and I’ve never read in my life something better explained, with all the passages made clear, with all the instruments you have to use and when, all the ingredients precisely indicated…
I would go on and on for days, but I don’t want to bother you…
Pierre Hermé is just fantastic! I haven’t yet found the courage to try one of the recipes on PH10, mainly because some ingredients are strictly seasonal or difficult to find in Italy or on big surfaces, but the recipes on Secrets Gourmands are just incredible!
Take for example this cake. Normally for a plum cake you mix all the ingredients together and away in the oven. Here no! You make your own almond paste, you use a semi professional kneader to assemble everything (and he doesn’t just tell you to turn it on! No: he tells you which accessory to use, when and at which speed!) and then you cook it. Fate wanted my little grinder to brake just today, so I cut the chocolate in the way he instruct it, and I have to say, it made the difference!!!
If you follow each and every word he writes, success is knocking on your door. Of course if you never baked in the whole of your life, well, leave the book on the shelf… But if you normally bake, well, he wrote the new millennium pâtisserie bibles… And I’m not a religious person!!!
The problem is that I’m quite “embarrassed” to re-write one of his recipe: I will never master its perfection…

For the almond paste
100 g of almonds, refrigerated for 1 night
15 g of egg whites
90 g of sugar

Blend all the ingredients until you obtain a smooth paste.

For the cake
140 g of almond paste
165 g of sugar
4 eggs
1,5 dl of milk
40 g of cocoa
180 g of flour
1 teaspoon of chemical yeast
80 g of diced chocolate
60 g of hazelnut, toasted and roughly minced
55 g of almonds, toasted and roughly minced
55 g of pistachios
180 g of cold melted butter

In a big kneader bowl, knead, al medium speed and with the k utensil, almond paste and sugar until you have crumbles. Add one by one the eggs and when everything is assembled, substitute the k utensil with the whisk and whisk at maximum speed for 10 minutes.
Lower the speed to minimum and add cocoa, flour and yeast. With a spoon add then chocolate, hazelnut, almonds, pistachios and butter.

Bake in a preheated oven, at 180° C, in a cake pan 28 cm long, for at least 1 hour. After 15 minutes, when a think crust will form over the cake, groove a straight line in the centre, with a knife.

Let it cool, then unmould.

Hermè cake

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Green Sformatini

Again? She made sformatini again???
Oh yeah! And you know why? Because they are so simple I’m not ashamed to show them on this blog forever and ever.
Yeah, ok, but she could choose not to publish them!
And why???? The way I made them is absolutely the same, but I slightly changed the ingredients and they are superb!!!

Last week, reading a post by my friend Ilva, I realized that cauliflower and broccoli stalks are edible and you could do something with them, something tasty, and something edible!
So I boiled them and I mixed them with a mozzarella, some stracchino, half a teaspoon of red curry paste, two egg yolks and some Parmesan. That’s it! Oven and it’s cooked, edible, tasty, healthy and good!!!!! And if you don’t put the egg yolk you can enjoy it like that, maybe with pasta or over bread…

P.S. The picture is always part of the set “Piperita bought bargain linen napkins”…

Lemon Marmalade

Lemon marmalade

So good, so simple, so refreshing, so, well, lemony!

1 kg of lemons
1300 g of sugar

Wash the lemons (better be organic), cut them in thin slices then each slice in four wedges. Leave them to macerate with the sugar overnight in the refrigerator. The next day cook the jam for 1 hour, 1 hour and half.
Store in sterilized jars.

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