Queen of Hearts Queen of Spades

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One of my favorite characters from Disney’s Alice in Wonderland is, of course, the magnificent Queen of Hearts: she is so mean, so pushy, so overbearing, so merciless that it’s a real pleasure to watch her punishing a very annoining Alice!
To the contrary, in the book, I stand with Alice against the dictatorial Queen…
And now my mind is wondering in the realm of how wrong are some adaptation, especially for young minds, ready to be shaped and that will never read the original book…
But back to the recipe!!!
It happens that I own those cute cutters in the shapes of the symbols of a deck of cards, and sometime I remember to use them!

Carrots and courgettes pie

Puff pastry
1 courgette
1 carrot
1 onion
1 glass of milk
Salt and pepper
Egg yolk to brush

Preheat the oven at 180° C.
Lay the puff pastry and cut it to cover completely a cake mold (remember that you need to cover this pie, so cut wisely!).
Dice the vegetables. Warm the salted and peppered milk.
lay the vegetable inside the covered pan, cover with the milk, then cover the pie with the remaining puff pastry. Decorate the pie with the shape of your choice, brush with the egg yolk and bake until golden and puffed.

Madly baking!

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Waiter there’s something in my bread” really encouraged my bakery instincts! After the bread I baked yesterday my only thought was: “Bake! Bake! Bake!”!!! Plus I was truly inspired by some of the wonderful entries, and especially by Patricia‘s recipe, so I hope she won’t mind if I made something similar, yet different, to her wonderful Berry Twist Bread!
It was days I was looking for something not to sweet for breakfast, but I didn’t want to wait for an entire overnight fridge rise (as fo the French brioche), so I’ve used the basic recipe for Stollen, from Patisserie Maison, and I changed it just a little, to meet my objectives…

15 g of fresh yeast
13 cl of lukewarm milk
100 g of strong flour
300 g of flour
2 tablespoons of honey
1/2 teaspoon of salt
1/2 teaspoon of cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon of grounded nutmeg
4 egg yolks
75 g of melted butter

60 g of raisins
40 g of pistachio nuts

4 tablespoons of marmalade

First make the dough. As usually I’ve used my wonderful Kenwood chef with the kneader hook.
In the kneader bowl dissolve the yeast in the milk, let it rest for 10 minutes, then add all the ingredients, except raisins, pistachio nuts and marmalade.
Begin to knead at the lowest speed and after 10 minutes, knead at speed 2 for 5 minutes, then lower the speed at minimum and knead for another 5 minutes.
Make a ball and let it rise for 1 hour and half, covered with a tea towel.
After the given time, knead a little (by hand this time) and begin to add raisins and pistachio nuts. Once they are completely mixed with the dough, roll it out on a floured surface on a rectangle 1 centimeter thick. Spread it with the marmalade (I’ve used homemade orange marmalade), roll it, fasten the ends, and let it rise for another hour in a cake pan.
Preheat the oven at 170° C.
Once is well risen again, bake it for 30 minutes.

Serve cold with a nice mug of coffee!
Enjoy!

Waiter, there’s somenthing in my… bread!

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I find this monthly challenge very interesting, not only for the funny title, but even for the theme they choose! And it’s indeed a challenge fo me: never made a pie before and I’m not so much of a bready person. I like to eat bread, but make it sometimes seem to long and complicated… But since I discovered how a wonderful kneader is my Kenwood chef, well, why buying it when I can make it??? And, by the way, in Milan you can only find the worst bread in the world, so…
This bread is a complete invention: I had some provolone piccante and some pine nuts in the fridge (the pine nuts were in the fridge because I’ve toasted them some weeks ago…) and I wanted to use them together. And as the thyme is blossoming on the balcony, I added some fresh springs… Et voilà!

10 g of fresh yeast
2 pinches of sugar
300 ml of warm water
100 g of strong flour
100 g of semolina flour
400 g of hard wheat flour
150 g of provolone piccante (but emmenthal or mature cheddar will be fine too), grated
60 g of toasted pine nuts
Few springs of fresh thyme, minced

In the kneader bowl crumble the fresh yeast, add sugar and dissolve everything with the warm water. Once the yeast is begging to bubble, add strong flour, semolina flour, 300 g of hard wheat flour, cheese and thyme. I haven’t added salt because the cheese is very savory.
Knead until you have a nice and silky ball, adding more flour if needed. Transfer the ball in a glass bowl, cover it with film and let it double in a warm environment (45 minutes – 1 hour will do).
Preheat the oven at 200° C.
Once the bread is doubled, punch it and work it a bit, then resize it in a ball and lay it on a floured baking tray, covering it with the glass bowl upside down. Let it rise for 30 – 45 minutes.
Once is well risen, dust the surface, make criss cross cuts, and cook it in the oven for 30-35 minutes, or until knocking on the bottom you can hear an empty sound.
Let it cool completely before to slice it. Yeah, I know it’s hard to resist to freshly baked bread…

Enjoy!

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Verrines, again and again and again…

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Ok, I have to admit it: I’m obsessed with verrines… It’s that once you’ve started making them, your only thought will be about making them every time someone come along… They are so cute, so fast and so flexible that they scream: “MAKE ONE”! Now do you understand why on the last Cuisine et vins de France there were at least 20 recipes with/in them? Do you realize why in France they sell special glasses? (though mine were bought and made in Italy) And I even fund a wonderful catalogue that sells them in plastic, in different shapes…
And this one was practically invented: I said to my French hubby (that lives in Italy since 2001, but verrines must be in French dna…) “I would like to make verrines for tonight’s dinner, possibly with rillettes…” And we came up with this: on the bottom goose rillettes, grated carrots, blanched broad beans and some swirls of fresh goat cheese coated with just a little bit of pepper… They liked them… And someone (and I’m not saying the name, but begins with F) said that my first attempts weren’t so good… Well, as the proud cook I am, I thought about it, and I found on this very blog my first attempt with verrine… But maybe, judging by the date of the post, it was my first published attempt…

Strolling around Milan, second part

Free your mind, listen to my voice and imagine what I’m going to describe you.
An interesting building, modern, all glass and metal, headquarters of the most important economical newspaper in Italy. A big hall, very airy and with loads of natural light. The opening of a little (very very little) exposition about ten “food bag” realized by ten young designers and (supposedly, as I haven’t seen any…) pictures of the new Ferran Adrià collection of tablewares. On the sides of the big hall two buffet station with some young chefs preparing, live, the buffet, a mix of wonderful little dishes, spoons and verrines.
And now fill all the big space, plus the big garden, with a crowd (between 200 and 300) of hungry people, elegant, chic, between mid forty and sixty, all well dressed, struggling to eat something free. People, judging by their dresses, that could pay a dinner at the restaurants of those young chefs with the blink of an eye, instead they were pushing and shoving just to arrive to the buffet, stealing non finished dishes, gulping down as much food as they could, as famine was just knocking at the door…
I was trying to make my way through when I realize that I was far too young and too polite to compete with those people, so I began to make my way to the backstage and take pictures… While I was there I distinctly heard one of the chef angrily saying to an old man (tie and jacket, very elegant, maybe in Armani or other expensive fashion stuff): “Could you please wait until I finish the dish before to take it? I’m just asking you to be polite” and the old man waited there, grumbling…
If you were able to imagine that, well, welcome to Milan during the Design Week!

Coming to the real purpose of my visit to this “show”: in the middle of the big hall there was this little stand with the ten creations, and I have to say that, despite the absolutely useless meaning of some objects (some were disposable bags made with environment unfriendly materials… Enough said), others were really interesting, like the vertical Bento… The long awaited pictures of Ferran Adrià new collection were unseen, as long as there weren’t the ones hanging from the high ceiling, so practically invisible to the human eye…

All this had at least two good points of view (and I assure that I went there will all the best intentions…):
1- I was able to meet a new Italian food blogger, Roberta, that I was checking out since some times, as she writes very clever (and ironic) posts. We strolled around Milan with some of my friends for the rest of the night!
2- The beautiful, wonderful, amazing bag containing the press kit: orange, leather (or something very similar!), perfect for carrying around papers: I love it!

After this “sociological study” (as Roberta called it) of rich people struggling for free food, we headed to the opposite part of the city, via Tortona, filled with studios and young artists. The amount of people there was this year was amazing (and frightening! Too many, too many!).
There we visited a very amusing and appealing exposition by Marti Guixé, a very wit Spanish artist: he reinterpreted food, transforming it in pieces of conceptual art, like the lollipop you eat and after you can spit the seed inside to let a new plant grow, or like serigraphed peas or olive atoms… That was fun and far more the most “design food” I’ve seen…

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Disclaimer: this post, especially the first part, is intended to be read as an ironic piece. True, but ironic!

Strolling around Milan

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Milan becomes really international few times a year: during the fashion shows and during the Salone del Mobile. I normally avoid the real fair (pure chaos) and I prefer strolling around all the events in center of Milan.
My day, chronologically (here the pictures I took this morning):
8.30 am meeting at Princi for the first likemind.mil (I was there since 8 am, but that’s me…): at the acme of the breakfast we were 6 and that’s not bad for the first time! Present at the event were: myself, Elena, Andrea, Eddy and Friend, Zeno (fantastically late!) and briefly Sara (Sara amica stordita as she signs herself in this blog comments!). We chit chatted until 10.30, continued creating “more blogs to the masses” that began last month at the Ancona likemind and opening Andreas’ blog!
10.30 am heading to Triennale for Design food experience, an exposition of pictures of food integrated in famous design objects. Not even the food or the objects were present at the exposition (the only exception was the always present Louis Ghost), but pictures of it… Did I like it? Well, to me it seemed the usual useless and meaningless exposition, but that’s only my humble thought… And sorry to say it, but the picture were not even so “good”: the world is full of ASTONISHING food photographer, why don’t ask him, her or him (just to give you few names. And if we really want to stay stucked in Italy, you can always ask her or her) to do it??? In the booklet they don’t even say who took the pictures… And at the end, where is the experience??? Design food experience: where, which, how? Boh…
11.30 am heading to Ingegnoli for the exposition Kitchen Garden. Far more interesting than the one before, the location was astonishing: in one of the oldest garden center of the city you can find different areas with new kitchens, chefs cooking, tasting and interesting (but not memorable) food settings.
12.30 pm heading to Teatro Smeraldo to buy two of the few reaming tickets for Tori Amos concert of the 31st May 2007!!!

That’s all (for now) folks… Tonight I’m heading to the presentation of a more interesting event: stay tuned for more news! And don’t forget to take a visual look of my day here!

Verrines, strange stuff and other food pics…

Well, verrines are absolutely at their highest in France! You see them everywhere, salted, sweet, to take away… They put inside a verrine practically anything!
And maybe in two, three, four years some “clever” Italian chef will begin to use them telling everybody how smart he is… Well, we’ll know he’s wrong!

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Now tell me: who on earth we’ll be attract by something that taste like a chewing gum or banana bonbon??? I found it quite strange to see those horrible stuff in French display, but apparently those are Mediterranean flavours…

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Some patisserie, just randomly taken from a BAKERY display! Understood? They sell this in bakeries in France… Try to find something like this in an Italian bakery, or even in a patisserie…

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