Bigoli for ever and ever

Bigoli con asparagi

I’ve just realized that I’ve never spoke of Bigoli on this blog!!! That’s incredible!
Since the first bite I had of this wonderful pasta I was in love!
Let’s go back in time… It was our first tour in Veneto, winter of 2002 or 2003, and we were in a nice little restaurant in Verona, near the (hypothetical) Juliet’s balcony (Juliet of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet). It was a mid week lunch, crowded, and while my husband was choosing among the many meat dishes with polenta on the side, I was heading towards the pasta list. I’ve decided for Bigoli con sugo di anatra (Bigoli with duck sauce).
The dish arrived in front of me and I was lying pure heaven! A steaming plate of thick, rough, home made egg spaghetti (Bigoli) with a dense tomato and duck sauce. The aroma was incredible… And the taste…
Most of the time non-Italians have difficulty to understand that each shapes and types of pasta as a flavour of its own… That duck sauce could only exist WITH that bigoli, not with normal spaghetti, even less with short pasta, may be it could have a little life with fresh egg tagliatelle, but with those bigoli it was just the nearest to perfection I’ve ever tasted!

I would love to make that duck sauce again, but to constraint my bimonthly need for Bigoli I have to find compromises…

Serves 4 (2 in there me at the table…)
500 g of fresh Bigoli (sorry, I buy them, but may be one day I will try to make them)
200 g of asparagus, thickly sliced
1 robiola (around 100 g)

Bring to the boil a large quantity of water. When it’s begging to boil, add sea salt.
Add the asparagus and the bigoli. Cook it for 8 minutes.
In the mean while, lay the robiola in a big bowl, pour over it a ladle of the pasta water, and mix it.
Drain pasta and asparagus, add it to the bowl and mix t well before to serve it.

In the open

I’ve been thinking about this post for a few months.
I was fighting with myself for the way I was going to write it, how many and which informations I was going to put in it, what “impact” it would have (as I have some kind of “impact” on anything outside my little shiny room from which I’m writing this! AH!AH!AH!), how many insults I will receive…
As few of you know, I was (and I would like to stress on the past sense) in the catering business. I’m not any more. Why?
Well, the first answer to this would spontaneously be: “mind your own business!”, but as I’m writing this on my blog it would sound a bit hypocritical! (hey, I wrote the last word perfectly right all by myself!!! And that was a difficult one!)
I didn’t want any more to be part of it, but the matter is not simple. As I wasn’t the only person involved, and the other person is going on with the business, I don’t want to get a legal charge for what I might say! So that’s as far as I’m going on the catering matter!
Any way, that’s not the story I wanna tell!
Two days after I went “public” with my decision I was offered with a job!
I wrote to Antonio, whom I had known through my blog, months back, and for whom I was writing recipes, to change everything and cut away the name of my former catering company, and just leave my name.
He asked me what I wanted to do from then.
Well, that was the major problem! It wasn’t that I hadn’t given a thought to this, but I had no real strategic plan! I was too relieved to get free of a suffocating situation, that I hadn’t really thought of anything…
So I wrote him my ideas… He cut everything short and he gave me the opportunity, if I was willing to take it, to become San Lorenzo Country blogger for England.
Well, what do you think my answer was???
:-)
And next week I’m heading to London for my first “”"”"”business trip”"”"”"!!!

Well, why am I writing all this?
Self-promotion, primarily… :-)
To assure you that my “integrity” (:-DDDDDDD, sorry, I can’t stop laughing!!! I’m so funny!!!) as a food blogger is well kept and safe: I won’t do any advertising on this blog, if not related to my personal life…
Because I’m a self-centred person (but well, you know, I have my own blog, so that was established more then one year and half ago when I published the first post…)…
Because I like what I do and I wanted to share it…
Because I have few passions, one of it is good food, and I like to share it…
Because you don’t want to know about tv series (possibly stupid and American) or books or movies or cross-stitching or cats, right??? ;-) (Well, about the last one I’m managing to do something too ;-D)
Because I have no recipe pending, and I’m not really into cooking lately (still with flu, but on drugs, many drugs!)…
Because I want, from now on, everything in the open (for more, check the backstage!), everything being as much spontaneous as possible, everything clear…

And I’m ready for that! Are you?

Every finger in a row is pointing at me [...]
Everyday I crucify myself
Nothing I do is good enough for you
Crucify myself
Everyday I crucify myself
And my [blog] is sick of being in chains…

P.S. Sorry for little quote that nobody will understand, but she‘s coming… She‘s just few days away… And I’m the most thrilled person in the world!!! :-)

Daring Bakers: Saint Honorè

When last month I’ve seen all around the internet a wonderful tower of chocolate crepes (something I’m dreaming/dreading to make since ages), I knew I wanted to be part of this exclusively club!!! So I’ve pulled some strings of well known V.I.P. food bloggers ;-) and the next day I was part of it… And just in time to discover the May challenge: Saint Honorè!!!!!!!!!
I run to the kitchen, looked at my husband and said: “I’m afraid! I have to make Saint Honorè!!!” He looked at me in disbelief while I was telling him the whole story, and he began to refer to us, Daring Bakers, as “the crazy people on the net that bake”… And at the end is what we are: find me somewhere else so many people that are all exited to bake, all together, from the same recipe, a Saint Honorè, and publishing it on the same day… Find me a “secret” place where all this people (and this month we are almost 50!), from all over the world, meet and chat about the making of one of the most known cake in the world, and put in the open if they made a mistake, if they had a bad time or a good time, and seek for help, advices, support… And they get all that!!!
I’ve made my Saint Honorè (the first and probably the last) the weekend after the under covering of the May challenge: I had some friends coming over to dinner, so I thought it was the best time to try something so scary!
I was honestly scared by the task, especially the decoration part of it, as I’m not much of a decorator…
Anyway, let’s go back to the beginning…
I’ve decided, as the rules permit me to, to use ready made puff pastry: sorry, but puff pastry is one of the biggest fears I have in baking and I need more than that to get over it!
So, having already set the problem puff pastry, I could concentrate on the rest. I’ve already made cream puffs in the past, and that gave me to much confidence, and I screw the first batch, making the dough too liquid, so I made it again, and this time it turned out nicely…
The cream was ok, as I have my own way to make cooked cream (and sauces in general): I use a hand mixer directly in the cooking cream, so you can cook it for shorter time at high temperature, it doesn’t stick to the bottom, and you don’t have to keep stirring all the time…
The assembly was ok… Until I arrived to the caramel part…
I admit it: I’m a caramel challenge person… I’m afraid of it, I don’t have a caramel thermometer, it just never caramelized in my hand…
Ok, I’m a bad daring baker: I’ve used my husband! He made caramel for me, and it was a wonderful caramel!!! All this while the pan I’ve used to make it in the first place was doomed in the limbo of caramel sticky pans…
The overall product was a success! They all loved it, they all eat it twice!
The cream was very very good, and while at the beginning I was a bit sceptic for the jelly, it was absolutely necessary, and I thing I will put jelly in other creams too from now on…
I’m so so happy to be part of the Daring Bakers: if it wasn’t for you I would never made a Saint Honorè!
And now I can’t wait to see what the June challenge will be!!!!!!!!!!!

Daring bakers rule and rock!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Tonight…

Tonight is a big night: in one hour we are leaving for Franciacorta, homeland of the Italian Champagne, where my hubby will be officially proclaimed somellier by AIS (the Italian Sommelier Association, with whom he attended three long years of courses).
We will be having dinner and staying overnight here.
And then tomorrow I will head to Bologna for the FemCamp, in part sponsored by San Lorenzo
I’m already tired… ;-)

Finally…

Tabbouleth

Finally I’m able to find a recipe (worth, at least) and the time to update my blog (at the end it made me find a job, so how can I neglect it????)!
And let’s begin this post with a sonic “OMG, it’s hell-hot!” And it’s not even the worst yet, as it is only 35° C…
So, hot = cold stuff! And as last year some other south European blogger ;-) beat me on the race “Who’s the first to publish Tabouleth?”, this year I’ve decided to play ahead and make it, today, now, oggi, aujourd’hui…

For 6 people
200 g of couscous
the juice of: 1 lemon, 1 lime and 1 pink grapefruit
200 g of cherry tomatoes, halved
1 sping onion, chopped
Few springs of basil and mint, roughly minced
Salt

Mix everything together and let it rest in the fridge for few hours before to serve it.

P.S. Of course, for the picture, I’ve put mine in verrines: you already know my insane love for verrines

Food photography for dummies

At the end I had to: I’ve decided, tempted by a good offer, to oblige my (poor) French husband to buy me, for my birthday (that is in 4 month…) a Canon Eos 350D! Yeah, I know, I’m a slaver! ;-)
As the camera is not yet in my hands (because of the offer, Milan shops run out, so my father bought it for me in Varese), I was “preparing” for the big moment (me? a control freak??? Noooo….) downloding brochure from the Canon web site. And look what I found???
A brochure for macro lenses that on page 6 explain you how a nice lady with a nice apron can take pictures that “Looks like professional cooking” in a bit, using a 500 € camera + 600 € macro lenses!!! If it could be just the camera, the world would be saved in a click!!!
I think all the Bourdain reading during flu made me bitter… ;-)

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