Mirror cake: I couldn’t…

This time I couldn’t… And I feel a traitor…
I can give you all the excuses in the world, because I’ve made it, 2 weeks ago, but I couldn’t dare taking a picture of it: it was all wrong…
What the hell am I speaking about???
I’m speaking about this month Daring Bakers challenge, Strawberry mirror cake.
It was my first with a mirror cake, and I felt challenged, and so happy!
Everything went perfectly well, until the last passage…
I made the sponge cakes, I made the Bavarian cream, I made the strawberry jelly… And it was so red I didn’t even need to colour it!!!
The cake was in the fridge, and the strawberry jelly was getting cooler… But I was tired, and it was SO hot, I couldn’t wait any more the jelly to get cooler… So I poured the jelly on the cake while it was still warm… I let your imagination to picture with what I ended up: a complete mess!

You see why we HAVE TO follow the recipe in every single step??? Because when I didn’t, mess came out! And so I lost my first bonus. I will lost the second bonus next month, because I’ll be on holiday…
And so I have to dare baking every single month, until the end of my days…
And it doesn’t look bad at all!!! :-)
Sorry Peabody if I screw your challenge! I’ve just seen your creation and it looks amazing! Better: awesome!

Posted in Uncategorized

Rice to the world

Today I’m slightly excited for some reasons:
- I drank to much coffee in the last days so I’m easily amused and excited!!!
- it’s our fourth wedding anniversary! :-)
- a friend gave me two computer programs that defining them awesome is not enough! Thanks Kikmuk!
- today I’m going to lunch in my favourite Japanese Restaurant with a dear friend
- I’m pondering an afternoon off-line (OMG! An ENTIRE afternoon off-line????), as I have to prepare myself for something I’m gonna do tomorrow…

What am I gonna do tomorrow???
I’m going to shoot a short documentary in the paddy field of Riseria Greppi, the rice producers for San Lorenzo
Which kind of skill I, the Piperita, the reject of the Italian blogosphere (and proud to be it! ;-D) could have to accomplish a task like this?
Absolutely none! Ask my “boss” why is sending me! ;-) Maybe just because I propose him to go and do it…
I’m going there with a friend, a professional director of short movies, who will held the actual shooting, and we’ll be filming the Greppi’s brothers while they’ll tell us about their job, their link to the terroir and the rice they produce…
If everything goes well (I mean, I do not pretend to be the female version of Jonathan Nossiter, even if it would be cool!) it will be a wonderful experience!
How many times, in front of chatty French wine producers, I though “How nice would be to have a video camera in my hands!!!”…
I hope it will happen even in front of the Greppi’s! Or as my husband calls them: the Mondini! Mondina were the women working inside the paddy field, bend to take away the weeds form the water fields where the rice grows. It doesn’t exists the male counterpart…
Ok, I don’t get started with any feminist issue… :-)

That’s it: simply cool!

Bouncing off clouds

Sweet & Sour pork.jpg

[...] Make it easy
Make this easy
It’s not as heavy as it seems…

And that’s what this traditional Chinese recipe is: easy… Too easy! And too good home made to go back to the greasy/chemical restaurants versions (in Italy at least!).
Among the two or three different recipes I was consulting on my cook books to make Sweet&Sour pork, I came across this one from Recettes Chinoises Marabout chef I’ve bought last time I was in Paris.
What appealed to me was the fact that the pork stripes were dipped in plum sauce before to cover them with cornstarch and fry them in hot oil! And that’s the real trick!!!
For the rest is quite easy, as I was saying! You slice some onions and some peppers. Even better if you have some pineapple, with its juice. Stir fry onion and pepper, add soy sauce, tomato paste, vinegar, pineapple, pineapple juice, and then the fried pork. Stir until thick and shiny.
Serve over a bowl of steamed rice.

Enjoy easiness! It’s summer after all!

P.S. Have you notice the summer issue on the side bar? Run to buy it!!!

Crocchette di zucchine

Crocchette di zucchine.jpg

Again something Greek inspired. Those simple appetisers are quick and you wouldn’t find anybody who dislike them (except my father, but that’s because he hates courgettes over anything else!).

4 courgettes
1 onion

Mint leaves

Basil leaves
Salt and pepper

4 egg yolks

Bread crumbs

100 g of grated parmesan

Grate the courgettes very finely and salt them. Let them rest for 10 minutes, then drain and squeeze them to throw all the excess water.
Add the onion, grated, them mix together with the egg yolks, the minced herbs, 100 g of parmesan and some bread crumbs, until perfectly combined.
Heat good quality frying oil, and add spoonful of the courgettes mixture, frying until golden.
Sprinkle with salt and serve right away.

Summer! Summer! Summer: Greek Salad

Greek Salad.jpg

We’ve been to Greece just once, in September 2001, and since then we would love to go back and have an extensive tour of all the islands. For which we would need more then three weeks, so we keep postponing it!!!
But just to remind us how beautiful Greece is we make often, especially during summer month, what we European call Greek salad. If you can find very good and fresh ingredients it will be a must on you table too!
Of course I thought: why not make verrines out of it??? You can always make a verrine, remember!!! Verrines are our friends!

Cucumber, peeled and diced
Red pepper, diced

Spring onion, minced

Cherry tomatoes, halved

Feta cheese, diced
Black olives
Oregano
Extra-virgin olive oil

In your glasses, layer the ingredients in the order you prefer (I gave you the ingredients in the order I used them). Dress with dry or fresh oregano and drops of extra-virgin olive oil.
Serve it right away.

Greek salad 1.jpg

Gelato alla pesca

Gelato alla pesca.jpg

In the last six month I’ve changed so much that my friends call me “The New Sara”. And depending from the situation, with a smile, a grin or an angry face!
The pro of “The New Sara” is basically that I’m nicer. Sometimes. And that I’m surrounded by waves of personal luck I’ve never noticed in my almost 33 years on this earth. One of this luck waves let me won the latest David Lebovitz‘s book, The Perfect Scoop.
One day I was looking around my favourite food community and I found a post about entering a competition to win David‘s book. It was the last day to enter it. I left my comment about which was my favourite ice cream flavour, and that was it. Few days later I received an e-mail telling me I won the book!!! Gosh, I was so happy!!! The book needed something like three weeks to cross the ocean and part of the inland Europe, but finally it arrived to my humble home! And what could I do better then celebrate it by making one of David‘s ice-cream??? The book is awesome! It’s a big collection of wonderful ice-creams, sorbets, granita and accompaniment! I think it can be called the ice-cream bible! And above all it has the best Basic chapter I’ve ever seen in a cook book: complete, heavenly written, almost encyclopaedic… And I’m not trying to bribe David (as I’ve already written all this in private to David, one of the most influential food blogger online, and one of the nicest too!): I really think it!!!
But, please, David don’t hate me: I made some minor changes to you recipe… I did not modify the process or the basic ingredients, but I just added a flavour in a day that I was particularly inspired to add something “exotic”! And I did it not because I though your recipe was lacking of something, but just because I was inspired, and as it happens something like once a year, I must follow my inspiration!

675 g of ripe nectarines (ops, yes, sorry, I’ve used nectarines, instead of peaches!)
125 ml of water
1 teaspoon of Sezchuan peppercorns
150 g of sugar
240 g of whole, plain yogurt

Slice the peaches, remove the pits, and cook them with the water, the sugar and the Sezchuan peppercorns until tender. Remove form the heat and refrigerate.
When they are cool, blend them with the yogurt, still leaving chunks.
Ad my ice-cream maker is out of order, I’ve used the hand method. Put in the freezer the final mixture. Every two hour whisk it, until it’s completely frozen and creamy.

Posted in Uncategorized

Seafood and meat Paella

Can you spot the rice?.jpg

Warning: this post was written by The French, my husband, as he’s the Paella maker of the house. If I receive too many praising comments I will abdicate as queen of this blog and leave you alone with him! And just to remind you: HE’S FRENCH and he has ALL the components that make French people so “peculiar”! ;-D

This is a fairly aromatic dish so an aromatic wine comes in nicely. We tried this one with a simple Alsace gewürztraminer (good structure and neat perfumes but still quite light and fresh with almost no residual sugar). The freshness of the wine contrasted the richness of the rice and pork, the aromaticity accompanied seafood well, whilst the structure was holding well to the meat.

1.5 kg mussels
1 kg king size prawns (raw)
300 g chicken breast (or 4 legs)
300 g pork fillet
2 large onions
3 garlic cloves
300 g tomatoes
300 g green peas (petit pois)
350 g long grain rice
ca. 1 L stock (chicken or beef)
olive oil
1 lemon
black pepper, 1/2 tsp powdered saffron, laurel leaf

Peal and chop finely the onion and garlic. Blanch the tomatoes, peal them, remove the seeds and cut in rough pieces. Cut the meat into pieces around 1 inch square (if using chicken legs keep whole).
Heat up the oven at 100°C to keep the reserved ingredients warm. Start to heat up the stock.
Clean the mussels, discard opened ones and put the closed ones in a large saucepan. Put over high heat to make all the mussels open up (around 10 minutes), then remove from the fire, filter the liquid the mussels released and add to the heating stock. Select the bigger shells and separate the two halves keeping those with the flesh, for the smaller ones discard the whole shell and keep only the flesh, keep warm.
In the meantime heat up two tablespoon olive oil in a pan over high heat. Put the chicken in the hot oil and stir until golden, add ground pepper to taste, remove from the pan and reserve warm; do the same with thee pork meat. Put the prawns in the pan, stir until all sides have taken on red colour, reserve warm. Keep the reserved ingredients in the warm oven covered with foil so they don’t dry.
If necessary add extra oil to the pan, reduce heat and put the onion and garlic in the condiment, stir until the onion turns golden. Add the peas and tomatoes and stir 5 minutes to mix all ingredients. Add the rice and mix well, dilute the saffron in a ladle of broth and add to the rice, stir well, turn the heat under the pan to maximum and add broth, bring to the boil and reduce heat to simmer, put the laurel leaf in the rice. Add broth bit by bit, as the rice absorbs it and it evaporates add few more ladles, proceed until the rice is fully cooked (this should take around 20 minutes, depending on rice).
When the rice is finishing cooking remove the reserved ingredients from the oven and turn on to high heat (200°C).
Once the rice is cooked remove the laurel leaf and place over it the different reserved ingredients and lemon quarters. Cover with foil and place in the hot oven for 10 minutes.

Notes:
The pan for cooking the rice should go on the stove and in the oven. The traditional Spanish paella is earthenware but any all-metal frying pan can do the trick (actually for the one in the picture we removed the screwed on plastic handles). If you don’t have one you’ll need to transfer the rice to an oven dish.
Paella can be made in all sorts of versions with different seafood (scampi and squid are favourites) and meat, or some spicy hot chorizo for a more fiery version; in Catalonia it actually also comes with snails. You may also use a variety of vegetables for a vegetarian solution.

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