Classroom foods

May 31st, 2008

When people come to visit from Australia, they are getting something like an endless summer. Right now it’s more like endless spring, however. May continues cool and wet. The roses are hanging back and the peonies have become so heavy with water that they’ve hit the ground. A thirty foot tall plum tree has bowed completely over in the kitchen garden, which will make it very easy to pick the plums should there come enough sun to ripen them.

Thursday’s cookery included:

Crostini of summer truffle

Risotto with porcini mushrooms

Scallops of turkey with asparagus and mozzarella
Fried zucchini blossoms led with mozzarella

Layered pudding of vanilla cream, chocolate and alkermes.

The recipes which are not already published here follow.

Risotto with Porcini mushrooms

45 minutes prep which includes soaking the dried mushrooms
45 minutes cooking

Ingredients for 4

350 g fresh white mushrooms, sliced very thinly or cut into thin spears
100 g of dried porcini mushrooms
350 g carnaroli rice (or vialone nero or arborio)
2.5 deciliters broth, either chicken or vegetable
I medium white onion, peeled and chopped fine
1 wineglass of dry white wine
parsley, minced very finely
150 g grated hard cheese
2 slices of meltable process cheese (we used Bel Paese, but the recipe actually asks for something like Kraft Singles)
1 piece of butter the size of a walnut
1 pinch of mint
salt

Prepare the broth ahead of time, your choice whether your risotto will be vegetarian or not. Put the dried porcini in a little hot water for 45 minutes.

Once those two items which take a bit of time are done, you are ready to prepare the risotto. Make sure your broth is simmering by the time you need it in about 15 minutes.

In a pan, non-stick is suggested (?) heat a piece of butter the size of a walnut and an equal amount of oil together. Cook the onion and the fresh mushroom slices as well as the re-hydrated mushrooms with a little of their water, until lightly golden.

Add the rice and cook it, stirring, until it is toasted, for 3-4 minutes on medium heat. The rice starts to look chalky. Then add the wine and raise the heat to maximum to evaporate the wine. Once the wine is evaporated, turn off the flame and let the rice rest for about 10 minutes. Relight the flame to medium, and start cooking the rice, adding a ladle of boiling broth, stirring until it is almost absorbed and then adding more. Stir frequently.

When the rice is cooked but al dente, remove it from the flame and add the grated cheese and the two slices of processed cheese, stirring in, then cover the pan and leave it to rest 5-7 minutes, then serve the risotto dusted with the chopped parsley.

Scaloppe di tacchino agli asparagi

Turkey scallops with asparagus

This takes about 15 minutes to prepare and 15 minutes to cook, but you can partially prepare it and then finish it at the last moment so that you aren’t separated from your guests.

Ingredients for 4

4 slices of turkey breast
4 slices of mozzarella (if you use the highest quality of mozzarella, the cheese is smaller so you need more slices.)
24 asparagus tips freshly cooked
40 g butter
½ wineglass of dry white wine
flour as needed
broth as needed

Beat the turkey slices until flat, then flour them lightly and fry them until lightly golden on both sides in the butter (or oil.)
Add the white wine and let it evaporate, Salt and pepper the dish and add a little broth.
A few minutes before serving, add a slice of mozzarella to each turkey scallop and 6 asparagus tips. Cover and hold it on a low heat until the cheese is melted, or you can run it under a grill.
Plate the scallops and serve them immediately with some of the pan juices over them.

Crema dolce ai savoiardi

Alkermes is a liqueur which is widely used in Italy, largely for its ruby red color. I have never heard of anyone drinking it, although it’s possible. Savoiardi are elongated dry cookies that are used in making Tiramisu, sort of the Italian version of a ladyfinger, except crunchy.

Make a vanilla pudding. Make a thick mixture by mixing cocoa into leftover espresso coffee. It should be almost spreadable. Make a small amount of fresh Italian coffee.

Use glass dishes to show the colored layers. Place a layer of the vanilla cream in it, then layer on the cocoa/coffee cream, then drizzle with Alkermes. Break a Savoiardo in half and dip the halves into the fresh coffee, then press them onto pudding. Repeat the layers, using a spoon to drizzle on the cocoa cream artistically this time. Stand a Savoiardo up in the layered pudding. Chill in the fridge until wanted.

Entry Filed under: Italy, cooking school, Italian food, cucina, cookery

6 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Jane  |  May 31st, 2008 at 5:32 pm

    Judith, I recognize the kitchen and Alberta. I know all those recipes are wonderful–I\’ll be trying a couple of them. Please say hello (ciao) to Alberta from me.

  • 2. Beatriz\' Suitcase Contents  |  June 1st, 2008 at 10:13 pm

    Another recipe I might try: the risotto. It sounds lovely. I love risotto and mushrooms! Thank you for posting these. Here we have had TWO days without rain! I hope it lasts…

  • 3. bleeding espresso  |  June 2nd, 2008 at 9:01 am

    Oh that dolce sounds heavenly….

  • 4. admin  |  June 2nd, 2008 at 12:48 pm

    The risotto was very good indeed. The recipe makes an awful lot and could have served 6 or 8 people, so en garde.

    The crema recipe is Alberta’s, but really I think the crema part could be any crema vanigliata or not, really.

    Today I will post Friday’s recipes. Also good, AAMOF, the pie keeps popping into my mind’s eye— wanna wanna.

  • 5. Palma  |  June 6th, 2008 at 4:58 pm

    Wonderful recipes, but I had to laugh at the “one coffee cup full”, THREE OZ. I know that is an espresso cup, but it just cracked me up, as I pictured one of my 20 oz mugs!

  • 6. admin  |  June 9th, 2008 at 10:08 am

    @Palma:

    20 ounces of espresso might be exaggerating a good thing. You have to read Italian cookery magazines to pick up the lingo– tazza do caffe, bicchiere di vino, etc.

Leave a Comment

Required

Required, hidden

This is a captcha-picture. It is used to prevent mass-access by robots. (see: www.captcha.net)

You must read and type the 5 chars within 0..9 and A..F, and submit the form.

  

Oh no, I cannot read this. Please, generate a

Some HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


  •  

    November 2008
    S M T W T F S
    « Oct    
     1
    2345678
    9101112131415
    16171819202122
    23242526272829
    30  
  • Recent Posts

  • Recent Comments

  • Pages

  • Blogroll

  • Links

  •  

  •  

  • Archives

  • Recent Trackbacks

  • expat Chefs Blogs Add to Technorati Favorites