Zuppa Gallurese: how she longs to be pretty
but she is not and she is also not really a soup.
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When something tastes this good and is this easy to make, looks shouldn’t count. I even threw a rosemary sprig at her, but it didn’t help, and I didn’t want to sprinkle something all over that would alter the flavor. This is a traditional dish of Sardinia again, and again it is just the kind of thing you need to know how to make if people come in for meals at intervals or at odd hours. It takes five or ten minutes to put it on the table if the ingredients are at hand.
I hope someone will try making it with lavash, because I think that will work but I can’t buy lavash here.
This is another dish made with Pane Carasau– see below. It sounds a bit unpromising, but once you have the box in the kitchen, you really do have to try all the ways to use it. Don’t you? It turns out that this first course vegetarian main dish is delicious enough to warrant buying the box in the first place. The most difficult part of making it was deciding which cheeses would work the best. The ones I used were terrific and I suspect that anything you choose may be terrific too. Recipe after the
Zuppa Gallurese
Pane Carasau, about 1 to 1-1/2 sheets for 2 portions
formaggio fresco/fresh cheese, anything from Kraft Philadelphia on up, about 2 ounces (60 g) for two
Pecorino not very aged, grated on the big holes of the grater (about 2 ounces for 2)
Pecorino stagionato quite aged and gratable like Parmigiano, or use any grana including Parmigiano– about 1 ounce or 30 g for two
a few leaves and sprigs of herbs, such as bay, rosemary, thyme or sage
boiling hot reduced broth or stock, enough to cover, about one pint for two.
In a pot that will hold the amount you want to make, make a layer of pieces of Pane Carasau on the bottom. Using a spoon, add a few dollops of the fresh cheese on top, then sprinkle with the grated soft cheese, then grate the hard cheese over that. Add a few pieces of herbs. Continue with another layer of everything, in the same order, but you must end up with a layer of the crispy bread.
Now pour boiling hot broth over it until it is just covered. Let it sit for a minute or so until it is moistened, then serve. This is the step that gives her her name. Soaking the dish in broth is to inzuppare, and so it is called zuppa even though as you can see, it is not soup. Black pepper is a very nice addition. You really won’t believe what this tastes like!
I gave you an estimated amount for two portions, but that could change if your pot were wider or narrower. My pot was about 7″ wide and I made 3 cheese layers surrounded with bread layers. By simply layering up more I could have made many more servings. In a 10″ pot I could easily have made servings for 10 people. I could have made it richer by using more cheese. I could have made it less rich by using stronger cheeses but less of them– although you do need the soft cheese to combine with the broth, so don’t alter that one. The broth both melts the cheeses and becomes milky itself, and that is why there are two fairly young cheeses in the dish. If you were to use more aged cheeses, that effect would lessen. It would probably still be mighty good, however. I don’t really see how it could ever fail as long as you use tasty cheeses.
I picked the herb bits out as I ate this. They definitely flavored the dish, so I would never leave them out, but all the herbs mentioned are woody and stemmy and I can’t see eating them. All in all, this is another surprising dish from Sardinia, a place that has a talent for surprising me in the nicest possible ways. Let’s see if we can surprise Ruth at Presto Pasta Night with it.





It does sound absolutely heavenly. I\’m off to find some lavash…shouldn\’t be too hard. Now the Pane Carasau…that might be a challenge.
Thanks for sharing with Presto Pasta Night.
Sounds easy and perfect for a cheese lover like me. I’ve seen the Pane Carasau in the market, but have never bought it. Next time i’ll have to pick some up.
Sounds yummy! I love cheese.
Not sure, maybe too much cheese, I\’ll have to try it to decide. Judith, I\’m a bit worried about what is all this cheese going to do to your waistline remember you\’ve got to get all those big belts buckled up in time for Spring/Summer and it\’s almost here. Yikes!
Judith, I also cannot buy lavash here. But do you think matzoh would work? I can get those until Easter – after that, I “d have to wait another year.
I wonder because the lavash I know is soft and the matzoh crackers haree are hard/crispy – similar to cream crackers, if you’re familiar with those.
Ahhh, I never saw soft lavash, but eg told me there was such. I don’t think Matzoh works because it is too thick. Carasau is extremely thin, as thin as parchment or at least the real thing, not modern stuff.
Amanda you are very cruel to remind me that I have gained weight since quitting smoking and need to diet. It’s shaping up to be a very busy year, so presumably some of this will melt off in those 40°C kitchens, yes?
Judith, I had the soft lavash in a restaurant in Krakow, Poland n (ISTR they said it was Georgian) and saw it in shops in Istanbul. But never here in Holland.
Since matzoh aren\\\’t a real option, then, I think I\\\’ll just keep dreaming instead. Maybe, someday, I\\\’ll be in Italy. Then I\\\’lll have Pane Carasau to look forward to.