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Make Marmalade!

by Laura DiLembo - 0 Comment(s)


Blood Orange Marmalade

A dazzling array of citrus fruits are in the stores and my thoughts naturally turn towards incorporating them into my life. I favour delivery systems that emphasize the zesty tang as well as the sweetness of tangerines, blood oranges, Seville oranges, mandarins, grapefruits and lemons, so was instantly drawn to a velvety marmalade after reading David Lebovitz's rendition on his blog. One point of departure: he uses Seville oranges and I had blood oranges. No matter. Where his product pulsated with an almost neon papaya hue, mine sang a more ruby-toned song.

Marmalade is marvellous with toast but please don't stop there. You can combine it with Dijon mustard and brush it on chicken breasts before grilling them, spoon it into a vinaigrette for a fruit-centric marinade, smear it on a scone, or dab a splotch on a wee wedge of creamy brie. Marmalade dishes out the sunshine during the winter months when we so need a dose, some bright merrimement in a jar for those cold mornings when tea offers warmth and sweet things make you smile. You can use Seville or blood oranges in the following recipe.

Seville Orange Marmalade - Photo courtesy of www.davidlebovitz.com

Seville Orange Marmalade from www.davidlebovitz.com

6 Seville oranges
1 navel orange
10 cups (2.5 liters) water
pinch of salt
8 cups (1.6 kg) sugar
1 tablespoon Scotch (optional)

1. Wash oranges and wipe them dry. Cut each Seville orange in half, crosswise around the equator. Set a non-reactive mesh strainer over a bowl and squeeze the orange halves to remove the seeds, assisting with your fingers to remove any stubborn ones tucked deep within.

2. Tie the seeds up in cheesecloth or muslin very securely.

3. Cut each rind into 3 pieces and use a sharp chef’s knife to cut the rinds into slices or cubes as thin as possible. Each piece shouldn’t be too large (no more than a centimeter, or 1/3-inch in length.) Cut the navel orange into similar-sized pieces.

4. In a large (10-12 quart/liter) stockpot, add the orange slices, seed pouch, water, and salt, as well as the juice from the Seville oranges from step #1. Bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer, and cook until the peels are translucent, about 20 to 30 minutes.

(At this point, sometimes I’ll remove it from the heat after cooking them and let the mixture stand overnight, to help the seeds release any additional pectin.)

5. Stir the sugar into the mixture and bring the mixture to a full boil again, then reduce heat to a gentle boil. Stir occasionally while cooking to make sure it does not burn on the bottom. Midway during cooking, remove the seed pouch and discard.

6. Continue cooking until it has reached the jelling point, about 220F degrees, if using a candy thermometer. To test the marmalade, turn off the heat and put a small amount on a plate that has been chilled in the freezer and briefly return it to the freezer. Check it in a few minutes; it should be slightly jelled and will wrinkle just a bit when you slide your finger through it. If not, continue to cook until it is.

7. Remove from heat, then stir in the Scotch (if using), and ladle the mixture into clean jars. Sometimes I bury a piece of vanilla bean in each jar. (Which is a great way to recycle previously-used or dried-out vanilla beans.)

Yields 2 litres.

Store in the fridge for a few weeks, freeze or can.

Pucker up with more citrusy sensations:

Insaporire

by Laura DiLembo - 0 Comment(s)

Photo courtesy of the New York Times

Insaporire
- a verb derived from the Italian noun sapore, taste. Insaporire is the act of making food tasty, an act we would all be wise to partake in.

Some people have a magic touch with food that involves insaporire. One such person is Marcella Hazan who writes evocatively about ways in which to invoke the best flavour in cooking by using some special tricks and techniqes. In her much loved cookbook Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking, Marcella describes the building block process of creating flavour in a chapter called "Where Flavor Starts": "Flavor, in Italian dishes, builds up from the bottom. It is not a cover, it is a base." She outlines the three architectural principles that define Italian cooking: Battuto, Soffritto and Insaporire. Battuto is the mixture of cut up aromatics that form the flavour base of many pasta sauces and soups, parsley, onion, carrot or celery finely chopped and sauteed in olive oil, butter or lard. Once the battuto is sautteed until golden and aromatic, it turns into a soffrito. Care is needed here, as sometimes elements are added in sequentially, as first sauteeing the onion until it is translucent and only then adding the garlic, which would burn if allowed to cook entirely with the onion.

According to Marcella, the step that follows soffritto is called insaporire, "bestowing taste". It usually applies to vegetables, as they are often the critical ingredient in the formation of many dishes, pastas, soups, risottos. The technique of insaporire requires that you add vegetables or other principal ingredients (like meat) to the soffrito base and, over very lively heat, briskly saute them until they have become completely coated with the flavour elements of the base, particularly the chopped onion. Failure to execute this crucial step is culinary suicide: "One can often trace the unsatisfying taste, the lameness of dishes purporting to be Italian in style, to the reluctance of some cooks to execute this step thoroughly".

In short, take your time in the kitchen. Not everything you cook will come together in minutes. Some things need nothing but good old time, especially those onions! So much of our culture has been built on saving time, handling tasks as rapidly as possible, but this is not always the recipe for success in the kitchen.

"An Italian vegetable soup is an excellent illustration of the principle of insaporire, the extraction and building up of flavor. Note how the rapini is sautéed at length with onion that has already been cooked to a golden color. Only then is the red pepper added, after the rapini has been given an opportunity to release and concentrate its flavor." - Marcella Hazan

Marcella's Italian Vegetable Soup from Saveur magazine

1 1/2–2 lbs. potatoes; 1 bunch of rapini, about 1 pound; Fine sea salt to taste; 1 large meaty red bell pepper or 2 smaller ones; 1 tbsp. vegetable oil; 3 tbsp. butter; 2/3 cup chopped onion; freshly ground black pepper; 2–4 cups meat broth, or a beef bouillon cube dissolved in 4 cups of water, or 1 can beef broth diluted with 3 parts water.

If you are baking the potatoes, turn on the oven to 450°. Wash the potatoes in cold running water, pierce them here and there, and put them into the preheated oven. They are done when the tines of a fork enter them easily, about 50 minutes to 1 hour, depending on their size. As soon as they are cool enough to handle, scoop out the flesh, mash it through a potato ricer, and set it aside until you are ready to add it to the soup. If you are boiling the potatoes, bring a pot of water to a boil. Wash the potatoes in cold running water, drop them into the pot, and cook at a steady, moderate boil. They are done when they can be easily pierced with a fork, about 30 minutes or more, depending on the size and youth of the potatoes. Drain and, as soon as you are able to handle them, pull off the peels and mash the flesh through a potato ricer. Set aside until you are ready to add them to the soup.

Cut off the tops of the rapini and put them away for another use. Peel off the tough dark green rind that surrounds the stems. Wash the rapini in cold water. Bring a pan of salted water to a boil, add the stems, and cook them until tender. Drain and cut into pieces about 2" long.

Cut the red pepper lengthwise along its creases, remove the stem, seeds, and pithy core, then skin with a swivel-blade vegetable peeler. Then cut it into narrow strips about 2" long.

Put the oil, butter, and chopped onion into a saucepan, turn on the heat to medium-high, and cook, stirring occasionally, until the onion becomes pale gold. Put in the rapini, turn once or twice to coat well, and cook for about 10 minutes. Add the pepper strips and cook for 8-10 minutes, stirring from time to time.

Add the potatoes to the pan. Stir well, adding salt and several grindings of black pepper. Pour enough meat broth into the pan to ahieve the consistency you desire. I like it as loose as thin cream. Cook at a steady, slow simmer for 30-40 minutes. Taste and correct for salt.

Insaporire happens when you allow the flavour residing naturally in vegetables to emerge through careful attention to cooking them slowly and at the right temperature. You do need some brisk heat to coax vegetables to release their liquid and carmelize their sugars. Absence of this heat leaves vegetables flat or "boiled". Once your vegetables take on a deep caramel colour and have become insaporito, you can continue cooking your soup, sauce or risotto at medium or even low heat, depending on your recipe. You cannot make up for lack of insaporire later on by throwing in more spices or salt. It is precisely the slow release of flavour that will reward you later with a dish whose deep flavours intermingle and dance.

More wisdom from the master. . . . . .



Roasted Fennel and Prosciutto

by Laura DiLembo - 0 Comment(s)

I have tried a few versions of roasted fennel and generally find the sweet, tender result quite appealing. But I also find some of the chunks from the outer layers of the bulb stay tough and stringy, the oven not quite rendering them into the gentleness I am seeking. Until I met this fennel dish, meltingly soft, spiked with parmesan cheese and strewn with a crisp, salty topping of roasted prosciutto. If "crisp" and "salty" are emotional hotspots for you, your soul will sing with this rustic Italian dish from matriarch-chef Lidia Bastianich.

The first order of business is the one responsible for the moist tenderness I speak of. You boil your fennel chunks in salted water just until they can be easily pierced with the tip of a knife. After a good draining in a collander, you line the morsels in an oiled baking dish and sprinkle some grated Parmesan cheese, along with salt and pepper, over them. Over this goes slices of San Danielle prosciutto, following the lines of the vegetables. Roast for about 25 minutes and you will be rewarded with a hot, savoury casserole filled with sweet flavour and crisp bacon-like notes. Prosciutto undergoes a fabulous transformation in the oven, darkening, shrinking, and thus giving off a more concentrated hit of its essence.

What makes this dish work so well? The fennel is hot, sweet, juicy and tender. The prosciutto is dry, salty, crisp and meaty. Together they sing a happy song, the blissful conjoining of disparate elements creating a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts. It is one of those kitchen mysteries, where flavours play off each other in a particularly harmonious manner.

Roasted Fennel and Prosciutto - adapted from www.lidiasitaly.com

2½ pounds fennel, trimmed and cut in wedges; 2 tbsp. extra virgin olive oil; 3 ounces prosciutto, thinly sliced;
½ teaspoon salt; freshly ground pepper; 1 cup Parmigiano-Reggiano, freshly grated.

Bring about 4 litres of water to the boil in a large pot. Drop in the fennel wedges and cook them at a gentle boil for 10 to 15 minutes, just until you can pierce them easily with a sharp knife tip. Lift out the wedges and drain well.

Cut the prosciutto slices crosswise into strips, about 1/4-inch wide.

Set a rack in the middle of the oven; preheat to 350 degrees. Coat the bottom of a 9 by 13 inch baking dish with a splash of olive oil. Lay the fennel wedges in one layer, filling the dish. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Drizzle the remaining olive oil over the top. Lay the prosciutto in strips over the fennel, following the direction of the fennel. Finally, sprinkle over the grated cheese, covering the whole dish evenly. Bake the dish for 25 minutes or until the top is crusty and golden and the edges of the prosciutto and fennel are also colored and crisp.

Learn from Lidia!






An Italian Store Supper

by Laura DiLembo - 0 Comment(s)

How easy is this? Buy some homemade roasted vegetable ravioli, boil some water and open a can of tomatoes. Voila, you have dinner! I speak the truth. If you live in Calgary, The Italian Store is THE place you must go to, for there is where your dinner awaits you. With a freezer full of many types of homemade stuffed pastas, you can select the shape and filling that speaks to you: Veal tortellini, cheese ravioli, roasted vegetable ravioli, to name a few. I am currently working my way through a 5-pound bag of roasted vegetable ravioli and am loving every moment of it. The usual treatment is a quick boil, drain and then toss with some great canned tomatoes, preferably San Marzanos, also available at The Italian Store. Buy some hard, aged pecorino romano cheese at the same store and sprinkle a generous grating over your cooked, drained, sauced ravioli.

The shelves of The Italian Store are lined with imported Italian pastas in almost every imaginable configuration, including ones you will not see elsewhere. You may recognize brands such as Barilla and De Cecco as well as La Molisana. Prices are great, so I stock up on everything that looks interesting. Sometimes I splurge on an artisinal brand of beautifully shaped noodles, as even at $3.89 a bag, plus a can of San Marzano tomatoes at under $4.00 each, I am still feeding 4 people for less than $8.00! How else can you do that and know you are giving them the best products on earth? This is not a rhetorical question. I would really like to know if you have an answer.

Taralli, fresh pizza dough, lonza, hot pickled peppers, pear nectar, biscotti, Sicilian olives, Rega canned tomatoes, dried Greek figs, prosciutto salami, Savello cheese, fragrant basil, mascarpone, cannoli shells, lupini beans . . . . . . . the makings of a feast await you at The Italian Store. For me, a visit is like a pilgrimage to a holy sight, the temple of Italian food. Take time for a sandwich and a bowl of hot homemade soup at the lunch counter. And then go home with a carload of goodies to share with friends and family.

Celebrate your inner Italian:

Roasted Cauliflower

by Laura DiLembo - 0 Comment(s)

This is SO easy and SO delicious, I wonder why it took me this long to tackle. I have a few versions of roasted cauliflower, one that involves par-boiling first, but this one is even easier. Simply separate a head of cauliflower into roughly equal sized florets, toss with olive oil, salt and pepper and parmesan cheese and roast in a hot 400 F oven, turning pieces every 15 minutes or so, until deeply and evenly browned and tender, about 40 minutes. The sweetness of the veg sings out like never before, dispelling any memories of sulphurous odours linked to the cauliflower. Vegans may wish to omit the cheese. The dish is still fabulous without it. Expect crisp and toasty nuggets of succulent vegetable. You may play with some flavour options here: a bit of curry powder in the mix would be nice, as would a squirt of lemon juice or the inclusion of thickly cut onion wedges from a sweet onion like Walla Walla or Vidalia.

Of course you could eat the roasted cauliflower as is, but I have an enhanced flavour-packed treatment for these tender, golden vegetables you will want to try. Roast your cauliflower florets to your liking and set aside in a mixing bowl. Take a can of anchovies in olive oil and spill the oil into a saute pan. Mince the anchovies and place them in the pan with the oil. Add in 2-3 cloves of garlic, finely chopped, a large pinch of pepperoncini (hot pepper flakes) and 2 tablespoons of minced capers. Cook the mixture over medium heat until the garlic is golden and the anchovies have melted down to a moist paste. This should take about 4-5 minutes. Be careful the garlic doesn't get too dark, as it could easily scorch and turn bitter. Scrape this fragrant mixture onto your cauliflower florets and toss to coat everything well. Season to taste with salt and fresh cracked pepper. I like to add some green to this mix in the form of fresh chopped Italian parsley which adds jolts of herbal joy and marries well with the garlic/anchovy/caper elements in the dish. Serve immediately. This gutsy, lusty vegetable creation pairs nicely with other Mediterranean offerings, including tomato-centric pastas, grilled fish, or savoury meat pies.

You need never be bored by the humble cauliflower. Roast it!

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