Saturday, 17 December 2016

Schiacciata or "scacciata" with broccoli and sausage

In Sicily, as in the rest of the world, it's around the dinner table that friends and family gather together to spend Christmas among laughter, stories, games and lavish dinners. The island housewives, even the younger ones with less and less time available, divided between work and family, spend whole days to prepare delicious dishes, which are the real stars of this holiday season and whose recipes are handed down from mother to daughter by generations. Among an incredible variety of delicacies, this year I decided to proposer you a typical Christmas recipe from Catania but now widespread throughout the island. It is, in practice, a stuffed savory pie: the "schiacciata" or, as they say in dialect, "scacciata". There are several variants of this recipe: some stuffed with tomato, anchovies and tuma (a typical cheese of the island's north-east), others with cauliflower and sausage. I have decided to follow the traditional recipe, the one at Christmas and New Year's triumphs on the tables of the whole island.

The recipe is a bit 'long and complex, especially the preparation of the dough requires a bit' of practice, but I will guide you step by step and also, to shorten the time, I suggest you start preparing the day before some ingredients that will serve for the filling: potatoes, sausage and broccoli.



Start to prepare broccoli. After washing, cut the tops: sliced ​​the bigger ones but leave the smaller ones whole. Boil a pan with water plenty of salt (2 tablespoons), when the water bubbles soak the broccoli for a few minutes (max 5 minutes). Then remove them and drain in the colander, where you will leave them to cool. Now started to peel the potatoes, wash and cut into slices. Preheat the oven to 200 ° C and let preheat. In the meantime, take a baking dish and arrange the slices of potatoes, sprinkle with the tomato puree (4-5 tablespoons), add water (100 ml), 1½ tablespoon of oil, 3 teaspoons of salt. After mixing everything, bake the pan and simmer for about 20 minutes. Halfway through cooking, take care to turn the potatoes but gently, to prevent them grinted. Once cooked, remove from oven and let cool in a colander. Repeat the same operation for the sausage: after having peeled and crumbled, put it in a baking pan by adding 3 tablespoons of tomato sauce and 1 glass of water. Bake, always cook at 200 °
 Cfor about 20 minutes, stirring a few times. Then, remove from oven and let cool. Finally, now that broccoli are very cold, put on a frying pan with 2-3 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil and one clove of garlic. When the garlic is golden, remove it and add the broccoli. Brown them for a few minutes, turning them with extreme delicacy. Remove them from the pan and let cool in a colander.


Now let us dedicate ourselves to the final part of the recipe: the preparation of the dough, which I suggest you make the day after cooking the potatoes, sausage and broccoli. First you dissolve the yeast in lukewarm water (80 ml) and sugar (2 teaspoons). Now in a bowl or on a pastry board the flour and give them the shape of a fountain, topped with a recess in which you will add the lard and the water in which you have dissolved the yeast. Mix with your hands and gradually add the water required. Only at the end add salt (2 tablespoons). I recommend you add salt only at the end, so that it does not come into contact with the yeast, which would block the leavening. Knead the dough until its appearance is smooth, elastic, but mainly dry: should not remain stuck on your hands and give it the shape of a ball. Now oil a bowl and arrange inside the dough, cover with a tea towel. Let rise for around 1½ hours, until the ball has doubled in volume. In the meantime, prepare the onions: wash, remove the skin and cut into thin strips, and the olives: cut them in half, remove the core and cut into small pieces.



At this point, take the dough and divide it in two parts. Roll it out with a rolling pin on a floured work surface giving it the shape of the pan you wish to use: round or rectangular and high about 1 cm. I suggest you leave a puff pastry slightly larger than the other, it will need to close the side of the schiacciata. Now grease the baking dish with oil and arrange on top of one of the puff pastry, raising the side edges, they'll need to close. Now add the filling you will place in layers: first the Tuma cheese (I suggest you use the Tuma at room temperature), then the potatoes, the broccoli, the sausage, finally again Tuma cheese.
Sprinkle all with onions, olives and freshly ground black pepper. When you place the ingredients, let the free edges, about 2 cm. Now cover with the other puff pastry and try to seal the edges well, rolling them. Perforated with a toothpick the surface of the puff pastry, so as to let out the water vapor during cooking. Cover your pan with a cloth and let stand for 30-40 minutes. Meanwhile make preheat the oven to 200 ° degrees static. Spent half an hour, bake the pan and cook for about 40 minutes. After you come out the cake from the oven, brush with oil, further cover with a cloth and let stand for 20 minutes.

For those with limited time, you can buy at the bakery a loaf of already leavened dough. I advise you to taste the pasta lukewarm, but cold is absolutely exquisite too. You can serve it as an appetizer or a main dish and it is ideal for the palates of everyone: young, children and vegetarians. Hence a Christmas in the spirit of  the riot of taste and also with an eye to saving, which never hurts. To enhance the flavor of crushed I recommend a delicate white, well chilled, or totally counter to that a good red full-bodied but not too fruity


Doses for 8 people:

 For dough:
1 kilograms/2½ lb  of flour of durum-wheat semolina (if you want a dough less "rustic" I recommend you use 500 grams of durum-wheat semolina flour and 500 grams of flour '00)
25 grams/1 oz of yeast
sugar (2 teaspoons)
lard (1 tablespoon)
salt
lukewarm water to taste


For the stuffing:
http://cocciudamuri.it/index.php/selezionati-da-cocciu-d-amuri/vini-e-spumanti/giffaro-cabernet-sauvignon-syrah.html
4 potatoes
1 kilograms/2½ lb of fresh pork sausage
800 grams/1lb 12 oz of broccoli tops (small ones whole, the larger ones sliced)
600 grams/1 lb 5 oz of Tuma cheese (to be used at room temperature, in case take off it from fridge 2/3 hours before use)
2 white onions tender, cut into thin strips
tomato sauce (8 tablespoons)
50 grams/2 oz of black olives
1 clove of garlic
Freshly ground black pepper
Salt
Extra virgin olive oil

For your shopping we suggest:
http://cocciudamuri.it/index.php/selezionati-da-cocciu-d-amuri/olio-extra-vergine-d-oliva.html

http://cocciudamuri.it/index.php/selezionati-da-cocciu-d-amuri/vini-e-spumanti/giffaro-cabernet-sauvignon-syrah.html

http://cocciudamuri.it/index.php/selezionati-da-cocciu-d-amuri/vini-e-spumanti/lissandrello-cabernet-sauvignon.html

And, in particular, for your purchases and how original Christmas ideas recommend the packages of carefully selected typical Sicilian products:
http://cocciudamuri.it/index.php/confezioni_cocciudamuri

Sunday, 20 November 2016

Pasta with picchio pacchio sauce (pasta a "picchi pacchiu")

Many of the Sicilian friends will smile when reading the curious name of this recipe. In my research to understand its origin, in fact, I found very little information, but according to the most widespread, it seems that this is a wordplay born from the term "Pacchio" that, in the island dialect, indicates the female sexual organ  and, by analogy, this good and exciting sauce has the same nickname. In the proposed recipe that I use this sauce, originally from Palermo, to season the pasta, but the Sicilian housewives add it in various preparations: the pasta with tenerumi, with borage, with zucchini, but also in soups, soups fish, stewed salt cod and, above all, in a famous dish, also from Palermo, the "babbaluci" (snails that are prepared for the feast of the patron saint, Santa Rosalia, on 14 and 15 July). This versatile sauce, ideal for the palates of our vegetarian and vegan friends and some call also abbreviating pic pac, has the great advantage of being easy and quick to prepare. In short, perfect when you do not have much time and want to accomplish something genuine and cheap.


To realize the "picchi pacchiu" sauce, you must first clean up the tomatoes. After washing, place a saucepan with cold water and dip them in. When the husks tomatoes break, remove them from the pot and place them in a colander. Once they have cooled, peel them, open them in half to remove seeds, then cut them into strips and set aside. Now prepare onions and garlic: remove the peel and chop finely, especially the garlic (if you do not like garlic, cut it into two parts so that it can recognize and delete at the end of the cooking sauce). At this point you place on a frying pan with oil, add onions and garlic and let cook everything for a few minutes (3-4), low heat. After you add the tomatoes, the chopped basil leaves, salt and pepper. Let cook for about fifteen minutes.


Meanwhile boil some water for pasta. When pasta is ready, drain it, pour the sauce, some basil leaves and dish out. Add on every dish abundant grated caciocavallo cheese (or toasted breadcrumbs for our vegan friends). For gourmets who enjoy the spicy flavors I suggest you add the dried red chilies cut thinly.





Doses for 4 people:

- 600 grams/1 lb 5 oz of pasta (long or short, choose the kind you prefer)
- 1,500 kilograms/3 lb 5 oz of tomatoes for sauce (if you like sweet tastes, I recommend you use the "datterini" quality)
- 100 grams/4 oz of grated Caciocavallo cheese (for vegan friends, you can replace the cheese with the toasted breadcrumbs)
- 1 white onion (small or half of a large)
- 2 cloves of garlic, finely chopped (if you do not like garlic, cut into 4 pieces just so you can later remove)
-  salt (2 tablespoons)
-  freshly ground black pepper (2 teaspoons)
-  extra virgin olive oil (3 tablespoons)
-  dried red chilli, finely chopped (2 teaspoons; chili is optional)
- fresh basil leaves (some chopped, others left intact)

For your shopping, I suggest:
http://cocciudamuri.it/index.php/selezionati-da-cocciu-d-amuri/olio-extra-vergine-d-oliva.htm

Monday, 17 October 2016

Sicilian style cutlet

Melting pot of Italian cuisine, Sicilian style cutlet is, indeed, an exquisite reinterpretation of traditional Milanese recipe that meets typical ingredients, flavors and fragrances of the island, such as caciocavallo cheese, breadcrumbs, egg and vinegar.
This dish provides, precisely, that the slices of meat are marinated in vinegar, a procedure often followed by the Sicilian housewives because the meat, even those of the fish, don't pulp  soften, leaving, instead, firm and compact.
Perfect to prepare when you have little time and you want to bring to the table a delicious main course, these cutlets with their tasty breading and the particular flavor given to it by pickling in vinegar, manage to give delicate palates and lovers of intense flavors.




First, put the slices of meat to marinate in a dish with plenty of vinegar that has to cover them completely. Let the slices submerged for at least 15 minutes. In the meantime, open your eggs in a dish and beat them until the yolk and the egg white are well blended. Now take charge of preparing the breadcrumbs. After pouring the breadcrumbs in a large bowl, add the grated cheese, finely chopped garlic, salt, fresh ground black pepper and chopped fresh parsley.

Now place on fire a large skillet pan with 5 tablespoons of extra vergin olive oil and let it heat for good. Meanwhile take the slices of meat one at a time, by dripping the excess vinegar, intigetele by both parties before the egg and then in the seasoned breadcrumbs taking care that the breadcrumbs adhere to well.
When the oil is hot, fry your cutlets until they are golden brown on both sides. Place the slices on a tray lined with paper towel, to wipe any excess oil.

I suggest you to accompanied yours cutlets, to which the special breading and vinegar will give a unique flavor, by a full bodied red wine.

Doses for 4 people:

- 600 grams of veal rump slices, sliced ​​thin
- 200/250 grams of breadcrumbs
- 2 eggs
- 5 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
- 1 glass of red wine vinegar (if you prefer a milder flavor, you can use white wine vinegar)
- 4 tablespoons of grated caciocavallo cheese (alternatively you can use the peppery ewe's cheese)
- A chopped bunch of parsley
-1 thinly sliced clove of garlic
- Salt (6 teaspoons)
- Freshly ground black pepper (3 teaspoons)

For your shopping, I suggest:
http://cocciudamuri.it/index.php/selezionati-da-cocciu-d-amuri/olio-extra-vergine-d-oliva.html

Thursday, 29 September 2016

Pasta with pesto sauce in the Trapani's style ("agghiata trapanisi")

Typical of western Sicily, the pesto sauce in the Trapani's style recipe, that is called "agghiata" is, in practice, a reworked version of the traditional pesto sauce. From the East, the Genoese sailors who stopped in the port of Trapani, in fact, did know the pesto to the local inhabitants, who modified it by adding some typical ingredients of their land: the almonds instead of pine nuts, and tomatoes. The ideal would be to step on the various ingredients in the mortar, but if you do not have enough time at your disposal you can use a blender or a mixer. The result will still be a quick and easy sauce to realize that will captivate everyone with its aroma and scents of Sicily. The original recipe also provides for the use of "busiate", a typical pasta format of the Trapani area.


After washing the tomatoes, place on the fire a pot of water and soak the tomatoes. Leave them for about 2-3 minutes until their skin does not begin to split. At that point, drain and let cool them. When they will be cooled, remove the peel, cut them in half and remove the seeds. Now add them in the mortar (or blender) along with basil, garlic and almonds cut into small pieces and two tablespoons of oil. As pounded add the other two tablespoons of oil. When you have finished pounding the ingredients, let stand the sauce, then after about twenty minutes, add salt, pepper, grated pecorino cheese. Mix well and add only a little oil on the surface.



At this point put on fire a saucepan of salted water to prepare busiate pasta. When the pasta is al dente drain it, arrange on plates and season with your pesto sauce. Before adding the sauce, dilute it with two tablespoons of cooking water.






I recommend you to combine pasta all'agghiata with a great dry white wine, which will enhance the aroma of this irresistible first dish.


Doses for 4 people:

- 500 grams/1 lb of pasta "busiate" (alternatively, you can use the spaghetti or bucatini)
- 300 grams/11 oz of tomatoes (preferably plum or Pachino quality)
- 1 tablespoon of grated pecorino
- 70 grams/3 oz of basil
- 50 grams/2 oz of almonds, shelled and peeled
- 4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- 1 clove of garlic (if you find the quality red, but if you do not like, you can not put it)
- salt (6 teaspoons)
- ground black pepper (2 teaspoons)

For your shopping, I suggest you:
http://cocciudamuri.it/index.php/selezionati-da-cocciu-d-amuri/olio-extra-vergine-d-oliva.html
http://cocciudamuri.it/index.php/prodotti-gastronomici/aromi-e-spezie/aromi-per-spaghetti-all-eoliana-100g-82.html

Sunday, 11 September 2016

Sun dried tomatoes in oil ("pomoduru sicchi")

Sun dried tomatoes in oil are one of those traditional canned in oil that the housewives of the South of Italy prepare at the end of each summer and during the winter they pull out of their pantries to cook or accompany some traditional dishes, so bringing to the table a bit of colors and flavors of the sweet and sunny summer season.
The recipe that I propose below is followed by the Sicilian housewives, for the drying and seasoning.
In most of the Island to make this canned oil it's used San Marzano tomatoes, but in some locations are used those of Pachino, while in others you add the capers when the tomatoes are seasoned. I prefer to use San Marzano and do not add the capers, I faithfully follow the recipe of my home that has always conquered all. Very simple to prepare, sun dried tomatoes in oil, however, require a lot of care and patience during the delicate time sun drying. But if the daily grind does not leave you much time, today you can buy already dried tomatoes.

Wash the tomatoes and cut them lengthwise into two parts, arrange on a wooden board or a baking sheet and season with salt thoroughly. Then cover with a thin net, which is used to prevent that the insects are put above, and put them under the sun from 9 am to 5 pm. In the evening I recommend you store tomatoes inside to avoid damp evening. Repeat this for about 8-10 days, turning every two days, until the tomatoes will not lose all their water.


At this point, wash the tomatoes inside a pot with lukewarm water. Repeat for 2-3 times in order to eliminate all the salt. Then place them back in the sun 3-4 days, until they are completely dry.


Now go to season your tomatoes. Arrange in layers inside the bowl, you have sterilized before, alternating these layers put in inters cloves of garlic and some cloves sliced , fresh chilli both whole and cut into slices and oregano. At the end, add the extra virgin olive oil. The oil will have to overcome the final layer of tomatoes by 2-3 fingers. Every time that you consume tomatoes take care to add a bit of oil.






Usually the dried tomatoes are eaten as an appetizer accompanied by good homemade bread but if you get a little ' fantasy you can also add them to first, second and salads , giving a particular taste that will conquer your friends. Try, for example, to add the chopped dried tomatoes to spaghetti garlic and oil , or try to make a mousse to spread.  You will see the result .


Ingredients :

- San Marzano tomatoes (or Pachino variety , if you love the sweet flavors)
- Green and red hot peppers
- Origan
- salt

Thursday, 25 August 2016

Canned tomatoes ("buttigghi i pomodoru")

There isn't a Sicilian boy or girl who at least once when was a teenager has not had to interrupt his summer vacation to help her mother, grandmother, aunts but even the neighbors to do the "buttigghi of pomodoru" (canned tomatoes). Although today it is more convenient to buy ready-made canned, in the Island this preparation is still a summer tradition for many, a bit ' as an anniversary during which the family but also close friends gather to spend a day together. As the Sicilian housewives we can use canned tomatoes throughout the year, avoiding to buy industrial products and why not save a bit ' on the budget of our spending , which never hurts .









First you place a large pot on the fire with water and soak the tomatoes already washed. Just the husk tomato breaks, remove the tomato from the pot and place it in a colander to drain. If necessary crushed tomatoes in colander with a fork to let out the excess water. Just the tomatoes have cooled put them in a vegetable mill and strain them. Applied the mill filter with narrower holes if you want to completely avoid the presence of husks. Be careful to pass the tomatoes several times so don't to waste the pulp, leaving it attached to the husk. If you intend to make a plentiful supply of canned for the winter you will have to boil many tomatoes and in that case we recommend you to use an electric blender .



Now pour the pulp that you have done ​​in the containers that have already sterilized and then sigillateli tightly. In the Island one time as containers were to reuse the bottles of beer that were opened during the year and aside from just to make preserves, from here the dialect word used " buttighi " (bottles) . Personally before to seal the containers I put in half some leaves of fresh basil. I don't add salt because I put it when i use the preservers for the preparation of a dish.


Now take a pot very large, line it with some tea towels and fill it with water. Put in containers, interlocking them gently to avoid breakage but not leaving much space between one and the other, otherwise they risk moving and jostling as they are boiling. Simmer for about half an hour. Finished boiling, outputs the containers and let cool thoroughly before storing them in your pantry. Now you will have canned tomatoes, without any preservatives , that you can use throughout the year .



I highly recommend you pay attention to the glass. Always handle containers with care especially when they are still hot, or while they're boiling !!!

Ingredients

- ripe tomatoes for sauce ( I personally prefer to use the quality San Marzano )
- water
- basil

Saturday, 16 July 2016

Meat rolls or "braciole" Messina style

In Italian kitchen "braciola" means a slice of lean meat destined to be cooked mostly on the grill .
In Southern Italy the "braciola" , instead , shows a thin slice, usually of meat, but there are also those of fish or vegetables, containing a filling wrapped on itself. Here we propose the braciola according to the use of chop Messina, where this recipe was brought by the Spanish, but reworked by the inhabitants of the Strait that personalized it, giving us today this delicious dish. There are several variants of this preparation which concern the use of butter or oil instead of lard, the kind of cheese to put in the seasoning, the outer breading of rolls. I propose a very simple version, the traditional one of my house  and to enjoy it at its best, if you can, I recommend to cook the chops on the grill .

First you buy from your local butcher tne meat needed for rolls. You'll have to make you give the small slices of silverside cut very thin, or you can use thick flank, but you'll have to beat with a meat mallet to make it thinner. For the size of slice must have a rectangular shape and be approximately hig 4 fingers and 6 long. Many use slices of bigger size, but consider that you can eat the ideal roll in just two forkfuls. Indeed to realize chops very small, to eat in one bite, is considered a true mastery in Messina.






Therefore, start to prepare the "mollica condita" which will serve for the filling. Pour into a bowl grated crumb of dry bread, (if you grate the bread by yourself, try to remove the bread crust and used only the soft part) and add the fresh parsley cut very thin, freshly ground black pepper, grated Pecorino cheese, garlic chipped thin, almost crushed, and salt.
Now arrange the slices of meat on a level and started to fill them. On each slice put in the middle a thin piece of lard, almost a veil, then pour a small amount of our "seasoned crumbs." Some prefer to use in place of lard butter or oil, strictly extra virgin olive oil. In this case you will have to add oil directly into grated crumbs (4/5 tbsp). Finally, add cheese cut into little cubes. I will suggest you use the sweet provolone, if, instead, you prefer a more intense flavor use caciocavallo ocheese or for a softer taste use a  steamed stretched cheese.



After this step, you must close the rolls wrapping them on themselves .
First inwardly bent the side ends, to prevent the filling comes out during cooking, then you begin to wrap the roll in on itself. Now strung one by one in the rolls skewer trying to stop the side ends. Arrange 5/6 rolls at most to skewer. This is a far from simple task , as we well know. This operation is not very simple to realize, we know well. The advice is not to surrender even if your first rolls will not be perfect. Acquire technical and mastery time by time.



Do aflame well the grill or your electric grill and when it is hot put over the rolls. Turn the rolls on the other side halfway through cooking, roughly when you detach from the grid without difficulty. In general, the meat must remain tender and not dry too much to taste better its flavor .








Meat rolls or "braciole" Messina style is a dish to be served at the table during the family celebrations, because they manage to conquer all: young and old , and for delicious dinners among friends. Even the most refined palates can not resist the unique flavor of tender "braciole" that blend well with a full-bodied and intense red wine, but are united in a very pleasant combination even with a good well chilled white wine, both dray that semidry.

Doses for 4 people:

- 600 grams/ 1lb 5 oz of silverside or of thick flank, cut thin- 600 grammi di fettin
- 200 grams/7 oz of grated crumb of dry bread
- 150 grams/5 oz of sweet provoone cuts into cubes (alternatively you can use caciocavallo cheese or steamed stretched cheese)
- 70 grams/3 oz of grated percorino cheese
- 70 grams/3oz of lard (or butter or extra virgin olive oil)
- fresh parsley cut very thin
- freshly ground black pepper (6 teaspoons)
- 1 garlic chipped thin