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Italian Sushi …. Rotolini di Salmone.

May 28, 2013 in Antipasti, Cheese Recipes, Christmas Recipes, Fish Dishes, How to make Fresh Pasta, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Lunchtime Recipes, Pasta Recipes

My life has been blessed with two beautiful family weddings recently.  Both of my sisters have daughters.  Cuzzies Melisa and Nicci married within 3 weeks of each other.  Oh the joy of it all still brings happy tears to my eyes.  Of course, weddings mean Bridal Showers and this means ‘pretty food’.  Being ‘la mamma’ in an all-male Italian casa, my food tends to be rustic, substantial and made in very large quantities so the opportunity to make ‘pretty dainty food’ is rare and very exciting for me.  I relished the challenge with great gusto!

These little ‘Rotolini’ are Italy’s equivalent of Japans sushi.  Fresh thin sheets of homemade pasta are rolled up with any number of fillings; they are tasty and conducive to a little flurry of decoration which makes them perfect for a bridal shower.  You can fill rotolini with any number of different fillings, and instead of rolling them up in pasta you could roll them in smoked salmon, Parma ham or cabbage leaves!   They are pop-in-the-mouth perfect!

 

Rotolini di Salmon

Makes 40 pieces.

Rotolini di Salmone

Salmon & Caviar Pasta Rolls

This recipe has two parts – first we make the pasta sheets and then the we  filling.

The Pasta Sheets

Ingredients

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200g SASKO flour – always soft and fluffy

 2 eggs

2tsp olive oil

1tsp salt

Method

Place the eggs, Sasko flour, olive oil and salt into your mixer fitted with a dough hook, or your food processor or mix by hand on a clean cold surface in your kitchen.

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Once the dough has started to come together, pour it out onto a clean, flour dusted surface, bring the dough together by hand and knead for a good 5 minutes or until the surface of your dough is smooth and shiny!

If the dough is a little dry, simply wet your hands and continue to knead.  Just a little bit of water on your hands should do the trick

Cover the dough in plastic wrap and rest in the fridge for 20 minutes or longer

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Your pasta dough before kneading.

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And after kneading …. see how the surface is nice and smooth.

Spicy Salmon & Cream Cheese filling

Spicy Salmon & Cream Cheese filling

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Ingredients

¼ cup fresh basil

1/4cup fresh dill

¼ cup fresh parsley

½tsp smoked paprika

1Tbs pepper sauce, such as Lea & Perrins or Tobasco Sauce – adjust this amount to suit your self

3 spring onions cut into 1/2cm lengths

2 cloves of garlic crushed

The zest of 1 lemon

The juice of 1/2 lemon

Salt & White Pepper to taste

200g Smoked Salmon

250g Cream Cheese

1Tbs tomato paste

2Tbs red or black Capelin Caviar

An extra sprig of dill to snip over the rotolini for garnishing

            Method

Roughly chop the herbs and spring onion and place in a food processor, add the paprika, hot sauce, garlic, lemon zest and juice of ½ a lemon

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Process this for about 1 minute; add the rest of the ingredients until you have a nice creamy filling.  Of course, you need to taste the mixture and adjust according to your taste buds.  You may want to add a little more lemon juice, salt or pepper – you decide.

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Now to make the pasta sheets.

Remove the relaxed dough from your fridge and cut into 4 equal parts.

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Take one of the 4 pieces and flatten it with your hand

Lightly flour a piece and roll it through your pasta machine on the largest setting, then fold it in on itself twice, lightly flour again and repeat this 3 times.

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Now roll the piece of pasta through the machine, always dusting it with a little flour in between each roll.  Roll the pasta sheet on each size until you get a nice, thin sheet of pasta.  I rolled mine to setting no.7 which was fine.

Repeat with each of the 4 pieces of pasta dough.  Cut the edges of the dough nice and straight and set aside.

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Bring a large pot of salted water to a rolling boil and cook 2 sheets of the pasta at a time.

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Place a piece of cling wrap on your counter – the cling wrap needs to be wider than your two sheets of pasta placed side by side and slightly overlapped.

Place the two sheets of pasta on the cling wrap

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Using a pallet knife spread a thin layer of the salmon and cream cheese filling over the pasta making sure to go right up to the outer edges

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Gently lift the bottom end of the cling wrap up and roll pasta back, like you would roll up a mat!

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Once you have reached your desired thickness, cut off the rest of the pasta and roll the roll up in cling film.

Twist the ends up tightly in the opposite direction so that you get a nice tube and place in the fridge for 20 minutes before you cut them.

This serves to set the shape nicely and make them easier to cut.

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Place the left over filling into a piping bag with a large nozzle.

Using a flat bladed sharp knife cut off 3cm thick slices of your rotolino.

Top Tip:

Clean your knife under hot running water between cutting out each slice of rotolino, this will ensure a nice clean slice every time!

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Don’t forget to remove the cling wrap of each one.  Arrange on your serving tray.

I placed each rotolino onto serving spoon and arranged them on a three tiered cupcake serving tray.

Pipe on a floret of the left over filling on top of each rotolino

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Garnish the cream cheese with a little caviar and dill.

 Pretty as can be for a Bridal Shower!

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Poor TrickyRicky was at home convalescing after an operation on his neck - so I made him two extra large, extra special ones.  xxx

 

I couldn’t possibly sign off without sharing a pic of the beautiful bride, Nicci and her hunky hubby Scotty.

Mr and Mrs Scott Hosking

May you live Happy Ever After ......

 

I just love a wedding!

as always

Buon Appetito

Jan

x

Cannoli Siciliani, with Love on Mother’s Day

May 9, 2013 in Baking, Biscuit recipes, Christmas Recipes, Cooking with Fruit, Desserts, Gifts From Your Kitchen, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Meatfree Mondays, Pasta Recipes, Valentined Day Food for Love

Cannoli Siciliani

Cannoli Siciliani made with lots and lots of love for Mother’s Day xx

This is a time that makes me reflect on the many ‘mothers’ I have known.  And I use the word ‘mother’ in a very broad sense.  One does not have to give birth to be a mother.  I have been ‘mothered’ by so many incredible women over the years.  I think of the many ‘nannies’ who have cleaned my scraped knees, whoshared a bowl of porridge on the back step and shown me how to embroider on a Sunday afternoon.

I think of my friends mothers who have enveloped me with big mamma hugs, offered me tissues and helped me through the heartache of loves lost.  I think of my dearest mum whose lap I long for so often.  Even as an adult and a mother myself I would sometimes phone my mum to come over so I could lay with my head in her warm lap.  She could take a headache away with a single caress and she really did understand me.

I think of my dear mother in law whose generosity of spirit and very special thirst for life never ceased to inspire me.  She spent hours in her tiny little kitchen with me teaching me to cook.  How I must have frustrated her with my never ending questions.  As we cooked she taught me to speak Italian and we laughed a lot at my clumsy ways.

I remember taking my Mum, Granny Annie and Mum-in-law, Nonna Lily to dinner at the Roma Revolving and then on to watch the Bolshoi Ballet dance Swan lake at the Playhouse.  My mum was a ballet dancer in her youth and as a consequence of spending half of her life in point shoes she could hardly even walk; Nonna with her two bionic hips needed the aid of a walking stick; Mum could not speak a word of Italian and Nonna, no English.  I had to enlist the aid of my friend Karmie to manage them both.  Traffic had to be stopped outside the Playhouse, for these two Diva’s were not going to walk all the way from the Parkade.  They sat through the performance chatting away, Nonna in Italian and my mum, in English and for some reason seemed to understand each other perfectly!  Oh, what a special night we had.

At this time of the year  I remember those days when Max and Daniele were little dudes and would arrive in my bedroom, faces beaming with pride, clutching a tray of ‘Scambled Eggs Mum!” and hand made cards with precious words of love and affection scribbled in multi coloured crayon.  I miss that beautiful smell of freshly shampooed hair and their flannel jamies as they huddled with me in my bed and proudly ate the ‘scambled’ eggs with me.  I can honestly say that my children are my greatest achievement of my life and I am deeply grateful for the honour of being their mum.

Both my mum and Nonna Lilly have passed on but if they were here today I would get into my kitchen and with lots of love in my heart I would make them a beautiful tray of these Cannoli to celebrate Mother’s Day.

These crunchy tubes of fried sweet pasta filled with a ricotta cream that oozes with the flavours and aromas of Christmas make me sigh with satisfaction.  Cannoli are most definitely Italy’s answer to the mighty macaroon of France and can be filled with both sweet and savoury fillings.  The Cannolo is native to Sicily and must surely be closely related to the arrival of the Arabs in the South of Italy.    Whereas daily food in Sicily reflects the ‘cucina povera’ fashion, Cannoli put on their high heels, red lipstick and parade down the promenade.  No expense is spared when it come to pastries in Italy and every pasticceria sells its own special Cannoli filled with their signature filling.

I like this particular recipe as it has no lard in the pastry, which means its a bit lighter and easier on the hips.  I get 20 cannoli out of this quantity but this can vary dependant on the size of your cannoli.  In Italy you can buy metal tubes to roll your cannoli around for the frying stage.  Seeing as I don’t have any of these tubes I went the ‘really ancient’ route of using wood.  I purchased an unpainted wooden broom stick from our local hardware store and cut it up into 10cm lengths.  They work just fine and can be used again and again!  You can also use cannoli pasta shells as moulds.

My cannoli moulds - a broomstick cut into 10 x 12 cm sections.
My cannoli moulds – a broomstick cut into 10 x 12 cm sections.

I make all 20 cannoli shells but have only ever filled 12 at a time.  The shells keep perfectly well in a air tight container for use up to 2 weeks later.  Once the cannoli are filled with the Ricotta – you need to eat them as the pastry will go soft after about 10 hours.  So I only use 500g of ricotta to fill 12 but keep the rest of the filling ingredients as per the recipe.

Ingredients

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For the Pastry

3 cups SASKO flour

3 egg yolks

1 egg

1tsp grated lemon rind

3Tbs Marsala – this can be substituted with port

1 egg white

sunflower or oil for deep frying

I always use Sasko Self Raising Flour for extra light and crunchy pastry.
I always use Sasko Self Raising Flour for extra light and crunchy pastry.

For the Cannoli Filling

1kg ricotta cheese

1 1/2 cups icing sugar

6 x 5cm cm cinnamon sticks/ quills

2 vanilla pods – split open and the seeds removed with the back of a knife

1tsp grated lemon rind – I used the rind of a whole small lemon

1/4 cup mixed peel

1/4 cup chopped glacee cherries

1 ring of glacee pineapple

icing sugar for coating

60g grated dark hazel nut chocolate – or just plain dark chocolate grated, you could even use crushed nuts instead if you don’t fancy chocolate

Method

Sieve 1 cup of  Sasko’s always soft and fluffy flour into your mixer bowl, add the egg yolks and mix for 30 seconds to achieve a crumb like texture

cover the bowl with plastic wrap and regrigerate this mixture for 2 hours

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Mix the dough to a crumb like texture, cover and place in your refrigerator for 2 hours to rest.
Mix the dough to a crumb like texture, cover and place in your refrigerator for 2 hours to rest.

Remove from the fridge and add the ramaining sifted flour, lightly beaten egg, lemon rind and marsala.

The recipe calls for 1tsp of grated lemon zest - I added the zest of a whole small lemon ... 1 just love the flavour it adds!
The recipe calls for 1tsp of grated lemon zest – I added the zest of a whole small lemon … 1 just love the flavour it adds!

Mix well

Turn the mixture out onto a floured surface, bring it together and knead it for 10 to 15 minutes

Cover in cling wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour.

(I refrigerated my dough over night …. and it was fine, in fact it was beautifully relaxed)

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Cut the dough into 4 pieces , roll out the dough into paper thin sheets.  It is really important to roll the dough very thinly as you want thin crunchy cannoli.  If the dough is too thick it doesn’t crisp up nicely.

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I roll each piece through the machine on the largest setting three times, folding it it on itself twice and repeating three times

then I continue to roll each piece through to setting No 7 which is paper thin

Roll the dough through your pasta machine on the largest setting 3 times, in between each roll fold the dough in on itself twice like above and dust with a little extra flour to prevent it from sticking in the machine.
Roll the dough through your pasta machine on the largest setting 3 times, in between each roll fold the dough in on itself twice like above and dust with a little extra flour to prevent it from sticking in the machine.

Using a cookie cutter, or a cup cut circles of the dough and wrap each circle around a wooden mould overlapping the ends and glue it closed with a little egg white.

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Overlap the ends and glue the cannoli closed by brushing a little egg white between them. Be careful not to get egg white on the stick or mould.

Make sure not to get the egg white on your mould otherwise it will stick and be difficult to remove.

Heat a pot of sunflower oil to boiling point, and fry four cannoli at a time.

Turn the cannoli in the oil so that they cook evenly all round.

The cannoli start to puff up and bubble - this is EXACTLY what you want, light and fluffy!
The cannoli start to puff up and bubble – this is EXACTLY what you want, light and fluffy!

Fry until they are golden brown then remove onto kitchen paper to drain off the oil.

While the cannoli are still hot gently pull them off the wooden mould and place onto kitchen paper to cool.

Ready and waiting for their filling.
Ready and waiting for their filling.

Once you have cooked all of the cannoli – return them to the oil and fry them again for 1 minute – this ensures that the pastry has the required crunch when you bit into it.

For the Filling

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Place the ricotta cheese into your mixer bowl, add the sifted icing sugar and beat on high for at least 5 minutes.  It’s quite amazing as the curdy cheese turn silken and smooth.

Using either a grinder or a blender – place the cinammon sticks in your blender and crush them to a powder.  This will take no longer than two minutes.

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Add the ground cinammon, lemon zest, vanilla beans, chopped cherries, chopped glacee pineapple and mixed fruit to the ricotta cheese and mix again, at high speed for 4 minutes.

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Spoon the filling into a piping bag and pipe into each cannolo.

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Roll each cannolo in sifted icing sugar and dip each end into the grated dark chocolate.

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Place each cannolo in a cupcake cup.

Serve with an ice cold glass of Asti Spumante or maybe even a nice Viognier

or an espresso caffe.

A plate of heaven ... made with lots of love xxx
A plate of heaven … made with lots of love xxx

And lots of love!

Cannoli making is a labour of love, but so worth the effort, especially for someone you really love.
Cannoli making is a labour of love, but so worth the effort, especially for someone you really love.

Happy Mother’s Day to you all.

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May your day be filled with lots of love

….. and Cannoli Siciliani!

xxx

As always

Buon Appetito

xxx

jan

Spaghetti with Clams and Artichokes get’s my ‘Best Pasta Dish of the Year Award”

December 21, 2012 in Dinner Divas, Fish Dishes, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Pasta Recipes, Shellfish

 

But

it’s only

until

I, on the other hand have hit the slippery slope and am having an intimate affair with

my martini glasses

and

my pool loungers!

I am surrounded by my boys and we are already celebrating the season!

I LOVE CHRISTMAS!

So, it’s another quick-quick, DINNER IN 12 Minutes

by TrickyRicky Tripepi!

and personally, I give this the

Janice Tripepi

BEST PASTA DISH OF THE YEAR

Award!

And I say a Big Mamma Thank You to my TrickyRicky for his love of cooking, his infinite passion in the kitchen and

his unending willingness to create amazing pasta dishes with me after a full day’s work!

Sei, vraiment formidable, amore mio!

Spaghetti alle Vongole e Carciofi

Spaghetti with Clams and Artichokes

Just too good for words …..
This dish just screams Summer and Fun and Eat Me!

Ingredients

olive oil – about 1/2cup

5 cloves garlic finely chopped

1 red onion finely chopped

3 red chillies finely sliced

1 chicken stock cube

freshly ground black pepper to taste

2 glasses of dry white wine

1 x 130g jar of clams in brine (use the brine as well as it’s packed with flavour)

1kg fresh or frozen clams in their shells

800g cherry/ rosa tomatoes cut in half

5 artichoke hearts – I used a jar of grilled artichokes preserved in oil

a large handful of parsley roughly chopped

1 x 500g packet of spaghetti

1 willing and very lovable cook

My willing and very lovable cook!

Click on this picture to go to the recipe

A plate of pure pasta pleasure.

and before long all that will be left is ….

Tomorrow is Episode 11 of Dinner Divas

be THERE

or be SQUARE

SABC2 at 08.30AM

It’s ANOTHER challenge!

As always

xxx

Buon Appetito

Jan

xxx

Dinner Diva’s: My Semi-Final Wedding Rehearsal Dinner Menu and Recipes …

December 7, 2012 in Antipasti, Christmas Recipes, Desserts, Dinner Divas, Dressings, Fish Dishes, How to make Fresh Pasta, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Pasta Recipes, sauces, Shellfish, Valentined Day Food for Love

 

So what is a day like on the set of Dinner Divas?  It’s looong and quite exhausting but at the end of it your adrenlin levels are just so high that you feel like you have consumed a hundred cups of coffee.   My mind was a bee-hive of buzzing and I was constantly running through my menu and the order in which I had to cook everything on my Bridal Rehearsal Dinner Menu.   After a 6am poly-filler session with the make-up girls, who were just so friendly and incredibly adept at making up an ‘older’ woman, we would make our way to the set which was just accross the road from The Upper East Side Hotel in Woodstock.

The location of the Dinner Diva set!

 

Peter Goff-Wood’s spot called Kitchen Cowboys was already a hive of activity at 7am and by the time that Nina, Kristy and I arrived the floor looked like a huge bowl of spaghetti had been tipped over!  Endless kilometers of electrical cords ensnared anything in its path.

 

Spaghetti!

At 8am breakfast was served, but I rarely had anything to eat, preferring to cook hungry!  Being that it was mid winter and freezing cold and I needed to warm up I did manage a cup of Chai tea.  At 09.00am we had just 30minutes to locate our ingredients, serving dishes, plates etc and gather up every pot, pan, cutting board, knife, sieve etc. that we would be using in the preparation of meals.  Once filming had begun, we were not allowed to leave our stations to get anything that we may have forgotten.  There would be a quick briefing by Anne Meyers, the executive producer of 2Blondes and a Redhead and we were off.

The Brief

The brief for this elimination round was to prepare a FESTIVE or SPECIAL OCCASION meal for 4-8 people.  It could be a dinner, breakfast, lunch or cocktail party … absolutel any occasion,  in 3 hours.

Judging Criteria

We were encouraged to keep in mind that this episode would be shown in summer and therefor were to keep this in mind.  The meal should be our “blog on a plate”, be for a family or our interpreatation of a family, show good taste, balance and nutrition, be seasonal, local produce, be well styled on the plate, based on a normal family budget.  We were asked to write a short post of 100 words describing the meal to the judges in our usual blog voice.  We had to write our recipes up for the judges scrutinise.

The Decision

My participation in Dinner Divas happened to coincide with my incredibly special and vry favourite nephew Claudio’s marriage to Jennifer, which was my motivation for the meal that I prepared.  A Tripepi wedding is such a joyous celebration of marriage and is accompanied by so many dinners and lunches drenched in hapiness for the various preparations for the joining of two families.  In this case, Jennifer and her family who are of French Mauritian decent fitted together with the Tripepi Clan like peas and carrots.  They are a wonderful family with just so much in common with us that from the moment that these two special people met, we have all been partying and celebrating together.  They love food and family just as much as we do ….. a perfect union in just so many ways.

I had to make a difficult decision, for partaking in Dinner Divas meant that I may just miss their wedding.  To make matters even more difficult, my son Daniele had been offered a job on set too.  After much deliberation and many considerations both Daniele and I agreed that the Universe was offering us a synergistic opportunity.  Daniele reminded me of the mantra that I had so often drummed into his head that, “It’s not the things that we DO in life that we regret, it’s the things that we DON’T DO”  and to never ever refuse opportunity for it will stop knocking at your door!  How our parental efforts at instilling wisdom do sometimes whip around and slap us in the face!  Daniele was tasked with the position of “Judge Liaison” and with the blessings of the other Divas, we both accepted this incredible rare opportunity to have an adventure together.

Claudio & Jennifer on their Wedding Day

My 100 words describing this meal.

A Tripepi Wedding Rehearsal Celebration.

 

Nothing gets la famiglia Tripepi more excited than a Tripepi wedding.  The hint of one starts a tsunami of wedding related celebrations.   New suits are the order of the day as uncles and cousins have either grown in height but mostly in girth and the ladies rush around ordering wedding regalia.  Bridesmaids and flower girls all in a row are paired with best friends and cousins and the mere mention of a pre-wedding gathering requires food and lots of it.

Aunties’ line up offering up their specialities for bridal showers and bachelor weekends and all this is wrapped up in massive bows of laughter.  The wedding rehearsal dinner is the last dinner before the big event and must be special as it serves to unite two families as one with the promise of a beautiful future and hopefully a few more Tripepi bambini.  This summer wedding, set on the sun kissed shores of KwaZulu Natal is a seafood celebration.  My wedding rehearsal dinner menu is light yet celebratory and will take these two families by the s and join them together on a seafood adventure.

Benvenuti nella famiglia Tripepi.

Of course I wasn’t able to photograph my recipes on set so you are not getting the usual step-by-step pictures that I would normally post.  I did, however feature three recipes that I had posted on my blog in the past.  This was my ‘old school’ way of doing exactly as I was told and truly representing ‘my blog’ on a plate.  I was raised at a time when we were taught to follow instructions to the letter and this is ONE of the lessons that I learnt in this competition.

Think outside the box Janice!

Just ONE of the valuable lessons that I learnt in this competition!

My Menu

Insalata di Frutti di Mare

(prawn and calamari cold seafood salad)

Calamari Ripieni

(Prawn and Mushroom Stuffed Squid in a tomato sauce served warm)

Dorado in Padella con Fettuccine fresce al sugo di Finocchi e Porri

(Pan Fried Dorado on a bed of fresh fettuccine with a Leek & Fennel Sauce)

Fragole al Cinzano con Zabaglione e Amaretti

Strawberries in Cinzano topped with Zabaglione, served with Amaretti.

 Please click here or on any of the photos of this menu to go to the recipes for these dishes.

This menu is certainly festive and in keeping with the celebration.  I chose a seafood feast to reflect the bounty of our coastline.  These are the pictures of the actual food that I cooked during the competition, so you can see exactly what the judges saw and tasted.

Insalata di Frutti di Mare

Seafood Salad

Serves 6 – 8 people

I had planned to serve a smaller portion than this in a cup and saucer but there wasn’t any on set.

 

Insalata di Frutti di Mare
Calamari Ripieni

Serves 6

I served just one squid per portion as there was plenty more to come.

 

Prawn & Mushroom Stuffed Squid in a Red Wine & Tomato Sauce

This is one of those dishes that actually improves with age.  Make it the day before your function or meal, not only will the flavours have improved but you will have extra time to prepare the other components of your meal and be a cool, calm and collected Zen Hostess!

Dorado in Padella con Fettuccine fresce al sugo di Finocchi e Porri

Panfried Dorado on a bed of fresh fettucine with a Leek and Fennel White wine sauce

Fragole al Cinzano con Zabaglione e Amarett

Strawberries in Cinzano topped with Zagaglione and Amaretti

 

Strawberries in Cinzano with Zabaglione and Amaretti

And they lived happily ever after …..

Oh my I just can’t stop myself …. need a tissue!

And there you have it ….. my semi-final meal.  Unfortunately, we didn’t ever get any direct feedback from the Judges so I can’t really tell you where I did well or where I failed in this meal.  We shall have to wait for tomorrow’s screening to find out!

 

See you there!

SABC2 at 08.30am in the Dinner Divas Kitchen!

As always

Buon Appetito

xxx

jan

 

TrickyRicky’s 10 Minute Spaghetti with a Tuna, Tomato and Mushroom Sugo

December 4, 2012 in Cheese Recipes, Dinner Divas, Fish Dishes, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Pasta Recipes

TrickyRicky’s Spaghetti al Tonno!

 

TrickyRicky and I have been paragons of virtue for the last few weeks; surviving of a standard breakfast of bran flakes that taste like cardboard, lunching on meat free summer salads and dining at night on simply cooked meat with steamed vegetables.  We surely qualify for an award of some sort!  I really shouldn’t complain as we have been very creative with salads etc.   Weekends, always bring family meals and occasions which can’t possibly be tainted by the confines of our diet!

Last weekend, we attended a wedding up in the Midlands of KZN, which meant that we spent three nights at a beautiful trout fishing resort called Whispering Waters.  With four dams dotted around the grounds, sprawling immaculate verdant lawns and bird life up the yin-yang; the stress of daily life and the silly season just evaporates.  I am such a fan of the current ‘destination wedding’ fashion as it forces one to take time out.  The obvious choice of destination in KZN is the Midlands which opens her arms wide in a loving embrace.

Tuesday evening our resolve crumbled, TrickyRicky and I agreed that a comforting plate of pasta was exactly what was needed after a long and stressful

TrickyRicky ready for action!

day.  Like two excited children the night before Christmas we mustered up some ingredients and with me behind the camera Tricky got cracking in the kitchen.

This is one of those pasta sauces that you won’t find on any local Italian restaurant menus.  However, tuna is a common store cupboard ingredient in Italian homes and often finds its way into the pasta pot.  When you have just have not found the time to plan a meal this pasta sauce is a life saver.  Generally tinned tuna is used in one of two ways, either in a tomato based sauce with any number of complementary ingredients or it’s used in conjunction with lots of chopped parsley, garlic and black pepper in an olive oil based sauce.  I enjoy both and will make a point of making the parsley and garlic version soon.  We chose the tomato based sauce route this time.

 

Sugo di Tonno

With the pace of our lives clicking into top gear at this time of the year you need to have a good few quickie meals on hand.  When Daniele and Massimo were younger, they would arrive home from the beach with four or five friends EACH,  so these quickie pastas are just the ticket to feed starving teenagers on the hop.

Spaghetti al Tonno is served up an on your table in 10 minutes.  It’s quick, it’s easy and it’s affordable and most of all – your hubby, lover, son, brother or partner can make it.

Open you laptop, wack it on the kitchen counter at this recipe and get him to follow this step-by-step easy Italian pasta dish.

You can set the table, dunk yourself in the bath and emerge refreshed and ready for a glass of vino with your loved one!

So….

Wadda-ya need?

One husband/ lover/ willing cook!

 

Your simple Italian ingredienti …

 

Ready steady ………

cook cook cook …..

and wadda ya get?

Choirs of Tenors singing the praises of pasta!

 

Spaghetti al Tonno!

Just click on any of the pictures above to be taken to my kitchen where TrickyRicky is waiting

to show you how to cook this 10 minute Wonder step-by-step!

Don’t have any tinned tuna at home …..

Try this spaghetti that is made with butter, black pepper and cream cheese …  another flash in the pan,

step by step recipe from TrickyRicky!

Click on the picture to go to this recipe!

DON’T FORGET TO TUNE INTO SABC2

SATURDAY MORNING

08.30AM

FOR ANOTHER EPISODE OF

DINNER DIVAS!

This weekend Kristy, Nina and I battle it out for a place in the Dinner Diva Finals Challanges!

How to make Fresh Pappardelle

October 11, 2012 in How to make Fresh Pasta, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Pasta Recipes

Here is part two of the Pappardelle with Ragu di Fusillo – Chuck Sauce Meal.  Making fresh pasta is just so damn satisfying. The ingredients are so simple and basic that they stir up ones primal instincts.  Flour is one of the most humble and honest ingredients that we cook with…..

Pappardelle are big and generous in the mouth and are traditionally served with a slow cooked meat ragu.  When the hunting season opens in Italy usually around August/ September this is one of the first pastas you will see adorning the table.  It’s the perfect partner to a great glass of your favourite red wine.  This simply must be accompanied by a great loaf of crusty bread.  Bread, on an Italian table becomes a utensil.  Fork in you right hand and bread in your left …

As, there were only three of us at the dinner table on Tuesday I made just a small amount of pasta dough.

Fresh Pappardelle

Click on the picture for the recipe.

Don’t forget to tune into SABC2 this Saturday 13th Octoberfor the first installment of South Africa’s firstBlogger Competition.

As alwaysBuon appetitioxxxjan

Diva Chuck Steak Pasta Sauce

October 11, 2012 in How to make Fresh Pasta, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Pasta Recipes

Fresh Pappardelle with Chuck Steak Ragu

Click on this picture to get the recipe

There is absolutely no denying that cuts of beef such as chuck or blade are not only cost effective but the flavour that they add to a pasta sauce is incredible.  My mum used to refer to these cuts as sweet meat and only ever used them to make her steak and kidney pies.  They do require longer in the pot to get the meat tender but if you have a slow cooker, you could put this sauce on in the morning and come home to a pot of delicious pasta sauce, ready to cook with when you get home.

Carol, of Underberg fame had some doctors’ appointments in Durban this past week and spent a few days with us at la casa Tripepi.  She arrived with dozens of beautiful fresh eggs of all shapes and sizes as usual, and kilograms of beautiful chutney flavoured biltong that is produced locally in Underberg.  The day before her arrival, I phoned her, as I always do to see if she had any special requests for dinner.  Her response was standard, “Oh anything my JanJan’ she giggled, “as long as it’s pasta!”

I just love her!  So, on went enough Chuck Sauce to dress our pasta that evening, and enough to freeze for another meal for 6 – 8 people.  Whenever I make a sauce that needs to cook for hours I always double up and make extra to freeze for another meal.  It just makes perfect sense.

I have been dying to make Pappardelle for the longest time.  Pappardelle are very broad noodles and are about 8cm in length.  There is no denying it, they are big!  The flip flop into your mouth and make for a very sensual eating experience.  Anyone who is adept at using a rolling pin could make these without using a pasta roller.

I am posting this recipe in two parts, The Chuck Ragu in the first post and How to Make Fresh Pappardelle in the second post.  I am doing it this way to make it easier for you to find recipes in my categories.

Don’t forget to tune into SABC2 on Saturday morning the 13th October

for the first installment of the first Bloggers Cooking Competition

Dinner Divas

It’s going to be fun!

 As always

Buon appetito

xx

jan

 

10 Minute Pasta: Bucatini with Tuna and Anchovies.

September 28, 2012 in Fish Dishes, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Pasta Recipes

Bucatini al Tonno … dinner in 10 minutes!

Some of the very best Italian dishes are the ones that are put together in just a few minutes.  There is nothing that I enjoy more than spending a day with a nice big cut of meat, spiking it with beautiful aromatics such as rosemary, garlic, salt and pepper for the browning process and then lovingly assembling all the ingredients to bathe it in, in a long and very slow oven.  This would be fine if our weeks consisted of only Saturdays and Sundays, but they don’t and very often TrickyRicky and I finish work quite late and only get into our kitchen around 6.30pm with grumbling tummies.

This Bucatini al Tonno, another Venetian favourite, is ready in the time that it takes to boil the pasta, which is around 9 minutes.  Bucatini are of the ‘pasta lunga’ family, the ‘long’ pasta family.  They look just like spaghetti but have a hole through the centre.  This hole is all the better for sucking in the flavour captured and taken prisoner in a sauce such as this.  This is beginning to sound like the Italian version of Little Red Riding Hood!

This pasta smacks of the sea and is only rivalled by the speed with which it is on your plate!  A 10 minute dinner wonder! Check out my TrickyRicky produce this dish in 10 minutes flat!  He loves cooking just as much as I do, and on this occasion, won the toss to cook dinner!

Maestro mio!!!

Bucatini al Tonno

Bucatini with Tuna

Serves 4

Click on any of the above pictures for the recipe.

I must thank you for popping over to my new blog – which I am so proud of and your continued support.  I just love blogging!

I am off to The Food Market tomorrow to stock up on some game meat and loads of beautiful artisan foods.

It’s their 4th Birthday … how time flies.

Now – I am going to watch South Afrca win another cricket match!

Have a wonderful weekend.

Triangoli di Guanciale ….. Benvenuto and Welcome to my new blog

September 19, 2012 in Cooking with Pork, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Pasta Recipes

A hearty welcome, to my new blog!  This is an incredibly exciting day for me and I am tickled pink with the way that it looks.  When I met with Joe, the young gun who bowed his head and did absolutely everything perfectly and magically produced exactly what  I asked of him and developed this beautiful blog for me, it took just 45 minutes to synergise my vision.    I knew exactly what I wanted my blog to look like from the mood, the theme and the general feel that I wished to portray to layout and functionality of the site.  Thanks to Joe and Dom for their incredible patience and for making this whole process loads of fun.

My home, my food and my family are a tightly woven Italian tapestry and it would be impossible to separate out any one of these for individual scrutiny.  We speak, love and live our food and culture and enjoy nothing more than a plate of pasta, a glass of vino and good chat around the dinner table at the end of a day.  So, my theme is Italy and every picture has a story to tell.  I shall be posting about each picture and matching it up with an appropriate Italian favorito!

My very first post, on the Food24 Letterdash forum was uploaded on the 16 September 2009 and 327 blog posts later, I have enjoyed every minute of blogging and look forward to sharing more new and exciting recipes on my new blog.  One of my recent adventures has got me thinking about modern Italian food and how the classics are in need of a little re-invention and in my case, Africanisation!

Now this approach is all well and good, but do remember that I have a house full of Italians, that should I stray too far from the time honoured, age old, Nonna approved recipes, and start throwing in bits of ginger and coriander Willy Nilly, they will start throwing hands and arms in the air and muttering many many Italian profanities!  So I shall try to fly under the radar and sneak in new flavours and without losing any limbs in the process.

So in the spirit of new beginnings I have created a budget (yes BUDGET) pasta dish and am using the star ingredient in a totally new way.  In Italy, pigs cheeks are known as ‘guanciale’ which one would pronounce (gwun-charlay), they are generally cured and smoked and used much like bacon/ pancetta would be used as a salty and smoky base flavour in a pasta dish.  I made enquiries with Dargle Valley Pork, the farm in the Natal Midlands that supplies me with hormone free/ free range pork and they happily supplied me with two beautiful pig cheeks at a cost of only R25, 00 for both.  Talk about reasonable!

Last weekend Durban was drenched for two days with torrential rain that just would not stop.  This is the kind of weather that fuels my cooking furnace so while hubby snuggled with Bubblz, Feenix and Tino-the-CLAW-Tripepi I got into the kitchen to play with my pork cheeks.

 

Triangoli di Guanciale

Triangular Pasta Pockets …. Triangoli Filled with Roasted Pork & Tomato Sauce

Seeing as this is my first blog post linked to my new blog Please click on the pic above, and hop along

over and check out the new base camp of my blog.  I would love to hear your comments and any suggestions you may have as to how I can improve your experience on my new blog mag.  I have all sorts of new pages that i will be introducing.

 I will continue to post here with my Food24 family, who are solely

responsible for getting me blogging back in 2009.

Thank You Caro and Cath for your ongoing support and encouragement may we continue

to go from strength to strength.

As always

Buon Appetito

jan

xx

Spaghetti Aglio, Olio e Peperoncino to warm you up today.

August 8, 2012 in Chicken Dishes, Indian Recipes, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Pasta Recipes, Vegetarian Meals

A simple bowl of hot and spicy chilli heaven!

Thank heavens for Pasta aglio, olio e peperoncino!  This has to be one of the easiest plates of pasta to knock together, second only to Pasta Bianca Neve (Snow Whites Pasta) which is made with a little cream cheese.  Sometimes the pace of life in la casa Tripepi goes into overdrive.  Of late we have been entertaining, working exceptionally long hours and life is beginning to resemble a blur.  Having said this, I couldn’t be more excited by it all.  I am of those, I’ll sleep when I’m dead ilk, and I firmly believe that it’s not the things that we do in life that we regret, it’s the things that we don’t do.

Meal planning has been on the fly and thank goodness TrickyRicky is more than happy to get into the kitchen to ‘rattle them pots and pans’.   My work day only finished very late yesterday and I still had to get to the shops for such basics as bread and milk.The chopping for this spicy hot plate of pasta takes all of five minutes.  So, put on a large pot of water to boil,  get chopping and by the time that your spaghetti has cooked (around 9 minutes) your sauce will be ready and the family can be fed.

 

Aglio, Olio e Peperoncino

(Garlic, Oil and Chilli Pasta Sauce)

Feeds 4

 Ingredients

 ½ cup of olive oil

5 cloves of garlic finely chopped

4 red chillies chopped finely – you can use either more or less chillies

1 bunch of spring onions finely chopped

1 handful of chopped fresh parsley

1 x 500g packet of spaghetti

Grated parmesan cheese for serving

Salt & pepper

Method

Bring a large pot of salted water to a rolling boil and put in the spaghetti.  Don’t forget to stir frequently to prevent
the pasta from sticking together.

In a large frying pan heat your olive oil and add the garlic, chilli, spring onions and over a medium
heat brown all the above.  The idea is to flavour the oil well with the chilli and garlic.

Add 1tsp of salt and 1tsp of freshly ground pepper.

As soon as the pasta is tender, use your pasta spoon to lift it out of the water and put it straight
into the frying pan with the sauce.  You don’t need to drain the water off in a colander.

Add 1/3 of a cup of the pasta water to the frying pan too to moisten the sauce.

Stir in the freshly chopped parsley and serve with a good sprinkling of Parmesan cheese.

Serve with some crusty bread.

The chilli will work its’ magic in a flash and warm you up from the inside.

Here is the Pasta Bianca Neve that I mentioned above – cooked in a flash and yummy!

Click on the picture to be taken to the recipe for this bowl of creamy, cheesy heaven!

 Perhaps a little curry to warm those tummies?

Butter chicken is one of my favourites!

Click on the picture to be taken to the recipe.

As always

Buon Appetito

and spare a thought for those less fortunate than ourselves in this cold and bitter weather.

Stay warm and safe.

Xxx

Jan

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