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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

Light & Lean: Low calorie Steak Stacks …. Happy Hip Food!

February 19, 2013 in Cooking with Beef, Janice Tripepi, Light and Lean Recipes ... Hip Friendly!, Lunchtime Recipes

 

Light & Lean Steak Stacks only 356 calories ...
Light & Lean Steak Stacks only 356 calories …

I am posting from a very beautiful and sunny Cape Town today!  You Capetonians are just so very lucky as your evenings are lovely and cool offering one a welcome respite from hot days!  So far, my days have been spent sorting out Daniele’s flat.  My goodness, six black bags of old clothes and counting!  We have been working out in the gym EVERY morning and feeling rather proud of ourselves.  Meals have been light and lean and I have only exceeded my daily Calorie allowance once, by a tiny margin.  Mexican food is lethal, and I paid for my indulgence with buckets of sweat ………..

Today’s post is a steak stack.  It’s really important to vary your diet when trying to lose kilo’s as it prevents your body from getting into a routine.  Our bodies are really clever; cut out carbs completely and eventually your body will munch away on your muscle in order to feed itself, so variety and a balanced diet, not excluding any food group (except chocolate) is vital.

I haven’t weighed myself in Cape Town and I don’t intend doing so!  I can’t take the chance that the scale at Virgin Active here is not the same as my scale at home in Durban!  What if it tells me I have put on weight!  Na-ahhhhhh ………. Not taking any chances!

I am really beginning to enjoy going to the gym and have started to up the resistance levels on all three machines.  I cycle, row and walk on the treadmill.  I am currently doing 20 minutes on the treadmill and bicycle and 10 minutes on that infernal rowing machine.  Apart from the obvious fitness that this is giving me, I get extra calories for each activity!  There is method to my madness!  I get 287 calories for the treadmill, 223 calories for the bicycle and 111 calories for the rowing; add this to my 1738 calories for the day and BINGO I have a total of 2259 calories a day.  I am sticking to the 1738 so I hope to reach my target earlier!

We were invited to lunch last Sunday at the iconic Brass Bell in Vis Hoek!  This gave me an opportunity to have a look around the book shops in Kalk Bay and I struck gold!  As I entered the shop, ding a little bell on the door peeled a little happy ‘welcome jingle’ and my mind flushed with excitement and anticipation.  The promise of all that information standing to attention in each and every book just waiting to be read never fails to quicken my pulse.  A deep breath to drink in the smell of a thousand years and I was off.

The shop keeper or perhaps one should call him a ‘librarian’ could have jumped straight off the pages of a Dickensian novel.  Kind eyes with gold frames, kind face sitting on a bow tie plinth; he led me to the cookery book section with an apology that most of their cookery books were at a market in Kirstenbosch that day.  Such information never deters me as I always believe that fate will provide; and provide she did.

I will go for most antique cookery books if they pique my interest, but one that has a South African reference I simply cannot resist.  To find two of Hildagonda Duckitt’s books in one fell swoop rivals Napoleon’s victory at Waterloo in my world.  I am not going to expand on the life and times of one of South Africa’s first kitchen doyenne today.  This lady is worthy of an entire week of blog posts if not more and at the very least a visit to Groote Poste, the beloved homestead where she spent her formative years in South Africa.

Ok – so I am not in Cape Town anymore so I am actually posting this from my study in Durban.   I flew back to Durban early as I couldn’t get accommodation in any timeshare spots for the week during which our flat was to be decorated.  So I ran back home to be with TrickyRicky on Valentines Day, who drove all the way home to Durban from a business trip to Mozambique, walked through the door and collapsed in an exhausted heap!  Oh well!  Poor Daniele will have to live in the flat during the renovations, moving into the lounge for a week while they sort his bedroom out and then moving into his bedroom while they sort the loung out!

C’est la vie!

BUT – drum roll please!  I lost 2kg’s during my stay in Cape Town …. I think I left them at Virgin Active in Sea Point!

Yeeeeeeeeeeee-haaaaaaaaaa!!!!

treadmill

Light & Lean Steak Stacks

I found one of these stacks with a cup of steamed broccoli and butternut enough for me for a dinner.  TrickyRicky had two and was happy.

The tomato stack is only 325 calories!
The tomato stack is only 325 calories!

Ingredients

1 x 150g fillet medallions (251 calories)

Large mushrooms approx. 60g each (15 calories)

Large red onions halved (50 calories per half)

Large beef tomatoes (17 calories per half)

30ml olive oil (240 calories)

2tsp finely chopped garlic (8 calories)

Salt & Freshly Ground Black Pepper

10ml dried oregano

1 sprig of fresh rosemary

Method

Preheat your oven to 180degrees.

Peel the onions and cut in half; wash the tomatoes and cut in half.  Place the onion and tomato halves on a baking tray.  Spray with a little olive oil, season with salt and pepper and top with garlic and a sprinkle of oregano on the tomatoes and a few leaves of rosemary on top of the onion.  Roast for 30 – 40 minutes at 180d.

L&L Steak Stacks (21)

Dust off the mushrooms and remove the woody stalk from the centre of each mushroom, place on a baking tray and season well with salt and pepper.  Sprinkle each mushroom with some chopped garlic and a tiny little drizzle of olive oil or a spritz of olive oil.  I have an olive oil in a spray bottle – which is totally fantastic as it allows you to just spritz the mushrooms with olive oil which saves on carbs!

Place into the oven and bake for 10 – 15 minutes.  Don’t cook the living bijeevers out of your mushrooms.  Ten minutes is enough time to cook the garlic but still have juicy mushrooms.  Remove from the oven and set aside.

L&L Steak Stacks (1)

Pat your pieces of beef fillet dry with some paper towel, rub or spray a little olive oil on both sides of each piece.

L&L Steak Stacks (41)

Heat your griller pan to smoking hot and place your steaks in the pan.  Fillet should only be turned once in the pan, as soon as the meat lets go of the pan turn it over.  I like my steak rare so once the other side has sealed and let go of the pan I remove it and let it rest, TrickyRicky likes his steak medium rare, so I let his cook for another 2 – 3 minutes.  ALWAYS allow your meat to rest before eating it.  Resting meat allows the juices to even out in the steak and the fibres relax resulting in a nice tender piece of meat.

L&L Steak Stacks (71)

I served these stacks with 150g of steamed broccoli dressed with a squeeze of lemon juice and seasoned with salt and freshly cracked black pepper.  (44 calories)

A squeeze of lemon, salt & pepper over the steamed brocolli which is only 44 calories for a whole cup!
A squeeze of lemon, salt & pepper over the steamed brocolli which is only 44 calories for a whole cup!

My dinner – one mushroom & tomato Stack 325 calories + 1 cup brocolli 44 calories = 369 calories

TrickyRicky’s dinner – one mushroom & tomato stack 325 calories + one mushroom & onion stack 356 calories + 1 cup brocolli = 769 calories

Next post:

Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder Seeded Wraps … Light and Lean again!

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As always

Buon Appetito

xxx

jan

Light and Lean Herbed and Spicy Avocado and Cream Cheese Wrap! Only 247 Calories!

February 7, 2013 in Cheese Recipes, Light and Lean Recipes ... Hip Friendly!, Lunchtime Recipes, Meatfree Mondays, Vegetarian Meals

I have so many blog posts on the go that I am starting to confuse myself!  I KNOW I am harping on about being on Die-T but it rather does determine the nature of the food that we are eating at the moment.  TrickyRicky and I have both got a maximum of calories that we may eat in a day.  We are both giving it horns in the gym and encourage each other all day long.  I am convinced that I look like Twiggy already and he is constantly asking me if I can see his muscles!

We laugh at each other a lot – probably not to cry!  Our first goal for the year is the first of two family weddings coming up.  Melisa, my niece is marrying her David in April and I am designing a very Audrey Hepburn style dress and coat!  My design does not allow for flubber … so we diet!

I had pretty much decided to declare a Blogging Blackout for myself during this period of sensible eating, but have subsequently changed my mind!  I am prone to such behaviour.  I can’t be the only person in the world dieting, and have decided to share some of the marginally more interesting meals together with a breakdown of the calories etc.  Perhaps there is someone else out there in the same boat as me!

I have a budget of 1738 calories a day, which if the truth be told, is ample. Add to this the 534 calories that I burn during my gym session and I could eat far more than I am.  I am by no means starving myself, heavens forbid, but am keen to reach my goal of losing 10kg’s by mid-April.  Hope springs eternal!

To our utter amazement, this whole diet thing as actually not quite as difficult as we thought that it would be.  Making simple adjustments to our eating habits has resulted in quite significant calorie savings.  We have both downloaded a simple cell phone App called MyNetDiary which makes life incredibly simple.  You enter your height, weight, activity levels and gender; then set a goal and Ping! It tells you exactly how many calories a day that you may eat.  You enter each meal and the App tracks your progress daily.  Easy as ….

Avocado, tomatoe, basil & coriander wrap … this will have you smiling all the way to the scale!

Avocado, Cream Cheese and Herb Wrap

247 calories = 1033kj

Flan de Naranja … Beat the Heat with these Cold Orange Caramels

January 28, 2013 in Baking, Desserts, Janice Tripepi, Summer Sizzlers!

I always find it nigh impossible to break the ice after a long lay-off!  Jan, the hedonist wages a fierce yet useless battle with Jan, the organised-disciplined mum, wife, worker, blogger, cook cum general factotum! All this battle seems to achieve is a Jan that’s frozen stiff.  This happens every year!  I am not comfortable with change, and my carefully contrived plans to diet, exercise, blog, and cook and work all got vaporised when I was struck down with a chronic chest infection which was treated with antibiotics, which meant that I could not possibly diet!  Well, that’s the excuse that I am sticking to it!

So, instead of kicking off the year with more traditional hip-busting, money saving health tips and recipes, I have chosen a fabulous recipe from an already cherished book that I received as a Christmas gift from Max.  Rick Stein’s latest book entitled SPAIN encapsulates all that Rick is!  Each of the 302 pages, beautifully adorned with the very best that Spain has to offer.  Rick’s food is not fussy, it’s not contrived and his prose are spectacular!  Rick and I see life through very similar eyes.  We both love to cook, to travel, to read and to share the simplest nuances with regards to food.  We each have one foot planted in the classics and the other in a foreign kitchen where we both revere and respect the time honoured recipes passed down from generation to generation.  The kind of recipes that celebrate all that is seasonal, fresh and local.

I don’t like messing with time honoured traditions and that’s just who I am.  Don’t ask me to re-invent these dishes and add the ‘flave’ of the moment.  I will always put my stamp on a recipe, replacing on flavour with another if it’s what is going to keep the horde quiet.  Perhaps it’s my age and that I am of the ‘sit-up, eat-up, look-up and shut-up’ generation where we were praised for following orders to the letter and NOT for ‘doing it our own way!”

Last Sunday our dinner table was blessed with a handful of regular friends and family.  The problem with desserts in Durban at this time of the year is that it’s generally around 32degrees at lunch time when you want to serve them.  Ice creams, no matter how hard they have been frozen, start melting the moment that you open the freezer door, never mind served and garnished on a plate; and hot desserts are just not particularly enjoyable in this heat.  Fruity flavours offer just a little respite from the heat so Flan de naranja (orange caramel creams), which is served ice cold from the fridge was my choice.  These orange caramels are not made with cream but rather freshly squeezed orange juice which is much lighter on the tummy and the orange juice just burst with flavour.  Win, win!

Flan de Naranja

Page 289, ‘Spain’ by Rick Stein

Click here to go to this Heat Beating recipe.

 

It’s great to be back and I am looking forward to 2013.  We are dieting our buns off (hopefully) and gymming our guts out!  Gotta get rid of last years indulgences! 

Wishing you all a year that is jam packed with opportunity, a dinner table that is surrounded by your loved ones and a home that is brimming with love and laughter!

Buon Anno e Buon Appetito

xxx

jan

Baked Whole Kabeljou Cabrarese

October 24, 2012 in Fish Dishes, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi

Shiver Me Timbers!  Every year, come October the pace of life seems to have its foot slammed on the accelerator.  I was in my local supermarket yesterday, and they were already unpacking their Christmas stock!  The manager, who was overseeing this event, was red faced, puffing and already scratching the back of his head.

His dark green eyes met mine, beads of sweat meandered down his cheek and breathless he uttered, “Yes, yes, yesssss ….. It’s that time again!” I think that he expected me to proffer some empathy and understanding because his jaw dropped when I suggested he hurry up and finish the job as soon as possible so I could have a look at the Christmas stock.  I did manage to trolley a pretty hand painted wooden bonboniera of (very unremarkable) crystallised ginger.

Durban is hotting up!  Literally!  La famiglia Tripepi is braaing regularly and eating al fresco most nights.  My nephew, George Tripepi, is an avid rock and surf fisherman.  He represented the Southern Natal and Natal B Side Rock and Surf Fishing Teams (he lives in Port Edward) and is passionate about the sustainability of fish stocks.  Most of what he catches he releases back into the water, but recently presented me with a beautiful Cob for the pot.  He caught this beauty in Port Edward at the river mouth, from the beach.

George was born to fish and the look on his face as he stands, rod in hand smiling at the open sea has to be seen to be fully appreciated.  His heart and soul are in the sea.  Having lived on the South Coast since 1982, he has many stories to tell, but, sadly he mostly mourns the previous abundance of fish in those waters.  He has not seen any species become extinct but rather the numbers have dropped dramatically.  He rarely catches Pinkies, Karanteen or Black Tail any more.  George sighs deeply as he describes seeing countless boats out at sea on the South Coast at night, underwater lights ablaze to lure fish, trailing kilometres if baited line to hook out absolutely everything.  They kill indiscriminately with no fear of intervention from the authorities.

So with all this in mind I was determined to honour this beauty and not waste a scrap.  I shall post two recipes as I had some fish left over after our dinner.  The first recipe is a southern Italian favourite and is adapted from Rick Steins Book, Mediterranean Escapes.  I love his approach to food, “it’s simple food cook simply!”   I wanted to cook the fish whole in the oven so this recipe was perfect.  The spices and aromatics reflect the ancient spice trade of days gone by and include saffron and sultanas which add an exotic flavour to the finished dish.  The leftover meat was recycled into some crumbed fish cakes which we enjoyed with some salad and a glass of vino for lunch.

 Click on the picture for the recipe.

Baked Kabeljou Cabrarese

Cob/ Kabeljou alla Carbrarese

Rick cooks this dish with skate wings – I doubled his quantities and changed the cooking method quite significantly as I wanted to cook the Cob whole in the oven.

Tomorrow I will post the recipe for the fish cakes I made with the left over meat.

As always

Buon appetito

xxx

jan

Gnocchi with a Tomato and Chilli Sauce

July 30, 2012 in Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Meatfree Mondays, Pasta Recipes, Vegetables

Gnocchi al'Arrabiata.

A great gnocchi recipe is a must in your pasta arsenal.  This has to be the quintessential Italian winter soul warmer.  Commercial versions of this tend to feellike a squash ball bouncing around your tummy and leave you heavy and couch bound for six hours; but a plate of homemade gnocchi is like eating feather soft, silky, angel’s pillows.  This is perfect for Meat Free Mondays too.

I get so envious when watching International cooking shows and the chef advises you to pop down to your local veggie supplier and pick up some Russet potatoes, deemed to be the perfect variety to achieve a for gnocchi making.  Blah!  It would appear that MY local just sells potatoes.   When I enquired as to what ‘variety’ of potatoes was on offer all I got the ‘Eish! I donno …. They are potatoes!” and a sideways glance.

Ideally the potato should by floury with a low water content which is fine if you can find them, but one cannot control when the craving for a bowl of soft white clouds napped with Napoletana or Arrabiata sauce is going to hit can one?  Fear not dear friends for there are ways to ‘joek’ the system.

Perfect Gnocchi

For 6 people

Ingredients

1kg of potatoes

320g flour

2 eggs

2tsp of salt

Extra flour for your worktop and hands when rolling

Method 

Place your potatoes into a large pot of salted water and bring to the boil.  Once the water is boiling reduce the heat and
simmer until cooked.

Place the potatoes into an oven at 180d for 20 minutes to dry out any water.

Now, if your potatoes are anything like mine, and they split open all you need do is preheat your
oven to about 100degrees place the potatoes into a roasting pan and place them
into the heated oven for 20 minutes.  This will dry out any water that has flooded your poor little potato. Problem solved!

While the potatoes are still hot, peel the skin off.

I find a potato ricer is the very best tool for this job – rice each potato onto a floured
surface.  If you don’t have a ricer you can mash the potatoes with a masher – just make sure that you don’t leave any
lumps in the mash.

Make a well in the centre and add your flour, eggs and salt.

Work the dough into a ball with your hands.  Don’t be tempted to add more flour to this dough as the potato will gladly suck in more and more
flour!  Don’t.  You are looking for light, soft dough and want to avoid rubbery gnocchi.

Form the dough into a ball, place onto a floured tea towel, flatten it down and cut it into easily usable chunks.

I do have to warn you that this dough is very soft and it’s not easy to work with. Use plenty of
flour on your hands and work surface,

Pull off enough dough to roll into a snake of about 10cm – roll it between your hands and cut into
small nuggets about 1,5 cm long.  Dust each nugget with flour as you go along.

Roll the dough into short snakes.

Using a fork – make the impression of the fork on the top of each one.
This is done to give an indented surface for the sauce to sink into ensuring the perfect mouthful of gnocchi and sauce.

Once you have cut them and forked them, move them to a cloth dusted with a little flour to
prevent them from sticking.  They do not like to be refrigerated and really are best used fresh.

I know that they feel very soft but they firm up perfectly when you boil them.

Bring a large pot of salted water to the boil, add your gnocchi and stir gently.

When they pop up to the surface allow them to cook for one minute then remove using a slotted
spoon.  Shake off any excess water and place them into a bowl with 5 serving spoons of your desired sauce.

TrickyRicky got into the kitchen and made a delicious pot of Tomato Arrabiata sauce for this batch
of gnocchi.  Arrabiata sauce is made from tomatoes with a hint of chilli and the recipe can be found here.

Penne with Arrabiata Sauce

 

Sei un gnocco!

“Sei un gnocco !”

Is a colloquial Italian expression that means a guy is good looking!!

One thing is for sure that these babies are not only good looking but taste buonissimo too!

As always

Xxx

Buon Appetito

Xxx

Jan

Roast Lamb with Pastina

July 27, 2012 in Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Lamb .... cooking with Lamb, Pasta Recipes, Roasts, Winter Meals

I served the left overs on rolls for lunch.

This Roast Lamb and Pastina dish falls fairly and squarely into the “Man food” category.  When it’s cold and miserable outside the smell that wafts through your home while this is in the oven is warm and happy and incredibly comforting.

Arrosto di agnello con la pastina is perfect for a weekend lunch or dinner in winter. It needs a little tender loving care and plenty of time but delivers chunks of lamb that can be eaten with a spoon it’s so tender.   All of the sauce ingredients are chopped up nice and small so that, once the meat is cooked you are left with a pot of deliciously flavoured sauce in which to cook the pastina.

Pastina literally just means, little pasta, it comes in various shapes and is most Italian babies’ introduction into the wonder world of pasta.    Again, left overs of this dish could be used to stuff ravioli, panzerotti or used in some suppli or Arancini as they appear on most restaurant menus these days.

The Tripepi boys swooped down on this meal like Japanese Kamikaze pilots which didn’t give me any time to style a plate and attempt to get a good
pic for you.  Some meals just have to be more than a blog post, don’t they?

 Arrosto di agnello con la pastina.

The Lamb and Pastina are served in one large bowl.

Preheat your oven to 220 degrees.

Ingredients

1 leg of lamb – the leg I used was 1,8kg

Olive oil or duck fat

3 onions chopped finely

12 cloves of garlic

500ml of red wine

3 carrots chopped finely

3 sticks of celery finely chopped

2 bay leaves

Rosemary – at least 5 long sprigs

2 stock cubes

Black pepper

4 small cans of peeled tomatoes – liquidised.

Water

1 x 500g packet of Rosmarino Pastina

Method

First you need to prepare the meat for the pot.  Using asharp pointed knife cut incisions into the skin of the roast on both sides.

 Poke you finger into the holes and open them
up and put salt, pepper, half a garlic clove and a tuft of rosemary into each hole.

Do this on both sides of the roast
and insert some in between the mussels inside the roast by opening them up from
the side.

Heat enough duck fat or olive oil to cover the base of the pot, brown the roast on all sides and set aside.

In the same pot brown your onions and another three cloves of garlic.

Add the red wine and cook off all of the alcohol.

Add the carrot, celery, stock cubes, bay leaves, rosemary and black pepper.

Give this a good stir and add the liquidised tins of tomato.

Put the leg of lamb back into the pot and add some boiling water to ensure that the roast is
covered with liquid.

Place the lid on the pot and put into the oven at 220 degrees for 40 minutes.

After 40 minutes reduce the heat in the oven to 160 degrees for at least 3 hours.

Once the meat is pulling away from the bone and meltingly tender the roast is ready.

Remove the meat from the pot and wrap in a piece of tin foil to keep it warm and stop it from drying
out.

Remove the rosemary sticks and bay leaves from the sauce, check it for seasoning, add 4 cups of
water and bring the sauce to the boil.

Pour in the packet of pastina and stir constantly until it’s cooked.
This will take around 9 – 10 minutes.
Don’t leave the pot alone as the pastina wills stick to the bottom.

If you feel the sauce is too thick just loosen it up slightly with another cup of water.

When the pasta is cooked, pour it into a large bowl and lay chunks of the meat on top.

Cut wedges of lemon and place them around the roast and garnish with a little fresh basil or
rosemary.

Here is another delicious roast – De-boned shoulder of Pork with crispy crackling

This is well worth your time!

Have a wonderful weekend all!

As always

Buon Appetito

Xxx

jan

How to Heal a Broken Heart … Mum’s Home Made Ravioli

July 24, 2012 in Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Lunchtime Recipes, Pasta Recipes, Wild Boar, Winter Meals

Home Made Wild Boar Ravioli

 

“Mum, I really need some family time” was all that this Mamma needed to hear on the other end of the phone last week.  Us girls tend to think that boys are big and strong and don’t have their hearts broken too often.  It’s just too easy to buy into the Cowboys  don’t cry crap.  No matter which person ends a relationship, there will always be a little carnage and an entire family mourns the loss.

Max was counting the days to his brothers’ arrival and insisted on fetching Daniele at the airport.  They are very close these two and when one hurts, they both feel it. Once all the hugging was done and dusted and words of wisdom dispensed with we all gathered around the dinner table to put the Tripepi Band-Aid, Ravioli,  over the wounds and in no time at all the house was filled with fond laughter and a good giggle was had by all.

The truth of it all is simple.  When a relationship ends, there just is no need at all for any finger pointing.  It’s just the way that life goes sometimes and the need for us to label on person as the ‘goody’ and one as the ‘baddy’ is ridiculous.   Special people come into our lives for a reason and some people stay longer than others. Hold on to and cherish the good parts and discard the rest, and above all, find a way to stay friends.

Wild Boar Ragu
Ravioli

Black Lava Salt.

I have said this before and will say it again; Italian Mamma’s are very good at stretching food to feed many mouths and use most meals more than once.
Most dishes will allow for the reinvention of left overs into another dish.  Think of the infamous Italian Frittata made from left over pasta which is either served with a salad for veggies for lunch or as Max loved, to take Frittata Rolls to school for lunch the next day.

Ravioli is just one of the many filled pasta’s.  You can fill ravioli with just about anything, but when you have made a roast as the Wild Boar I posted last week, it’s a great idea to keep a few slices and some of the sauce back to chop up finely and use as a stuffing for ravioli.  If you are not going to be making pasta any time soon just pop them into a packet and freeze ready for when you need them.  Many restaurants are serving ‘Arancini’ or ‘Suppli” these days – a ball or dome of rice wrapped meat that is crumbed and deep fried.  Another great way to use left overs.

Clickhere for the Wild Boar Ragu Recipe

Wild Boar Ragu

 

 

Ravioli Dough

Feeds 4

Ingredients all lined up and ready!

Pasta dough.

Ingredients

3 eggs

300g flour

2 – 3tsp olive oil

2tsp salt

Click here for a step-by-step guide to making fresh pasta.

Mix your flour, eggs, salt and olive oil in your mixer or by hand on a floured surface.

Knead the dough until it forms a smooth ball, wrap up in cling film and refrigerate for half an hour.

Cut your dough into manageable sized balls, flatten with your hand, dust with flour and put through  your pasta machine 3 times on number one, folding the piece of dough twice between rolling.

Roll the floured dough through your machine.

Now, put the dough through your machine on each setting until you get to number 8.  You need the sheets to be as thin as possible
as you are going to put two together to form the ravioli and no one likes thick
heavy ravioli.

Once each sheet is done, place it on a clean table cloth somewhere safe.  My Dalmatian Bubbles just loves to steal
sheets of fresh pasta off the table!

Lay the sheets out on a table cloth!

The Filling

Chop the meat very finely.

Cut your left over roast meat up very finely and make sure that it’s not too saucy.

Lightly beat one egg in a cup to use to glue your ravioli together.

Cut squares of the pasta using a cookie cutter or a pasta wheel.

Place 1/2tsp of meat in the centre of a square of pasta and brush the outside with beaten egg.

Place half a teaspoon of meat in the centre of your square.

Place another square of dough on top of this and seal the edges taking care to squeeze out all of  the air.  If you don’t do this, the ravioli will often burst when you boil it.

Place another piece on top, squeeze out the air and close the sides up.

Set aside on clean tea towel.

Set the ravioli aside on a tea towel to dry.

The Sauce

You have so many choices here.  I prefer to keep a sauce with ravioli quite light.   I served these ravioli with the sauce that the Wild Boar was cooked in.

All I did was sieve out all of the liquid from the left over sauce using a Chinois Sieve, reduced it slightly in a frying pan, added a dash of cream and seasoned with some black pepper.

To Serve

Bring a large pot of salted water to a rolling boil, pop in your ravioli and cook for around 10 minutes.  You need to take one out and taste it to see if the pasta is soft enough.

When the ravioli is cooked, pour into a colander and drain off all of the excess water.  Toss in some sauce and serve with a garnishing of fresh herbs.  I used
fragrant rosemary and a little dash of beautiful black lava salt.

Fresh Wild Boar Ravioli with a creamy light sauce.

Serve garnished with fragrant fresh rosemary.

As always

Buon Appetito

Xxx

jan

Pickled Pig Porter Beer and Cheese Bread.

July 19, 2012 in Bread Recipes, Cheese Recipes, Janice Tripepi, Lunchtime Recipes, Winter Meals

Isn’t it amazing how our pallets mature and develop as we grow up? (NB: I didn’t say, age!) Every Christmas Mum would haul out the family silver and polish

Stout Beer Bread at Sunset!

it with what I was convinced was a bottle of milk of magnesia!  Out came the Victorian table cloth, and we were served exactly the same meal year in and year out.  I guess that our family were the veritable definition of that favourite English institution called ‘tradition’.

 

We were very seldom, if ever, allowed or even given sweets and were not at all spoilt.  But Christmas time was the one time in the year when boundaries softened just a little and we got certain ‘treats’.   At Christmas lunch each one of us was given a shiny silver champagne goblet of the palest yellow Perry bubbly called Babycham.   Each dinky little green bottle was festooned with a pale blue label sporting the cutest and cuddliest little pale blue baby  deer on the entire planet.  I felt so very grown up with my goblet of Babycham and I loved everything about the ritual; from the little pale blue and gold Babycham carrier bag to the sparkly stars on the side of the bottle, all except one very important feature, the taste!  I hated it!  How could something so pretty taste so foul?  I stoically quaffed most of my tipple, pretending to enjoy it for I couldn’t possibly be the odd one out!

I kissed him but, alas, no Prince appeared!

Oh, how things have changed.  I can sniff out and slaughter a bottle of bubbly at two hundred paces these days!  However, one libation that I have never really been able to enjoy is beer, but, it seems that this too is changing.  Kami and I decided to go for lunch at the Rawdons’ Estate on our Midlands Meander last Saturday.  As we drew into the estate I noticed a sign that had something about cheese tasting on it!  Even though cheese does not like me I am like a cheese starved church mouse on a bad day.  Within five minutes of arriving we found ourselves in the bar partaking of a beer tasting of the
finest of the Nottingham Road Brewing Company.  I still can’t believe it but I thoroughly enjoyed these very fine beers.

I'm glad I don't have to polish this!

First we tasted the Whistling Weasel Pale Ale, produced by a chipper ‘whistling brewer’ who believes that whistling a tune while tending his brew adds a dash of joy and light-heartedness to every glass.  This was followed by Tiddly Toad Lager which the brewer aptly describes as, “delicious fullness, and has more fine hops than a hyperactive toad. Then the Pye-Eyed Possum Pilsner which has a lot more alcohol content that the first two and is designed for the more seasoned beer lover and lastly the Pickled Pig Porter a full, dark beer that I found a bit too bitter for my liking.  Each one of these bottles of Nottie’s Nectar is brewed from spring water found on the estate that is rich in minerals and must be good for one!  No preservatives aside, I was feeling fabulous within minutes.  Before leaving the estate I bought me a mixed pack of these amber elixirs and a round of the Pickled Porter cheese with which to continue the merriment in my kitchen at home.

Our beer tasting line-up.

After a good few more stops along the meander, a few bars, a Belgian chocolatier, a German deli, another few bars and the infamous ceramic studio from whom I purchased my terracotta brazier it was time to head for home.

On Tuesday I posted my Spicy Apple & Pumpkin Moroccan soup recipe, lovingly prepared in my tagine on top of said brazier.  I served the soup with a loaf of beer & cheese bread made with a bottle of the Pickled Pig Porter the dark and slightly bitter ‘stout’ beer and half of the Beer Cheese.

This combination yielded delicious malty, crusty dark fleshy bread punctuated with delicious chunks of beer cheese and was the perfect bread to slather with butter and dunk into bowls of steaming hot soup.

 

This recipe is not my own,  it belongs to one my favourite bloggers Carey of Bits of Carey who comes up with a fabulous array of Monday to Sunday dishes each month in  Crush on-line magazine and her recipes are light, delicious and well worth subscribing to. Check out this month’s dishes here.

Carey’s Beer Bread Recipe- Slightly amended to make this dark cheesy loaf.

The Pickled Pig Porter cheese and beer.

 Ingredients

450ml Bitters or Stout such as Pickled Pig Porter or Guinness

 500g Self-Raising Flour

Salt and pepper

Thyme

Wedges of Cheese

Method

Preheat your oven to 180 degrees

Mix the bread ingredients together and spoon into a greased loaf tin.

You can use either a loaf pan or a round sponge pan.

Push wedges of cheese into the top of the dough

Sprinkle with some thyme and flavoured salt.

Brush the top with some beaten egg yolk or a spray with a dash of olive oil.

I sprinkled some cayenne pepper on top to add a bit of a bite!

Bake for 1 hour.

Spicy Moroccan Apple & Pumpkin Soup

I cut thick slices of this bread, slathered with butter and served

with the soup.  Click on the title above to go to the recipe for the soup.

Here are some other of my soup recipes.

EasyMussel Soup

A  rich garlic, white wine and creamy soup.

Roasted Red Pepper, Brinjal & Tomato Soup with

Thelight alternative to gnocchi – gnudi!

Try making these Mushroom and Spinach Gnudi – they are light little Italian dumplings, just like Gnocchi
but without the potato.  They are made with ricotta cheese and can be flavoured with mushroom, spinach, butternut,
cheese or even finely chopped leftover meat!  They can be served on a soup, in a broth, or baked with a sauce in the oven.

Lunch menu at Rawdons.Hand crafted Belgian chocolates ..... padkos!

As
always I wish you

Buon
Appetito

Xxx

jan

Spicy Dorado on a bed of Fettuccine with a creamy Leek and Fennel Sauce.

June 13, 2012 in Fish Dishes, Janice Tripepi, Pasta Recipes

Pan fried Dorado on a bed of Fennel & Leek Mascarpone Sauce.

Every now and then la cucina Tripepi gets a visit from the kitchen fairies.  Last night they flapped their little wings, clicked their red sequined happy tappy heels together and a moment of perfect culinary synergy prevailed.  The dish looked elegant and ate even better.  For an original creation ‘twas naught less than the equivalent of a pair of Jimmy Choo’s I tell you.

I had planned to make orecchiette (little ear shaped pasta) with Cime di Rapa, a typical pasta dish from Puglia made with turnip tops and an anchovy based sauce.  It’s clean, fresh and almost vegetarian. Unfortunately “Earthmother” the shop that I usually get organic veggies from had run out of the magnificent bunches of turnips that they had on sale last week, so my plans were dashed.

A trip to my local super yielded a nice piece of fresh Dorado and my dew bin yielded some crispy fennel and leeks waiting for some special treatment.  What blew my hair back with this dish is the balance that was created between the fennel, leek and the fish.   The only improvement I can possibly think of would be a dash of Pernod to deglaze the pan that the fennel and leeks were in to heighten the flavour of the fennel.  I will try this next time.

This is such an elegant dish; it is cooked in a flash would make a wonderful main course for a dinner party.  Unfortunately I cooked this dish in the evening resulting in some rather bad lighting to photograph in and there were no left overs to photograph in a stylish manner the next day.  Oh well!

 

Creamy
Fennel & Leek Fettuccine with Pan Fried Spicy Dorado

Clean and slice your fennel and leeks.

clean and slice your fennel and leeks.

Ingredients

      Dorado  or any firm white fish

2 cloves of garlic finely chopped

A large knob of butter

1/2 a large red chilli, for a bit of zing and a little colour

4 medium sized fennels, cleaned and sliced thinly – reserve some of the top for
garnishing the finished dish

4 leeks – cleaned and sliced thinly

3Tbs of mascarpone

½ cup of vegetable or chicken stock

Freshly cracked black pepper

250g fresh fettuccini

I recently reorganised my spice drawer using these jars.

My re-styled spices an idea I got from Pinterest.

 Method

Bring a large pot of salted water to the boil while you cook the fennel and the fish.

Over a medium heat, melt the butter and gently fry the garlic and chilli

Cook the fennel and leeks gently over a moderate heat.

Add the sliced fennel and leeks to the pan and fry gently for 3 minutes then add
the half a cup of chicken or vegetable stock and cover the pan with a lid.  You don’t want to brown the fennel and leeks
for this dish.  Remove the lid once the
fennel and leeks are soft and cook off most of the liquid.

Add the mascarpone and black pepper to taste and once the mascarpone has melted
remove the pan from the heat.

Skin the fish, heat a griddle pan and rub olive oil over the fish to prevent it from
sticking to the pan.  Cook until the fish
is just cooked – don’t overcook the fish.
Set aside to rest.

Make sure your griddle pan is nice and hot to get good colour on your fish.

Add
the fresh fettuccine to the pot of salted water – they will cook in about 4
minutes.

Using
a pasta scoop lift the fettuccine out of the pot and place them straight into
the pan with the fennel & leek sauce.
Stir into the sauce and start plating up.

Add the fettuccine straight from the pot into your pan.

Place
a bed of fettuccine in the bottom of your pasta bowl

Top with
a piece of the fresh Dorado and garnish with some chopped fresh red chilli and
snip some fennel tops (dill) over the whole dish.  A light grind of black pepper and Walla!  Serve.

Your fish will be juicy and succulent if you don't overcook it.

I got a brilliant idea from Pinterest for reorganising you spices

click on this link above to have a look at my Pinterest Boards – you will be able to see all of my recipes

a lot easier by doint this.  Pinterest is loads of fun!

My spice drawer went from this ….

Chaos!

To this ….

Way more practical and organised.

Way more practical, tidy and uber organised!

I bought 24 jars from a wholesaler, painted the lids with blackboard paint and wrote the name of

the spice in each jar on the top with a Tipex pen!  I can now buy large quantities of spices from my local

spice shop and store ALL of my spices in one drawer!

bonus!

 As  always

Buon
Appetito

Xxx

Jan

 

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