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Italian Recipes

Bucatini Amatriciana

Bucatini Amatriciana

Being busy sure takes a lot out of you. I mean, it’s a good thing, always having something to do. But something’s gotta give eventually right? And for me, I’ve had to neglect a few chores for a while (paperwork, ugh!) but worst of all, I’ve fallen behind in my schedule to update the blog! I actually will be adding a page soon with a list of some of the local restaurants that I frequent but I’m trying to figure out how to sort it. By cuisine? By neighborhood? By price??

While on that note, I was at Giacomo’s for the first time in 8 years living in Boston. I’ve heard great things about the food but I also heard that the line can be long, especially since the North End location can only sit at most about 20 people! But last week, we decided to chance it and only had to wait about 20 minutes (Maybe it was a late dinner on a Sunday night that did it) and were treated to quite a meal. The specialty appetizer is fried calamari and despite it being a very mainstream dish, Giacomo’s made it unique…in a good way. I’m also a sucker for fusilli (probably my favorite type of pasta) so I got the house special fusilli with lobster and shrimp. In hindsight, I should’ve probably saved some of it for lunch the next day but I couldn’t stop eating! The only negative point I’ve heard about the place is that the waitstaff tries to turn over tables as quickly as they can. Which could mean dining in less than an hour during busy times (which almost is all the time)!

Being a huge fan of noodles and pasta (and inspired by some of the dishes I’ve had dining out), I’ve really been trying to recreate some things at home. I feel that the magic is in two distinct steps.

#1 : Don’t overcook the noodles
#2 : It’s all in the sauce

Contrary to the way I used to think, you don’t need to use that much “stuff” in your noodles. That is, meat and vegetables. And that, in addition to bringing the noodles to the forefront of the dish, keeps cooking cheap. For example, for 1.5-2lb fresh rice noodles, I use between 3/4 to 1 pound of meat (usually stuff I bought on sale a while ago and kept in the freezer).

Most of my experience here has been with Asian style noodles. And you’ve probably noticed that I’ve been on an Italian kick as of late and that it was only a matter of time until I got to more pasta dishes right? If not, that’s ok, I forgive you =P

But anyway, one of my favorite dishes when dining out is any kind of pasta in a fra diavolo (spicy marinara) sauce, especially mixed seafood. I’ve only ever tried making a base tomato sauce a friend of mine taught me and never really deviated from it since. That is, until I got my hands on Marcella Hazan’s Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking! I hate to keep sounding like a broken record but I can’t say enough good things about Marcella’s recipes. She provides so much intricate detail and description to a recipe but keeps the whole process unbelievably simple. It’s one of my favorite cookbooks…that’s for sure.

Recipe is adapted from Marcella Hazan’s Marcella Hazan’s Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking.

Bucatini Amatriciana

Serves 4 – 5
Time : 35-40 minutes

Ingredients:
– 1 lb bucatini (spaghetti, linguine work too)
– 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
– 1 tbsp butter
– 1 medium onion, chopped
– 1 clove garlic, minced
– 1/4 lb pancetta, sliced into strips
– 1 28oz can of whole Italian Tomatoes
– Red pepper flakes
– Salt, to taste
– Freshly grated parmesan and romano cheese

Method:
1. Add the oil, butter, garlic, and onion to a saucepan on medium heat. Cook until the onion becomes slightly translucent.
2. Add the pancetta and cook another minute.
3. Add the tomatoes, pepper flakes, and salt. Crush the whole tomatoes against the side of the saucepan with a wooden spoon.
4. Simmer uncovered for about 20-30 minutes. Taste and correct for salt and spiciness.
5. While simmering the sauce, boil hot water (with at least 1 tbsp salt) and cook the pasta to the desired firmness.
6. Toss the cooked pasta with the sauce and freshly grated cheese and serve.

Tomato Anchovy Beef Patty

Pasta Amatriciana w/ Tomato/Mozzarella/Anchovy Beef Patty

If you live in the area, you probably know that there was a water main break over the weekend. Then came the boil water order. It’s funny that temporarily being deprived of clean water can inconvenience someone so much. No washing dishes, no drinking water, be careful showering, no brushing teeth…the list goes on! Fortunately I haven’t gotten completely through my case of poland spring yet so it’s only slightly annoying.

On a side note, I was up in New Hampshire on Saturday making a meat run, as strange as that sounds. Jason from Bite the Bullet BBQ e-mailed me just a little while back with a deal I just couldn’t refuse. He had a Spring offer for 12 racks of ribs…I just couldn’t turn that down! And for good measure, I asked if he would be able to cook up some pulled pork too and he did (I ended up with 12 racks of ribs and 4 pork butts). I brought a friend up with me too…he was a little skeptical at first after Jason fed us with some fresh meat off the grill, he couldn’t stop talking about it on the way back. And of course, in a lack of foresight, I forgot my camera…doh!

Anyway, while experimenting with some of Marcella Hazan’s sauces, I figured I’d try out something else in addition. Anchovies never have been a big part of my diet but they’re used fairly often in Italian cooking, so I decided to give it a shot. Marcella suggests that one buy anchovies fresh from the market (read: not in a can or jar) but not having that available, I had to resort to the jarred stuff. Not that it was THAT bad mind you, I just wanted to see what the suggested anchovies would taste like!

Beef Patties baked with Anchovies and Mozzarella

Time: 30-40 minutes
Serves : 6

Ingredients:
– 1 slice white bread, crust removed
– 3 tbsp skim milk
– 1.5 – 2 lb ground beef (93%)
– 1 egg
– salt
– plain bread crumbs
– canola oil
– a little butter
– 28oz can whole tomatoes, drained
– 1/2 tsp dried Oregano
– Mozzarella cheese
– 12 flat anchovy fillets

Method:
1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit.
2. Add the milk and bread to a small saucepan over low heat. Mash the bread to a pulp with the fork and remove from heat.
3. Combine the chopped meat with the milk mush, egg, and a sprinkle of salt. Mix well and then shape into 6 patties. Dredge the patties in bread crumbs.
4. Add a little bit of oil to a frying pan and cook the patties over medium high heat for about 2 minutes on either side, turning only once.
5. Slice each tomato in half and scoop out the seeds. Slice a small sliver from one of the pieces for garnish later.
6. Butter a baking dish and place the patties in the dish. Cover each patty with both halves of a tomato, sprinkle with a little salt and oregano, top with a slice of mozzarella cheese and finally place 2 anchovy fillets, criss-crossed, on top with the sliver of tomato placed in the center.
7. Bake for about 10 minutes and then serve directly at the table.

Note: I served this with Pasta Amatriciana. I’ll have a post about that soon =)

Rigatoni Bolognese

Rigatoni Bolognese

This past Sunday was nearly a perfect day. Warm enough to not need a jacket but windy enough to keep you from sweating. So what did I do? I drove out to Shrewsbury to spend 5 hours hand washing, polishing, and waxing my car. That’s some love right there! And really, the car appreciated being all prettied up =P

I switched to a manual about 5 months ago and really, it’s been a huge change to how I viewed cars. I liked driving but it seemed more like transportation than fun. Now that I’ve got the manual (it goes vroom!), driving just became much more engaging. I’m paying a lot more attention to what’s going on around me and it’s a blast to make the engine roar as you merge onto the highway. Now that I’ve switched, I don’t think I can go back. I drove an automatic a month back and I kept trying to press the clutch and switch gears…too funny!

Over the past couple weeks, I’ve read through Marcella Hazan’s Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking. Many of the blogs I read have featured recipes adapted from this book, and for good reason, Marcella is considered one of the premier authors of homestyle Italian cooking! I picked out the Rigatoni Bolognese right away. I’ve had some different versions of this in restaurants but I’ve never really thought much of it. I wished I used more tomatoes (or had more meat sauce made up for the pound of pasta suggested) but it turned out very tasty!

Quick word of caution…there’s a lot of butter used here, this isn’t diet food =)

Rigatoni Bolognese

Time : 1 – 1.5 hours
Serves : 6

Ingredients:
– 1 lb Rigatoni (I used Mezzi Rigatoni)
– Salt, to taste
– 6 tbsp Parmesan cheese, grated

Bolognese Sauce:
– 1 tbsp Canola oil
– 3 tbsp butter
– 1 small yellow onion, chopped
– 2 stalks celery, chopped
– 1-2 carrots (about 2/3 cup), chopped
– 1 lb ground beef (I used 90% lean)
– 1 cup skim milk
– 1 cup dry white wine
– 1 28oz can whole Italian plum tomatoes, cut up w/ juice (I used half but I recommend the whole can)
– Salt, to taste
– Freshly ground black pepper, to taste
– Nutmeg

Bechamel Sauce:
– 2 cups skim milk
– 4 tbsp butter
– 3 tbsp all-purpose flour
– 1/4 tsp salt

Method:

First:
1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit.
2. Boil enough water for the pasta. While doing the other steps, cook pasta until slightly undercooked as the pasta will be baked later on.

Second, prepare the Bolognese Meat sauce (use ingredients listed above for Bolognese sauce):
1. Using a dutch oven or medium saucepan, add the oil, butter, and onion, cook and stir over medium heat until the onion is translucent. Add celery and carrot and cook another couple minutes, stirring the vegetables to coat.
2. Add ground beef, a pinch of salt, and some fresh black pepper. Break up the meat and stir until meat is barely cooked through.
3. Add milk and simmer gently until the milk has bubbled away. Add a pinch of nutmeg and stir.
4. Add the white wine and simmer until the wine has evaporated. Add the tomatoes. Simmer until ready to combine everything.

Next, prepare the Bechamel sauce:
1. Add milk to a saucepan. Heat over medium low until a ring of small bubbles forms on the outer edge of the pan.
2. Add butter to a separate saucepan. Melt over low heat and add the flour, stirring with a wooden spoon. Cook for about 2 minutes and remove from the heat. Be careful not to let the flour become colored (overcooked).
3. Add milk to flour/butter mixtures a little bit at a time, stirring constantly. Increase the amount of milk as the mixture becomes a little more liquid.
4. Place pan back on the burner over low heat and add the salt. Stir constantly until the sauce becomes thick, like heavy cream.

Finally:
1. Toss the cooked pasta with the meat sauce, bechamel, and 4 tbsp Parmesan cheese.
2. Butter a baking dish and add the mixed pasta. Top with 2 tbsp grated Parmesan and a little bit of butter (also parsley flakes if you like).
3. Bake for 10 minutes (or more if you like the top crispier)

Some Notes:
– This can be prepared under an hour if each stage is planned out well. I suck at planning so this really took me more like the 90 minutes but I can see how it can be done in less time!
– The Bolognese sauce can probably be prepared the night before

Spaghetti & Meatballs

Spaghetti & Meatballs

This past week has been some of the best weather I’ve seen (for March anyway) in Boston in the past 8 years. After 10-11 inches of rain in 3 days and massive flooding throughout the state, it hit 72 degrees on Saturday. From deluge to shorts weather…freaky. I won’t complain though, I got to dust off the golf clubs and hit up the driving range. And I guess a lot of others had the same idea, ended up waiting 30 minutes to get a booth, the line was 2 deep at one point!!!

I’ve also been on the hunt for a good tripod and head. Up until now, I’ve been shooting without a tripod and most of the time without flash. So it’s been tough to turn out good shots (can’t hold steady) and I’m getting a little tired of sifting through a dozen shots to find out none of them look any good! I’ve heard of a few brands, Manfrotto comes to mind, but I just started really looking this week. Pics to come once I get it though.

Anyway, onto the food. I’m a huge fan of Ree at The Pioneer Woman Cooks. She provides a step by step pictorial on almost all of her dishes as well as interesting tidbits and tips for each dish. But the thing I like the most is how homey the dishes feel, I’m an big admirer of homestyle cooking. There’s something to be said about the creativity home cooks have had over the years to feed their families, good times and bad.

Spaghetti and Meatballs is no exception. When I started cooking I never really paid any attention to staple dishes like this and Macaroni and Cheese. I guess my experience had been mostly cafeteria food and made from a box, so maybe that’s why I was blocking it out! But really, the stuff is classic for a reason, because it’s good AND it’s easy to make!

Recipe originally from The Pioneer Woman Cooks.

Spaghetti & Meatballs

Time: 90 minutes
Serves 6-8

Ingredients:
– 1 lb ground beef (85 or 90% lean)
– 1 lb ground pork
– 2 eggs
– 4-5 cloves garlic, minced
– 3/4 cup plain bread crumbs
– 3/4-1 cup grated Romano cheese
– 1/4 cup Italian parsley, minced
– 1/4 tsp salt
– Fresh ground black pepper
– 1-2 tbsp skim milk
– 4 – 5 tbsp extra virgin olive oil

Sauce:
– 28oz can Italian plum tomatoes
– 28oz can crushed tomatoes
– 1 medium yellow onion, chopped
– 5 cloves garlic, minced
– 1/2 cup dry white wine
– 1/4 tsp salt
– 2 tsp sugar
– Fresh ground black pepper
– Red pepper flakes
– 1/4 cup Italian parsley, minced
– 1 – 2 lbs Spaghetti, cooked

Method:
1. Combine meat, garlic, breadcrumbs, romano, salt, pepper, parsley, eggs, and milk in a mixing bowl. Mix together well. Roll into meatballs (should be around 30).
2. Heat a dutch oven over medium heat. Add olive oil and cook meatballs, 8 at a time until browned, it’s ok if slightly undercooked, the meatballs will be returned to the sauce later. Remove meatballs and drain.
3. When finished with the meatballs, add onions and garlic, stirring for a couple minutes. Make sure to scrape up the brown bits that may have stuck to the bottom of the pot. Add in tomatoes, wine, salt, pepper, sugar, and parsley. Stir to combine and simmer for 20 minutes.
4. Add meatballs back to the pot, reduce heat, and cook another 30-45 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Chicken Saltimbocca

Chicken Saltimbocca

Have you ever had a favorite dish at a restaurant you’d order almost every time without hesitation? So tasty that you think about it in the minutes beforehand, ready to ferociously dig in? Savoring every bite then wishing there was more? Well, for me, one of those dishes is chicken saltimbocca, chicken with sage and prosciutto in a white wine sauce. This is one of my Italian favorites, I’ve ordered it at almost all of the local Italian places I’ve been to (except some of the fancier ones that don’t have it on the menu. I guess it’s a little low-class for them)

But the funny thing is, I must have had this dish at least a dozen times over the last year or so and it never really occurred to me that I could try to make it myself. Maybe I could blame my laziness, the intimidation of Italian cooking, or even that I’m loathe to open up a new bottle of wine every time I cook (since I don’t cook every night) but no, I can’t even make an excuse for it. I just…well it didn’t even cross my mind until a couple weeks back.

I’m not really sure how it actually came to mind (could be that I ordered a new cookbook, more details on this when I actually cook something from it) but off I was, scouring the Internet for recipes. There were a ton of recipes to be found, some I liked…and of course some not so much.

Anyway, the recipe posted below is a compilation of several I found on the net along with a few additions of my own.

Chicken Saltimbocca

Time : 35-45 minutes
Serves 4

Ingredients:
– 4 Boneless chicken cutlets (4-6 oz each)
– 8 thin slices of prosciutto
– 8 fresh sage leaves (plus more for garnish)
– 4 slices fontina or mozzarella
– 1/2 cup flour
– 2 tbsp butter
– 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
– 1 shallot, minced
– 4 cloves garlic, minced
– 1/2 – 3/4 cup dry white wine
– 1/2 cup chicken broth

Method:
1. Sprinkle each chicken cutlet with salt and pepper. Pound flat, roughly a quarter of an inch. Lightly dredge the chicken cutlets in the flour
2. Heat 1 tbsp olive oil and 1 tbsp butter in a large frying pan. When the butter melts, place the chicken in the pan. Cook 3-4 minutes then flip over. Place 2 sage leaves and 2 slices of prosciutto on each cutlet. Place a slice of cheese on each cutlet and cook, covered, for another 3-4 minutes. Remove cutlets to a platter and cover.
3. Add shallots and garlic to the hot pan with 1 tbsp olive oil, let sit for about 10-15 seconds.
4. Add wine to the hot pan (watch for the smoke!) and use a wooden spoon to scrape all the brown bits from the pan. Reduce the wine to about half, then add the chicken broth. Reduce again, then remove from heat and add the remaining 1 tbsp butter.
5. Taste the sauce and adjust accordingly with some salt and fresh pepper. Pour the sauce over the cutlets and serve.