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Raviolo Aperto


"ne’ carne ne’ pesce”, in other words neither meat nor fish
Another interpretation of the “raviolo aperto”, with a mixture of vegetables and an emulsion of fresh tomato sauce and olive oil for dressing. (www.lovesicily.com)

פסטה וגבינה


החומרים:
1 חבילה (400 גרם) ספגטיני (ספגטי דק)
70 גרם חמאה
3 כפות (כ-30 גרם) קמח
1/2 2 כוסות חלב
200 גרם גבינת גאודה מגוררת או כל גבינה צהובה אחרת שאוהבים
1/4 כפית אגוז מוסקט מגורר


לסלט:
1/4 כוס שמן זית
1/8 כוס חומץ בן-יין לבן
1 שן שום, קלופה וכתושה
1 כפית חרדל
1 כפית דבש
מלח, פלפל שחור
1/2 2 כוסות עלי סלט צעירים (בייבי גרינס)


מחממים את התנור לחום בינוני ומשמנים את שקעי התבנית.
מבשלים את הפסטה לפי ההוראות על גבי האריזה. מסננים, שוטפים במים קרים ומניחים בצד.
ממיסים את החמאה בסיר בינוני ומוסיפים את הקמח. ממשיכים לערבב, תוך חימום, כדקה. מוסיפים את החלב ומבשלים, תוך ערבוב מהיר, עד שהרוטב מסמיך. מוסיפים את הגבינה ואת אגוז המוסקט ומתבלים במלח ובפלפל. מערבבים קלות,
מוסיפים את הפסטה, מערבבים יחד ומעבירים לשקעי המאפינס, כך שיהיו מלאים לגמרי. אופים 15 דקות, עד הזהבה.
הסלט: שמים במעבד מזון או בלנדר ידני את השמן, את החומץ, את השום, את החרדל ואת הדבש. מתבלים במלח ובפלפל ומערבבים יחד עם הסלט. משחררים את המאפים מהשקעים, מניחים על צלחות ומגישים עם הסלט

Macaroni Salad

1/3 cups elbow macaroni
Cook macaroni in large pot of boiling salted water just until tender but still firm to bite, stirring occasionally.
Drain. Rinse under cold water; drain well.

2/3 cup mayonnaise
1/4 cup Dijon mustard
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1 1/2 tablespoons sugar

Whisk mayonnaise, mustard, lemon juice and sugar in large bowl.

1 1/3 cups chopped drained bread-and-butter pickles or dill pickles
1 1/4 cups chopped celery
2 4-ounce jars sliced pimientos, drained
1/2 cup thinly sliced green onions

Mix in macaroni, pickles, celery, pimientos and onions.

2 chopped hard-boiled eggs [optional]

Season with salt and pepper.

This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Serves 6 to 8.

(*) Next time I will use much less mustard, and try the addition of black olives as other reviewers suggested. Tastes better after being refrigerated for a day. (epicurious)

Gnocchi

floury potatoes
The more floury the better. Washed, not peeled. The waxy sort just won't do. With 500 grams you can make gnocchi for 4 people as a starter or for 2-3 as a main dish.

all purpose flour
The amount varies every time.

eggs
One every 500 grams of potatoes.
This is optional but helps getting a dough that's easier to work with and, according to some, does not fall apart when cooked.

These are the classic ingredients.
One could add herbs, spices, cocoa powder, pumpkin (you'll need more flour in this case), chestnuts (just to name a few) to get flavoured gnocchi.
Herbs and pumpkin ones are traditional.
What absolutely does not come in the gnocchi is salt. Salt is hygroscopic, i.e. absorbs water, and could make the gnocchi fall apart.

Apart from a working surface, pot, slotted spoon, you'll need a ricer.
The ricer is in my experience the best way to mash the potatoes for gnocchi so to preserve their fluffiness.
I've tried other methods too. Food processor gives really gummy gnocchi, a potato masher is OK but you have too look out for eventual lumps.

So the first step is to boil the potatoes till done.
A bit overcooked is better than undercooked but try to get them out as soon as they're done.
While still hot peel the potatoes and press them through the ricer.
Wait till slightly cooler and add the beaten egg(s) and mix, adding flour from time to time till you have a soft but not sticky dough. The flour amount varies with potato sort, weather and so on: most of the times I have to add about 200 grams.

Once the dough is finished, take a piece as big as a small orange and shape it into a stubby cylinder.
Lay it on a floured surface and using both hands roll it till you get a uniform 1-1.5 cm thick dough "rope".

Rigagnocchi

Cut into square pieces. The pieces are already gnocchi but to make the sauce you'll be serving with them stick better you should make them ribbed using a gnocchi board or a fork. You put a piece of dough at one end of the board and, rolling it with your thumb, push it to the other end. I prefer the gnocchi board because I'm not really good at doing it with a fork but both work fine.


Dust the finished gnocchi with a bit of flour and let them rest while you shape the rest of the dough.

Gnocchi can be cooked straight away but can rest for some time (I never tried longer than 2 hours).
To cook them throw them in a pot full of salted water (lots of salt! the gnocchi don't have any, remember?) at a gentle boil and strain them as soon as they come to the surface with a slotted spoon.
You should avoid overcrowding your pot so you might have to cook them in batches.

Just add a little of the sauce of your choice to the cooked ones to prevent them sticking to each other.


Traditional sauces for gnocchi are: burro e salvia (sage butter), simple tomato sauce with basil, cheese sauces (for example gorgonzola sauce: lots of gorgonzola melted in a little milk), sometimes also meat sauces (hare ragout and similar).


They're also great with tomato sauce, scamorza cubes and a sprinkling of parmisan then baked till the gnocchi on the top turn brown and slightly crunchy (gnocchi alla Sorrentina).
------------------
Il Forno: My tiny culinary institute: gnocchi

Fettuchine Alfredo


Fettuccine noodles combined with Alfredo Sauce.

The Italian sauce consists of heavy cream or half and half that is mixed with butter, grated Parmesan cheese, pepper, and occasionally nutmeg to create a rich Italian meal. (see Alfredo Sauce)