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Cherry Love: Cherries with Chianti

Hooray it’s finally cherry season! To celebrate we will bring you one chef or restaurant recipe daily featuring cherries for the next several days. The season is sadly a short one so enjoy it ASAP!

Today’s feature is Cherries in Chianti by Chef Ben Davis, which can be served on it’s own as a simple Tuscan dessert or served over vanilla ice cream. Chianti wine has primary notes of cherry in addition to plum, strawberry, spices and almonds, giving this dish a gorgeous harmony of flavors.

photo by bensonkua on Flickr

Cherries in Chianti
Chef Ben Davis, Tony’s Market, Denver

1/2 cups Chianti (you may substitute zinfandel or syrah)
1/2 cups sparkling water
2 cups sugar
2 strips lemon zest
3 strips orange zest
4 black peppercorns
pinch of ground cinnamon
1 pound pitted cherries (you may substitute frozen or canned)

Combine the first 7 ingredients in a non-reactive saucepan and bring to a boil. Reduce the liquid until slightly thickened and reduced by half, which should take close to 15 minutes.

Add the cherries and continue cooking for another 5 to 7 minutes. Remove from the heat and cool to room temperature before storing covered in the refrigerator. Serve at room temperature, enjoy!

For more recipes with cherries, explore the rest of the Cherry Love series including Chef Michael Symon’s Pickled Cherries recipe, and a contest winning Cherry Basil Pasta recipe.

Italian Recipes Seafood Recipes

Leeks, Clams, White Wine, Chef Bartolotta and Average Betty

Photo © AverageBetty.com

Leeks, Clams, White Wine, Chef Bartolotta and Average Betty, can you imagine anything more scrumptious?     Our favorite diva foodie rocks it in a video interview with Chef Paul Bartolotta, a two time James Beard award winner from Bartolotta Ristorante Di Mare restaurant in Las Vegas.   Here he tells all and shares the recipe for his famous Brodetto di Vongole e Porri, aka “Tiny Clams in a White Wine Broth with Leeks”.  It looks amazing and we cannot wait to make it!  Read about Average Betty’s experience here and view the written recipe here.

Care to join in?  Make this recipe, take photos, and send them to our email on the about page.    We will feature you and publish your version with a shout out  to your site or blog, test the recipe, send our reviews and your version will be sent to the chef and Average Betty.  Be a star!

Italian Recipes Pasta Recipes

Love. Italian Chef Anthony’s Ravioli with Four Cheeses

It’s simple, it’s gorgeous, and best of all it’s homemade and authentic Italian. This comforting ravioli recipe with four cheeses recipe is from one of our favorite chefs, Anthony Priolo from Piccolo Sogno in Chicago. His restaurant features fresh seasonal rustic Italian cuisine paired with gorgeous regional wines.  It’s a win in our book, always.  We love.

Ravioli Quattro Formaggi aka Ravioli with four cheeses recipe:

FILLING:

1 C Ricotta cheese – fresh
1/8 C Reggiano Parmesan – freshly grated
1/8 C Capriole Farms goat cheese
1/8 C Gorganzola dolce latte cheese – chopped
1 t Italian parsley – chopped
Sicilian sea salt to taste
Ground black pepper – fresh & to taste

Method:
Mix all ingredients together & adjust the seasoning.

PASTA DOUGH:

4 Eggs – whole
4 Egg yolks
1 T Olive oil
1 t Sicilian sea salt
2 3/4 C Semolina flour
1 1/4 C Flour – all purpose
2 T Water

Method:

Method #1 – In a food processor, add all ingredients. Pulse until a ball forms & then take out and knead by hand until dough is slightly firm.

Method #2 – In a large bowl add all dry ingredients into center of the bowl. Make a small well in the center of the dry ingredients and add the remaining ingredients. With a fork beat the liquid until smooth, slowly touching the sides incorporating the dry ingredients.

KEEP MIXING UNTIL A BALL IS FORMED. Take the ball out and then knead by hand until the dough is slightly firm (Texture should be slightly firmer than your ear lobe). You may need to adjust the water amount due to the humidity in the air.

After the dough has rested, roll out the pasta dough progressively with a pasta machine until the dough is thin enough that you can see your hand through it. Brush the dough with egg yolk and add the filling on half of the dough with a spoon (the size of a Quarter).

With the other half of the dough, place over the side with the filling so that you form a ravioli. With a small shot-glass, form the center of the ravioli & press all the air out. Cut with a circle cutter so there is a small edge around the center. Press the sides gently pushing the air out and set aside.

Cook in boiling salted water about 2 minutes and then toss into the sauce.

FOR THE SAUCE:

1/2 C Chicken broth – fresh
1 T Butter – unsalted
1 T Pine Nuts – toasted
Sicilian sea salt to taste
Black pepper to taste
Shavings of Reggiano Parmesan Cheese

Method:

In a saucepan, reduce the chicken broth down by half. Add the butter and bring to a boil. Then take the sauce off the heat. Stir quickly so the sauce does ot break. Add the cooked ravioli and toasted pine nuts. Adjust the seasoning & serve.

Arrange the ravioli on the plate (about 6 pieces) like a flower overlapping only on one side. When you get the sixth ravioli, slip it under the first. Drizzle the sauce & pine nuts over the ravioli, adding a little extra sauce.

Garnish with “Marsala Glaze” (using a squirt bottle, make sure the glaze is warm, ot hot). Drizzle the ravioli’s like it was a zigzag line.

“MARSALA GLAZE”:

1 C Marsala wine

Method:

Using 1 C Marsala wine, cook down by 3/4 until it is thick, or you can use a corn-starch slurry to thicken.

Finally, add the shavings of parmesan cheese over the ravioli & serve immediately.

Italian Recipes Pasta Recipes

Batali Shares: Linguine with Romano Cheese

Did you catch Mario Batali recently on the Martha Stewart Show?   She interviewed our favorite chef last week, and they talked  NYC  Eataly and Babbo restaurant news, shared a few jokes, and Mario shared a favorite Italian recipe:   in Italian it is called “Bavette Cacio e Pepe”,  which translates to a delicious linguine with Romano sheep’s cheese and black pepper.

From the interview:

“Martha: He opened Eataly. How many people came this weekend?

Mario: On Saturday we had 13,200 people.

Martha: . Last Saturday it was 10,000 people!

Mario: It’s just. more and more. I mean, we’re almost at saturation right
now. We’re trying to figure it out!

Martha: There is a line out the door.

Martha: The last time I tried to get in. I snuck in the side door.

Mario: Right. you’re allowed!

Martha: If you go to Eataly.

Mario: Don’t tell everyone to go in the darn side door!

Martha: If you go to Eataly go on the side door!

Mario: Only if you’re with Martha come in the side door! She sneaks in with
a delivery of honey [making a sneaky-funny gesture].

ON MARIO’S RESTAURANT, BABBO:

“Martha: You know you’ve ruined my life Mario.

Mario: No! Hopefully I’ve improved it.

Martha: You’ve ruined it because I once had a dish at Babbo, which is one of
my favorite restaurants in New York, Babbo. Very difficult to get into
because it’s so popular!

Mario: Unless you come in the side entrance with Martha of course!

Martha: Right.”

And here is the authentic Italian recipe shared by Mario for Linguine with Romano Cheese, aka Bavette Cacio e Pepe:

Serves 4.

Ingredients:

* 2 tablespoons coarse salt
* 1 pound bavette or fine linguine
* 1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
* 1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter
* 1 1/2 cups freshly grated Cacio di Roma cheese (literally, this means “”cheese of Rome”. It is mild, both sweet and savory, and melts well. You should be able to find it at your favorite grocery, deli, or Whole Foods Market.)
* 1 1/2 cups freshly grated pecorino Romano cheese, plus extra for serving
* 3 tablespoons freshly ground black pepper

Directions

1. Fill a large pot with 24 cups water; bring to a boil over high heat.
Add salt and return to a boil; add pasta and cook until al dente, 1 minute
less than suggested on the package directions.

2. Meanwhile, in a large skillet, heat 1/4 cup olive oil and butter over
low heat until butter is just melted. Turn off heat.

3. When pasta is finished cooking, turn heat back on under skillet and
add 1/2 cup pasta cooking water; bring to a boil. Add a small handful of
cheese to skillet and let melt.

4. Drain pasta, reserving some of the cooking liquid. Add pasta to
skillet along with pepper and toss, using tongs, to combine; add 1/2 cup
reserved pasta cooking liquid.

5. Add remaining cheese to skillet and remove from heat; let melt on top
of pasta and toss to combine. Drizzle with remaining 2 tablespoons olive oil; toss, adding additional pasta cooking liquid, until pasta is well coated. Serve immediately with additional pecorino and pepper.

Grazie Mario and Martha!

Italian Recipes Pasta Recipes

Mario Batali’s Fettuccine Rigate with Pancetta and Peas


This one is a must see!  Chef Mario Batali cooks on the Late Night show with Jimmy Fallon in this amusing video recipe for a delicious Fettuccini rigate pasta with garlic, pancetta, peas, mint and Pecorino Romano cheese. (Meaning “striped” in Italian and pronounced “ree-GAH-tay”, rigate is a type of penne pasta, tube shaped with diagonally cut ends, however unlike traditional penne, rigate has a ridged surface rather than smooth.  Feel free to use traditional penne if you wish!).   View Mario’s written recipe here.

Mario is participating in Barilla pasta’s “Share the Table” which is a program that helps to “improve the time you spend with your family around the table”. Register here, for expert advice on why family dinners are important, more pasta recipes with photos, and your “Guide to Making Family Dinnertime More Meaningful,” with exclusive recipes from Mario Batali.  And for each person who promises to “Share the Table,” Barilla will donate $1 to Meals on Wheels Association of America.

[pro-player width=’550′ height=’353′ type=’video’]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NYcZsptCoew[/pro-player]

Italian Recipes Soup Recipes

Onion, Pancetta and Wisconsin Parmesan Cheese Soup

Brrr….it’s getting chilly here in Colorado, and we have nothing but soup on our minds.   From the kitchen of Master Chef Tom Catherall, his Italian restaurant recipe is a complete meal by itself:  simple, savory, and very comforting.  This Tuscan soup is made with onions, leeks and pancetta, and is topped with rustic crunchy garlic bread and shaved Wisconsin Parmesan cheese.   It serves approximately 4 people,  or 2 very hungry people!   We served the soup and toast alone, but it would be great with a salad, steamed greens, or roasted vegetables.

Read on for the recipe Continue Reading

Italian Recipes Soup Recipes

Tuscan Comfort, Chef Jody Adam’s Acquacotta Recipe

Buttero, painting by Giovanni Fattori, public domain image

Acquacotta or Acqua Cotta in Italian literally translates to “cooked water”.  From Italy, it is a soup with origins from the rural area of southwestern Tuscany and morthern Lazio known as Maremma. It began as a peasant soup for cattle and sheep herders known as “buttero”, who threw whichever fresh seasonal vegetables they had into hot water.  As such, this one pot meal has many variations, many of which include a poached egg and a side of crusty rustic bread.

Our version of Acquacotta today comes to us via our friends at Great Chefs, and is demonstrated by chef Jody Adams.  Jody won a James Beard “Best Chef” award in 1997, and previously was named one of Food & Wine’s “Best New Chefs” in 1993.  Currently, Jody’s delicious edibles are being consumed by the lucky patrons of Rialto restaurant in Cambridge, MA.

Chef Jody’s comforting Acquacotta consists of a porcini mushroom Marsala broth served over polenta and Pecorino Romano cheese, and topped with a poached egg and truffle oil.  If you love this dish as much as we did, please consider purchasing Chef Jody’s cooking videos on DVD at Great Chefs.

[pro-player width=’550′ height=’353′ type=’video’]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xOZ6zpYPmE[/pro-player]

Read on for the recipe Continue Reading

Appetizer Recipes Italian Recipes Salad Recipes

Delizioso! Italian Salmon Carpaccio

Italians seem to possess an amazingly strong passion for food, much more so than the rest of the world.
There is a really great site, Italian Food Net, which serves up delicious authentic Italian recipe videos.  Their chefs speak Italian in the clips,  but they have done such a wonderful job with the subtitles and ingredient conversions that the recipes are simple to follow.

Some recipes are incredibly simple to make but somehow give the impression that you’ve spent hours slaving over them.   This would be one of those! In the video, chef Alessandro prepares an Italian salmon carpaccio with oranges served over arugula.  Head over to their site to view the written recipe, browse around a bit and pretend you’re a student in an Italian culinary school!

Tiny bites of ingredient education:

  1. Carpaccio is defined as an appetizer using thinly sliced raw fish or meat.
  2. The peppercorns used in the recipe are brined, Whole Foods should have them, you may need to look in the  area where jarred pickles are.
  3. The recipe calls for the greens “rocket”, and rocket = arugula!

[pro-player width=’530′ height=’353′ type=’FLV’]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9hli8trbSyY[/pro-player]

Italian Recipes Lamb Recipes

Affordable Easter with Colorado Chef Lachlan Patterson

An Easter dinner for less than $40 for 4 people?  It’s possible!  Chef/Owner of Lachlan McKinnon Patterson of Frasca restaurant has upped the ante for the world of dining in Boulder, Colorado.  Nominated as a “Rising Star Chef” by the James Beard Foundation and named a “Best New Chef” by Food and Wine Magazine, Lachlan and his Frasca team create Northern Italian fare receiving numerous glowing reviews.  We love the fact that they strongly support local farmers with their seasonal menus and are active Slow Food members. Boasting the title of the “Best Wine List” in Denver’s Westword, they also have two master sommeliers in the house to ensure a perfect tasting experience.

And Top Chef Lovers unite! Bravo will premier a new show, Top Chef Masters in June! And guess who our favorite Colorado competing chef will be?  None other than Lachlan himself!

In this video, Chef Lachlan prepares a boneless leg of lamb with glazed radishes, and an arugula salad with a pesto and pickled shallot vinaigrette.   He completes the meal with his recipe for Gubana, a traditional Italian strudel-like Easter bread with raisins, walnuts, almonds, and pine nuts.


Watch CBS Videos Online

The written recipe may be found here. Enjoy and have a great weekend!

Italian Recipes Pasta Recipes

Ragu Bolognese with Mario Batali

Bologna, Italy

Bologna, Italy

Originating in Bologna, Italy, Bolognese sauce refers to an Italian meat based sauce, with a minimal amount of tomato. Bologna is within the region of Emilia-Romagna in Italy, the native home of classic culinary ingredients such as Parmigiano-Reggiano, delicious Balsamic vinegar, Mortadella, and Prosciutto di Parma.   Italy, as you know, is a country that takes their food very seriously, and the Accademia Italiana della Cucina, which is the Italian Gastronomic Society, has strict requirements on what dishes can be classified as Bolognese. Their strict ingredient requirements are confined to to beef, pancetta, onions, carrots, celery, tomato paste, meat broth, red wine, and as an option,  milk or cream, although traditonal Bolognese dishes frequently include ground pork or ground veal.   Here in this video, our beloved chef Mario Batali shares his technique for Ragu Bolognese, a meal close to his Italian roots.  This classic Italian pasta dish is simple and requires minimal prep time, but will require an hour and a half  of cooking time, and having made it more than once, we can honestly say that it  is worthy of every minute.  Absolutely give this recipe a try, you will not regret it.

Read on for the recipe!
Continue Reading

Italian Recipes

Spherical Olives and Top Chef Fabio’s Beef Carpaccio Recipe!

Fully obsessed with Season 5 of Bravo’s Top Chef, tonight we became equally fully obsessed with Fabio’s “Spherical Olives”. What are they and what gives them their outside shell and liquid center? After a quick visit with Google, we found this video from the genius chemist and chef Ferran Adria from El Bulli restaurant in Spain, where he demonstrates to Mark Bittman his special science using a recipe of calcium + alginate to create the magical olives.

Chef Fabio Viviani recreated these mysterious gems in his Top Chef winning beef carpaccio recipe, and Lee Anne from the French Culinary Institute in NYC shows us his technique in this video.

We also found an interesting post here from the chefs at the Ideas in Food blog, where they discuss encapsulation, play with chemicals, and create yogurt orbs. Is this type of food preparation natural? Not really. Is it fun and incredibly creative? Absolutely!

Beef Tenderloin Carpaccio with Arugula, Roasted Pine Nuts, Aged Parmesan Cheese, Spherical Kalamata Olives and Aged Balsamic Vinegar
Chef Fabio Viviani

Prep Time: About 2 hours
Serves: 3-4

Directions:Beef Tenderloin Carpaccio:
1. Slice the meat.
2. Display and season the arugula, shaved cheese, toast the pine nuts.

Kalamata Olives:
1. Mix first three ingredients together, let rest for three hours.
2. Mix water and algimate together, let rest for 3 hours.
3. Scoop first mixture into second mixture.
4. Let rest 3 minutes.

Note: Xanthan gum is not strictly necessary, but it can be used as a thickener. You can also use a thicker puree and it will work as well. Without the gum you will have to keep the olive in the solution for longer, around 5-6 minutes.

1 lb. tenderloin.
4 oz. parmesan, aged 5 years
6 balsamic vinegar, aged 6 years
8 oz. arugula
8 oz. pine nuts
olive oil
salt and pepper
kalamata olives

Spherical Kalamata Olives:
400 grams olive puree
1.8 grams Calcic Acid
1.3 grams Xanthan Gum
1.5 liters water
7.5 grams Sodium Alginate or Algin

Appetizer Recipes Italian Recipes

Holiday Appetizers: Eggplant and Prosciutto

Our series of holiday appetizer videos are designed to help your winter party be the smash of the season! Serving a variety of gourmet appetizers will ensure you please the pickiest Christmas party epicures, and we love this video featuring Italian chef Mateo from Academia Barilla whipping up a decadent yet simple Italian eggplant and prosciutto starter. Check it out!

Rolled eggplant with prosciutto and pecorino cheese
Chef Mateo Carboni
Serves 4

1 eggplant,
12 slices ham (prosciutto)
3 oz Academia Barilla Pecorino Gran Cru (an Italian sheeps milk cheese)
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
chives to taste
salt to taste

Preparation
30 minutes preparation

First slice the eggplants, then spread some extra virgin olive oil on both sides of each slice before grilling them for two minutes max on a pre-heated grill.

While the eggplant slices are still hot off the grill, sprinkle some grated Pecorino cheeses, then pair the slice with a slice of Prosciutto di Parma, and carefully roll them together, using chives to secure each roll, adding a final touch of flavor and presentation.

Appetizer Recipes Italian Recipes

Bruschetta Fusion: A classic recipe with a new twist

Central Italy: Le Marche, Lazio, Umbria, and Tuscany, 4 regions of delicious Italian food history. Here the summers are hot and long, and home to Italian delights such as the grain farro, the spice saffron, chestnuts, white beans, and truffles, and the world’s finest olive oils.

And here we find the origins, and fables, of Bruschetta.

The most common bruschetta legend is that olives harvested in November and December were taken to the local central Italian mill for pressing, the mill having a burning fireplace. The presenters to the mill brought local Italian bread, grilled it on the fireplace and rubbed it with garlic. The toasty bread served as a canvas to test, and to show off their prized oils.

Or a less romantic story is from “The Dictionary of Italian Food and Drink” by writer John Mariani, stating “”Bruschetta. Toasted bread, often rubbed with garlic and drizzled with olive oil. Also schiena d’asino, soma d’aj in the south, and fettunta in Tuscany. Bruschetta has always been a way to salvage bread that was going stale by adding oil and seasonings. Sometimes the bread is entirely immersed in oil, but usually the oil is poured on the top after the bread is rubbed with a garlic clove. In recent years adding toppings, particularly chopped onions and tomatoes, has become popular in restaurants.”

Rumors and legends aside, Bruschetta wins our heart. Tuscan Chef Gabriele Corcos with his beautiful wife Debi Mazar have won our heart as well, with their delicious video version of Bruschetta with a surprising twist!

Check out all of their delicious recipes and fall in love with them here, at Under The Tuscan Gun.

BRUSCHETTA WITH SAUSAGE, BRIE CHEESE AND FRESH HERBS
Gabriele Corcos – Under The Tuscan Gun

Serves: 6
Prep Time: 5
Cooking Time: 15 min. for the sausage sauce + 5 min. in the broiler

Ingredients
6 slices of bread
2 pork sausages (mild or hot according to taste)
¼ Lb of Brie Cheese (or other semi-soft cheese)
¼ Red Onion
1 Handful of Rosemary
1 Handful of Sage
½ Glass of White Wine
Olive Oil, Salt and Pepper

How to:
-getting ready-
Chop the Onion finely and rinse the herbs thoroughly. Chop the sage finely.
Slice the bread.
Pop the wine open and start sipping!
Cooking your dish
Open the Sausages and sauté the meat with the onion in a tablespoon of olive oil for about 5 minutes in a medium sized non stick pan, until the meat starts browning.
Add the half glass of wine, the rosemary and the sage.
Cook for about 5-7 minutes, until the wine has been completely absorbed, take off the fire and set aside.
Toast your bread on a fire grill, in a toaster or on the barbecue; do not use a sandwich press, otherwise you will make crackers.

Note: the correct pronunciation of bruschetta is “broo-sketta”. If the video was not clear enough, here is a sample sound clip from an Italian female that should help you say it the right way:

Appetizer Recipes Italian Recipes

Penne pasta with pumpkin sauce with Chef Matteo Carboni

October is past the mid month point and you haven’t yet had your dose of pumpkin trivia! Let’s fix that!

Pumpkins are considered a superfood, meaning they have high levels of antioxidant flavonoids and micronutrients, most notably vitamins A, C, potassium, and fiber. Pumpkin seeds are a great source of Omega 3 fatty acids, which contribute to healthy brain function according to recent research from UCLA. Enjoy that fact while munching on your pepitas!

The amber pumpkin flowers are also an edible food, and considered a delicacy in many cultures. I found a few interesting pumpkin flower recipes! The first one is a Bengali dish, Kumro Phool Bhaja which translates to “Pumpkin Flower Fry”, you can see a recipe here. Sopa Mexicana De Flor De Calabaza is a traditional Mexican dish that translates to “pumpkin flower soup” and a recipe from Miguel Angel Castillo can be found here.

Pumpkin seed oil is a viscous, nutty, dark green nutrient packed oil made from roasted pumpkin seeds. It is traditionally used in the Styrian region of Austria as a salad dressing ingredient combined with apple cider vinegar.

Our pumpkin tribute today is concluded with a video by Chef Matteo Carboni from the Academia Barilla Culinary School in Italy, and he prepares penne with a pumpkin and bacon sauce, garnished with balsamic vinegar and parmesan cheese.

Penne pasta with pumpkin sauce
Chef Matteo Carboni
Serves 4

Ingredients

1 lb pumpkin
3 oz smoked pancetta (or bacon)
Parmigiano Reggiano cheese
parsley to taste
rosemary to taste
garlic
few drops of Academia Barilla Traditional Balsamic Vinegar of Modena, aged 12 years
½ onion
extra virgin olive oil
1 lb penne rigate

Peel and remove the seeds from the pumpkin.

Cut into cubes of about 0.5 inch each side.
Place the rest of the pumpkin, the onion, and a little salt in a pan and cover with water until it boils.

When the vegetable is cooked, whip until you obtain a cream.

First cut the smoked bacon into pieces of about 0.2 inch in length and then cut in Julienne style.
Mince the rosemary, garlic and parsley.

Put a pan on medium heat, add a drop of oil and fry the smoked bacon.
Remove the smoked bacon from the pan, add the pumpkin and cook, adding salt and pepper to taste.

Add garlic, rosemary and the bacon to the pumpkin and after 2 minutes of cooking, add the pumpkin cream. In plenty of salted boiling water cook the pasta, drain and add with the previously prepared sauce.

Add the Parmesan grated, plate the pasta and drizzle with Traditional Balsamic Vinegar of Modena before serving.

Italian Recipes

Simple meets delicious: an Italian sausage balsamic reduction served over a warm potato salad

Charming Chef Kirk Offerle prepares a simple rustic northern Italian entree, including sausage, shallots, bay leaf and garlic with a balsamic reduction over a warm potato salad with olive oil, dijon, and italian parsley. This meal is a perfect comfort food for fall evenings when time is limited.

Read on for the recipe Continue Reading

Italian Recipes

Gabriele and Debi are smoking hot in this eggplant parmesan video!

Truly, I think these two are the most adorable couple I have ever seen in a kitchen together, and this may be the sexiest cooking video ever!

Striking beauty and actress Debi Mazar, is well known as her role in the film GoodFellas, and currently stars in the series Entourage on HBO.

Tall and handsome Italian chef Gabriele Corcos is her husband, and together they are Under The Tuscan Gun, preparing delicious authentic Italian food together with an undeniable passion.

In this video, Gabriele and Debi prepare Melanzane alla Parmigiana, otherwise known as Eggplant Parmesan, a dish they recommend you cook “not to impress”, but for someone you love.

Just start to watch the video and I promise you’ll be hooked!

Visit their site here for more love, italian kisses, and the complete written recipe.

Gratzi Debi and Gabriele!

Italian Recipes Pizza Recipes

Napoletana pizza recipe with Chef Gino D’Acampo

I admit it, I have a small crush on Gino D’Acampo! He’s talented, authentic, and his recipes are tasty!

You can read a chef bio about Gino here.

Napoletana Pizza, from Naples, Italy, is traditionally cooked in a wood fired oven with a well cured oak. And the Italians take their pizza seriously! There is actually an Italian association of strict requirements found here, that pizza makers must comply with to label their pizza as “Napoletana”.

Although there is no doubt that the association would disapprove, Italian Chef Gino D’Acampo prepares a simpler oven cooked version of Napoletana pizza in this video. It’s worth watching just to see his hand gestures!

Italian Recipes Side Dish Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Italian Chef Gino D’Acampo makes stuffed roasted tomatoes

Chef Gino D’Acampo is from Napoli, Italy, and began his education at Luigi de Medici Catering College at the age of thirteen! From there he continued his culinary skills in many restaurants in Europe, including Perignon in Nice and as Head Chef at Sylvester Stallone’s Mambo King in Marbella. Currently, Gino is Gino the owner of a leading supplier of Italian ingredients to the UK food industry, Bontà Italia Ltd, and now manufacturing his own pasta sauces and olive oils. Gino is also a celebrity chef who stars regularly on BBC’s Ready, Steady Cook, ITV1’s Daily and Saturday Cooks as well as celebrity food contest Soapstar and Superchef. As if this were not enough, Gino has also published an Italian recipe book titled Fantastico, which won the respectable award of “Gourmet Italian book of the year”.

In this video Gino prepares a tasty treat of goat cheese, mozzarella, and basil stuffed roasted tomatoes.


Find more videos like this on FoodTube.net

Cheese Stuffed Roasted Tomatoes
Chef Gino D’Acampo
Serves 6

Ingredients

6 beef tomatoes
2 tablespoons of crushed walnuts
180g goat’s cheese, without the rind and crumbled
150g Galbani Mini Mozzarella
6 thick slices of white bread
2 tablespoons freshly chopped basil
Salt and pepper to taste

Using a sharp knife, cut a thin slice from the bottom of each tomato and discard then cut the top of each tomato and reserve. Using a teaspoon, carefully scoop out the seeds and most of the pulp and discard, keeping the tomato shells whole.

In a bowl, mix together the mozzarella, walnuts, goat’s cheese and basil. Season with salt and pepper and spoon into the tomato shells. (3 mini mozzarella balls per tomato).

With the help of an 8cm round pastry cutter, stamp out 6 rounds from the bread slices and toast on both sides. When ready, place the bread in a single layer in a lightly oiled ovenproof dish. Place the tomatoes on top of each toasted piece of bread and cook in the middle of a preheated oven at 190º (375°F, gas mark 5) for approximately 15-20 minutes until the cheese mixture looks melted and golden. (Make sure that the tomatoes are not too soft).

Serve immediately and drizzle a little extra virgin olive oil on top.

For more Gino D’Acampo recipes, visit www.galbani.co.uk

Italian Recipes

Viva Italy! Spinach and ricotta ravioli with mozzarella cheese and tomatoes

Our friends at ItalianFoodNet sent us this mouth watering recipe and video link via email. Oh my.

You must watch this video! It’s in Italian with English subtitles and it’s so fun, and Chef Allesandro is quite handsome we must say :). He makes a mouth watering spinach and ricotta cheese ravioli with buffalo mozzarella cheese, pachino tomatoes, onion, garlic, Parmesan and sage. A simple authentic Italian meal for dinner, what could be better?

Ravioli with Mozzarella Cheese and Tomatoes (Ravioli ricotta e spinaci con mozzarella e pachino)
Courtesy of ItalianFoodNet
Serves 4

Ingredients
500 gr (17.64 oz) Ricotta and Spinach Ravioli (pre prepared ravioli, either packaged or homemade)
200 gr (7.05 oz) Buffalo’s Milk Mozzarella
15 – 20 Pachino Tomatoes or Cherry Tomatoes
½ Onion
Garlic
Grated Parmesan cheese
Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Fresh sage

Slice the onion, quarter the tomatoes and dice the Buffalo mozzarella
Pour the olive oil into a frying pan, add onion, 1 garlic clove then add some fresh sage leaves and let it brown
Add the tomatoes, season with salt and after 2 – 3 minutes add ½ ladle of cooking water.

Cook ravioli into boiling salted water. Once cooked, using a slotted spoon, drain and transfer them to the pan, add a handful of mozzarella, sprinkle with grated Parmesan and sauté. Transfer ravioli to a serving dish, top with mozzarella, sprinkle with grated Parmesan, drizzle with olive oil and serve.

Photo © ItalianFoodNet