Pissaladiere.

Nicoise onion tart, which I have first come across while browsing Rick Stein’s book “French Odyssey”. When Moka was here last week , we’ve made one together for lunch one day, but I knew from the first bite that I will be making it again MY WAY. 🙂

This was our joint effort;

We had the ready made pastry from Esselunga, Moka has prepared the onions, I put the whole thing together and baked it. It was very tasty, made a great lunch, but the onions could have been softer. Moka panfried them and wasn’t interested in adding fresh bay leaves or thyme from the garden ( I smuggled some through at the end for garnish), which I found rather surprising.

So yesterday, on a first rainy day in over a month I made the pissaladiere again. My onions were cooked under cover for over 40 minutes with a generous bouquet garni. This made a huge difference. Once I removed the herbs, I gave it another 20 minutes uncovered which made the consistency almost spreadable.

Black olives on top take the 15 minutes in the oven well, anchovies don’t. These should definitely be added after the baking.

Excellent light supper alongside Greek salad and some good chianti.

Bologna.

Another one of of The Places I Really Wanted To See in Italy Soon, has been seen. Moka and Viktor were here last week. We were debating whether to spend Sunday in water park or go somewhere we have not been before. So we hopped across the fence to Emilia Romagna.

The biggest surprise was how quiet the city was. I expected a bit of a massacre, like Siena two years ago, but no; the students were away, there were some tourists (Americans, at the city tour bus booking place “you know, we’re from New York, sooooooooo…..”), but there were no mental crowds, we had a good time and a fantastic lunch in Taverna del Postiglione. It wasn’t cheap, but we tasted two things we wanted to taste in Bologna and some more. Service was fantastic. Wine list very impressive, but we wanted beer.

The board that was brought for us full of local meats( that mortadella!) and cheeses was nicely explained and very much enjoyed, especially the marmalade made of prunes, which tasted great with Grana Padano and Parma ham. I happened to find some in Conad this morning, we’ll see how it compares.

For the mains Moka and Viktor went for some ravioli, I had gnocchi with prawns- who would have thought! Izzie really broadened her horizons and opted for pizza margherita. The winner however was Florek, who had tortelloni in brodo, we all had a little taste and it was the best plate on the table. Clear, meaty broth and homemade, tiny tortelloni, simple, yet mind blowing.

We had no desserts, as were too stuffed and after coffee headed back towards the car, well fed and happy. I’d love a plate of that brodo for myself anytime.

Also, I really liked the parmigiano container that stood of the table, I liked it so much that I sought it out online and I now have one in the fridge, thanks to Florek. 🙂

Plum and meringue cake.

Dessert was needed for a Sunday lunch with The Blackmore’s yesterday, mojewypieki.com were consulted and the result made us all happy.

The base- 270g of plain flour, 100g of ground almonds, 150 g of cold butter, 80g of icing sugar, a touch of baking powder and then 4 egg yolks, all combined and chilled for an hour, before rolling out onto the lined baking tray. It baked for about 20 mins in 180 degrees, during which I have pitted the plums and dusted them with some cornstarch and cinnamon. For the meringue I used 4 egg whites, a pinch of salt, 150 g of sugar, towards the end 1 tsp of cornstarch. The plums went onto the still warm base, meringue on top, some flaked almonds and immediately after the cake went in, I dropped the temperature down to 140 degrees. An hour of slow baking, then the heat off and I allowed it to cool in the oven.

Lovely, light, summery cake.

Wednesday evening in Capannori.

Molly and Enrico invited us over to dinner last night. As usual it was lovely to catch up with them and spend a few hours with their lovely kiddos, who not only know how to behave at the table, they also eat everything that’s served (salad??!!) and are simply a pleasure to be around.

I offered to make the dessert, sponge cake with whipped cream and fresh pineapple, this time however I’ve made the sponge from a different recipe than my mom’s, I used Dorota’s from mojewypieki.com. 3 whole eggs, 3 tbsps of plain flour, 3 tbsps of potato starch, 6 tbsps of sugar/vanilla sugar and 1/4 tsp of baking powder. After less than 30 minutes in the oven I ended up with a perfect sponge.

I have no picture of the ready thing, sadly, but it was enjoyed and some was left for today, to Elio’s delight!

I tried homemade caponata for the first time and I loved it. And I can’t wait to make it myself this weekend. Sweet and sour, served with crusty baguette and prosecco sfuso. Life is good!

The main were wonderful, light, soft, pillowy gnocchi with pesto. All made fresh! Just how they should be. Might also make some one of these days!

Garlic fried rice.

Or, as Marion called it in her video, a Japanese butter garlic fried rice with a mystery ingredient. I saw this video previously and while stocking up on my Asian ingredients last week at oisshiiplanet.it I have added some KewPie mayo, just to try.

Whether this was Japanese, errr, not so much. My rice was a shortgrain, all purpose rice from Conad, but I rinsed it prior to cooking and followed Marion’s tips, so for a mug of rice I added a mug and a quarter of water, so less than I normally would. And texture was perfect, no less! Once it was cooked I tossed it with 3 tbsps of that KewPie, a first for me, but not the last, it gently added to the flavour. I had 2 eggs in the bowl, cracked and gently whipped, 3 cloves of garlic finely chopped and also some peas, as this was going to be our lunch today, so I needed a bit of something more.

A generous knob of butter into the pan, the garlic, not for too long, just to soften it slightly. Rice in. A good splash of soy sauce. After a minute or so, the rice was shoved to the side of the pan and the eggs went in, to scramble nicely, then tossed together with the rice and peas. Marion added some parsley at the end, I opted for finely chopped spring onions. Salt, to finish with, a bit more soy( never enough for Izzie, who would have it in the glass if she could) and we were done.

Nice and simple little dish, I’m thinking it would go well with chicken teryiaki skewers. I invited the Blackmores for Sunday lunch next Sunday, so might just go down that route. 🙂

Oh, and that pretty bowl the rice is sitting in- Maison du Monde. Thumbs up.