All posts by Ola

I love eating. Even more than I love cooking. My Mum got this thing into me, being a working woman with two kids and still managing to put a two course dinner on the table for us every day. My meals are a lot simpler, I cook for two, with Florian being my most devoted fan and audience. There is nothing more rewarding than a nicely turned out meal. There is nothing more enjoyable that a great plate of food in a decent restaurant with a glass of great red in a nice company. Hence this blog, to share ideas and joy of good food. Bon Appetit.

Riciarelli.

Recipe from moje wypieki.com, found while looking for something sweet to take to LauDe tomorrow. Something, that would look good next to the lovely bottle of Amarone that is waiting to go too.

They need to be started the day before, the almond dough rests in the fridge overnight for the flavour to develop.

2 egg whites get whipped stiff with a pinch of salt. To this I added 1 tsp of lemon juice, 1 tbsp of freshly grated orange rind and some of my candied orange too( not in the recipe). Some vanilla paste, 160 g of icing sugar – 200 g in the original recipe- and 200 g of ground almonds. I skipped almond extract, yuk! All this nicely combined waited until today.

More icing sugar was needed to roll out, generously dust and roll them out, like gnocchi,shaped roughly like diamonds, then placed on the baking paper and into the oven at 150 degrees. After 6 mins the temperature goes up to 170, then after 6 minutes again down to 150. Mine baked for 20 minutes in total, developed a nice skin, cracked nicely and did not brown up at all.

I like them, in spite of the huge amount of sugar, but I’d probably crank up orange flavour, maybe with Grand Marnier if I had it? Now must put some away for LauDe, before Florek sees them. 🙂

Pierogi for beginners.

Last Saturday The Boaratis came over for a pre- Christmas get-together, as they will be flying off to America for Christmas. They are mostly non meat eaters, so I thought I’d make some pierogi. I have no more twarog though, used up all my stash from the freezer, so I had to get creative. I substituted it with feta and made a batch of “Greco- Ruskie”, not too bad, but twarog really is the best option. I had some festive Ula Pedantula on youtube, big glass of water and quite enjoyed making pierogi for Molly, Enrico and the kiddos.

The other batch I filled with a combo of dried porcini mushrooms and some cup mushrooms too, these were my favourite and I’ll be making more for Christmas eve.

What made my evening were the kids, Nina, Elio and Izzie, happily stuffing their faces with my effors, eating, and helping themselves to more. It doesn’t get any better than that.

Molly brought the dessert, a lovely, creamy, simple and very well made vanilla cheesecake, plus some very posh cherries in syrup to go with it. It was very much enjoyed.

A certain Gino took to Enrico and made himself very comfortable on his lap.

It was a lovely evening!

The remaining pierogi panfried the next day made us a lovely lunch. 🙂

UK meets Italia.

Steve and Ale came over to dinner on Saturday and brought along a very handsome bottle of Amarone. As is often the case, it tasted nice on the occasion, but the day after we have finished the other half of the bottle, which accompanied some Tuscan sausages, mash and … yorkies. The wine has breathed and became phenomenal. Izzie requested yorkies, I obliged, in spite of the fact that I had to scrub the oven after cooking them.

Recipe from Good Food, 70 g of plain flour, combined well with 2 whole eggs, 100 ml of milk slowly added, seasoned with s&p, cooked in very hot oil for about 20 minutes, 230 degrees.

What a wonderful marriage that was, Amarone and yorkies. To be repeated!

Back to Sourdough.

So, after my initial, not very impressive starter, I have wrapped my sourdough equipment and left it in the pantry for a few months. Having chatted with Steve Jaye lately, about food, what else, he suggested he’d send me some of his excellent, 8 month old starter and that I should try again. It took 2 weeks for Royal Mail and Poste Italiane to deliver the parcel, but it got here last week. Amazingly.

I have immediately fed Steve’s starter with 150 g of strong flour and 150 ml of water and left in room temperature for a day. The next day it has more than doubled, I had to take a break from painting the garderoba and get on with baking.

The following is Steve’s method, which has worked in my kitchen twice so far.

500g of strong flour, plus 2 tsps of salt and 2 tsps of brown sugar, combined, plus 300 g of the starter, which has been mixed prior to use, 250ml of warm water. All this into the bowl of kitchen aid and then mixed on very slow speed for 2 minutes, then left to autolyse for an hour, covered. After an hour it needs to be folded and beaten for about 5 minutes, kneaded in kitchen aid for a few more, until smooth with well developed gluten. Then bulk proved for 6-10 hours in room temperature, covered.

Once doubled in size, its formed into a nice ball, handled carefully, so as not to lose any of the rise, placed into a round banneton and it goes to the fridge overnight to develop a flavour.

In the morning the oven gets preheated to 230 degrees with a deep ceramic dish with a lid in my case, or a Dutch oven in Steve’s, or a posh cloche in Ken’s kitchen. I will be treating myself to expensive toys once I get a bit more confident in this field. The ball of dough from the fridge goes onto the floured ring of baking paper, into the preheated dish and into the oven, covered, for 20 minutes. After 20 minutes the lid comes off and a beautiful view like this happens

2 small details not to be forgotten: the loaf needs to be slashed before baking and it needs to be sprayed with water to help form the crust. Also, a tray with boiling water underneath the bread will help.

After 40 minutes there is a beautiful, homemade sourdough. What Florek called- the best homemade bread here yet. This loaf made Florek and Steve talk for the first time in weeks, after business differences kept them quiet recently.

The starter is back in the fridge, I have the taste for much, much more!

Best cooking happens when it rains.

And it has been really, really bloody wet. For over a week now. At times it’s really intense, so yesterday when we were driving home from school, we were looking at this….

Country roads resemble small rivers, so this morning we decided to give Izzie a day off school, weather forecast for next 3 days looks a bit more optimistic.

I baked some doughnuts today, the recipe is already on the blog, exactly the same, I took my time though, all the lights were on most of the day, as outside is grey and dark- I ended up with one of the best ones ever. They are disappearing quickly too.

And a few days ago I fancied kotlety mielone. I had some minced veal, which was a first for mielone, normally it is pork. I added lots of chopped, fried onions, some stale bread soaked in milk, a handful of parmesan, seasoned them well with salt and pepper. Tossed in breadcrumbs, panfried, served with truffle mash, as you do, when it rains and one can be bothered! They were fantastic, I might make them for the dinner with Blackmores in 2 weeks time.

Molly’s Mum’s chocolate cake.

Last weekend Molly and Enrico came over for dinner, Molly brought a chocolate cake, which she advertised as ” almost gluten free”. The cake was a hit, we loved it, the kids loved it, I asked for the recipe, though I’m not massive on chocolate cake normally. What was left of the one Molly brought was devoured the next day and both Bankses urged me to get on with it and bake another one, pronto!

Some help from Molly was required, as the recipe was her mum’s and I had no idea how much ” 2 sticks of butter” were, but we got there in the end and yesterday I took out of the oven a well risen, moist, light, great cake. A keeper and not at all complicated.

While the oven was warming up to 160 degrees I got the cake tin ready with baking paper all around, 230 g of butter and 280 g of good quality dark chocolate melted together in bain marie. 5 eggs were beaten whole with 200g of sugar, I did half and half caster and brown. All treated with the whisks of kitchen aid until they were light and fluffy. To this 5 tbsps of plain flour went it, alongside 1, 1/2 tsp of baking powder ( Ewa has just sorted me out with good English baking powder and soda for baking!). Chocolate and butter combo went in, all nicely combined together.

The cake was in the oven for about 1 hour, I kept checking till the stick came out dry; about half way though I covered it with alu foil to make sure it bakes inside, but stays fairly moist on top.

A dusting of vanilla icing sugar completed the picture. Superb cake!

Gift from the neighbours.

Anna, the lovely lady who lives next door, has given me 2 bowls full of veggies from their garden. The day before we had lunch together in our place, just to thank them for being so lovely to us from day 1. Nadia and Cristian came too, as did Anna’s husband, Francesco, largely responsible for growing all this fantastic produce.

The big tomatoes are on the windowsill for the colour to develop, but the little, sweet datterini were not kept waiting. I turned them into a lovely tomato sauce, spiked with a bit of chili, with lots of onions and garlic and a touch of fresh mint too. We had it with penne, a bit of aubergines and crispy guanciale completed the picture.

With our apetitivo we had some bruschettas, the best ones were those with stracciatella and datterini, the others with Anna’s aubergines, panfried with shallots and garlic. We devoured them with a glass of Santa Cristina bianco.

Next spring I will attempt growing some veggies, the neighbours and Steve set the bar really high!

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.