Broccoli with Salt

I don't usually talk about one ingredient like this. But, Joe (my dad) made me some really good broccoli and I needed to share this with you.

I've always simply steamed broccoli in a steamer basket. Joe boils his with some salt in the water. There are some people who like their broccoli crisp, even when cooked. I prefer mine a little soft, still green and not mushy.

Here's what you need to do:

Cut your broccoli up into florets, discarding the tough bottom stems.

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil.

Add broccoli and cook for about 8 minutes, or until your fork goes through the stems.

Enjoy!

The Day After: Pesto

I know, you've probably all eaten your body weight in treats, ham and gooey goodness by now, but I had to share a-not-so-light recipe with you. It's traditional, I guess, to start off the post-Christmas season with light, healthy foods, but it's so darn cold, I still think we need these stick-to-your-bones dishes to get us through.

Remember how I mentioned that my sister and I made a book for Gran Fran with her recipes and my photos? Well, here is another

recipe from that project, Lasagna Geonvese. I've not made many lasagna's in my time, but figured I should give this one a go since it's different than any others I've had.

I, of course, don't eat gluten or dairy, so I only had a small taste of this. It was superb. You could adjust this easily with gluten-free noodles, but I'm not a fan of non-dairy cheese, so can't recommend anything on that front.

OK, back to the recipe. It was really fun to make. Lots of steps, as I've mentioned before, but the potatoes and pesto really made this dish stand out from your traditional lasagna. I love the colors, too, since it's a little unexpected to see a green lasagna. I do have to say, though, I don't recall when Gran Fran may have made this for us.

I do remember her excellent Pesto, and know that when we were in Italy in 1989 we did have a lasagna with pesto and potatoes in it. Yes, that's right, I (and probably Gran Fran, too) can probably recall every dish we ate that month in Italy. The fried bread (savory and salty) is one thing I have yet to be able to recreate in my own kitchen.

Enjoy a piece of this right out of the oven.

original recipe courtesy of Fran Claro of The Italian Pantry

Lasagna Genovese

Serves ten

Pesto

  • 3 cups basil leaves
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1/2 cup Parmigiano Reggiano cheese, roughly grated
  • 1 to 1 1/4 cups extra virgin olive oil
  • 3 tablespoons toasted pine nuts
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2   teaspoon freshly ground pepper
  • Dried red pepper flakes to taste
  1. In blender or food processor, pulse all ingredients, until sauce is thick and creamy.
  2. Add more oil if necessary.
  3. Set aside.

Lasagna

Preheat oven to 375 degrees F.

  • 1 pound curly edge lasagna noodles
  • 10 fingerling potatoes, scrubbed, salted, thinly sliced, steamed until tender
  • 1 pound green beans, sliced on the bias, salted, steamed 5 minutes
  • 1/2 cup Parmigiano Reggiano, coarsely grated
  • 1 pound fresh mozzarella, diced
  • 2 cups whole milk ricotta, drained
  • 2 eggs, beaten
  • 3 tablespoons flat-leaf parsley, minced
  • Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
  • Pesto
  1.  Boil noodles in salted water, according to package directions, drain well.
  2.  Blend mozzarella, ricotta, and eggs with parsley;  salt and pepper to taste.
  3.  Layer pesto, noodles, green beans, pesto, grated cheese, potatoes, blended cheeses, pesto.
  4.  Continue stacking ingredients in the same order, ending with noodles, pesto, and a sprinkling of Parmigiano.
  5. Cover loosely with aluminum foil; bake 35  minutes; remove foil; bake 10 minutes, or until golden brown.
  6. Let rest 15 to 20 minutes before serving.

The Nativity

Gran Fran's brother, Uncle (yes he has a name, but we just call him Uncle, okay?) painted these ornaments over 40 years ago. They've been featured on the tree all that time. I helped Gran Fran decorate her tree this year for the first time in almost 20 years. It was great to see these guys in person again. The wood is a soft balsa-wood type that's so light it seems too fragile to have held up over this many years.

I especially love how Uncle painted Mary and Jesus. It's so sweet.

Wishing you all a Merry Christmas. Celebrate the old-time traditions, create some new ones and enjoy yourselves with friends and family.

Fish Stew: For Now or Later

It has been a long time since I spent Christmas Eve in New York with Gran Fran and Joe. My sister is here in San Francisco and we have our own family gatherings, but I do miss Gran Fran's Feast of the Seven Fishes. We do a pretty good job of it, if I may say so myself, out here in SF.

I remember one of the first times she made Boulliabase (which is essentially the same sort of recipe as the below). We drove out to the docks in Long Island and got the freshest shellfish there was. A story for another time, was when we got live Lobsters from the same fishermen and I had to sit in the back of the car with a plastic bag of crawling Lobsters near my feet.

But  I digress. My tale today is about making this stew, and serving it to your friends and family as part of any celebration or just as a weekend treat. You may have noticed, I have a thing for soups. Well, stews rank right up there, so this is another favorite of mine.

Gran Fran always uses the liquor Anisette mixed with vermouth for her version. I don't always have that in my cupboard, so use dry vermouth with fennel seeds. Let me tell you, there is a huge difference. The Anisette has a depth of flavor that you just can't get with my version. But, of course, as I always say, make do with what you have and you'll still end up with a great dish.

When I was home during Thanksgiving, Gran Fran was kind enough to make this wonderful fish stew for me. She let me take pictures while she cooked. I usually cook and shoot everything I post. It was eye-opening to try and work in real-time shots while Gran Fran cooked and not get in her way. We often communicate via yelling (not I'm angry-type yelling, more of an I'm just trying to make my point kind of yelling). And so, you can imagine, that Joe decided to excuse himself from this particular event, hiding out in their office.

In the end, the food was wonderful and I loved being able to document Gran Fran while she actually cooks. When she posts on her blog, I end up cooking the recipes myself here in SF and posting pictures for her. Oh the greatness of technology. But, there is nothing like having a tried-and-true dish made by the person who first served it to you. Mine is always good (and my sister and her husband's versions are great, too), but Gran Fran just adds a certain something.

Make this and add your own personal touches. Except for the method, you can add or subtract any amounts of fish to your liking.

Merry Christmas to you all!

recipe courtesy of Fran Claro, reposted from The Italian Pantry

Friday Night Fish Soup

Serves six

  • 4 tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 cups potatoes, diced
  • 1 cup carrots, diced
  • 1 cup celery, diced
  • 1 cup onions, diced
  • Salt
  • Freshly ground pepper
  • 2 tablespons tomato paste
  • 4 tablespoons anisette or other licorice-flavored liqueur
  • 1/4 cup dry vermouth
  • 2 bay leaves
  • Sprinkle of red pepper flakes
  • 1 teaspoon dried basil or 1 tablespoon fresh
  • 2 quarts boiling water
  • 1 1/2 pounds cod fillet, skinned, rinsed
  • 3 dozen little neck clams, well scrubbed
  • 1 pound mussels, debearded and well scrubbed
  1. Warm oliveoil in a pot large enough to hold all ingredients.
  2. Add vegetables; sprinkle with salt and pepper.
  3. Saute vegetables until golden, about 15 minutes.
  4. Add tomato paste;  saute over low heat 10 minutes.
  5. Add anisette and vermouth; reduce by half.
  6. Add herbs, pepper flakes; cover all ingredients with boiling water.
  7. Bring to boil; reduce to simmer.
  8. Partially cover; simmer 30 minutes, or until vegetables are tender.
  9. Add cod; simmer 10 minutes.
  10. Return soup to boil.
  11. Add clams and mussels.
  12. After 7 minutes, check if shellfish open; remove from shells.
  13. Cook shellfish until most open;  discard any that have  not opened.
  14. Add shelled seafood to soup.
  15. Serve soup with crusty bread.

Something’s Fishy: Feast of the Seven Fishes

Every year, the first week of December kicks off the planning of the Feast of the Seven Fishes, in San Francisco for my sister and myself, and in NYC for Gran Fran and the rest of our family.

What, you may ask is this Feast of the Seven Fishes you speak of, Miss? It’s a tradition to serve a meal consisting of seven fishes on Christmas Eve, if you’re from an Italian family (specifically, it’s more of a Southern Italian tradition, and since Gran Fran’s family hailed from Naples, and Joe’s (our Dad) family came from Calabria, we fit the bill perfectly).

The basic premise is that Roman Catholics didn’t eat meat on Christmas Eve, just as in years gone by, they wouldn’t eat meat on Good Friday, and every Friday. This all changed with Vatican II. But old traditions die hard and besides being tasty, fish is abundant in Southern Italy, San Francisco, and NYC.

So it remains the food to feast on before heading to Midnight Mass. There is no hard evidence on the “why” behind the number seven being chosen, some theorize it’s because of the Seven Sacraments, but others think it might have to do with seven of the of the Ten Commandments. Doesn’t really matter. For ours and most Italian-American families, Christmas Eve was and continues to be all about the fishes.

I have several fond, adult memories of recreating the Feast here in San Francisco, one great New York memory, and some odd childhood reluctance to eat many of the fishes presented to me.

Gran Fran’s menu usually includes: Calamari in Spicy Tomato Sauce, Brandade, Fried Whiting (converted to Fried Fish Salad on the following day), Breaded Shrimp and Scallops, Fillet of Sole, Anchovy Pasta, and Baccala (dried cod) in Tomato Sauce.

Let’s start with childhood. I was always in the kitchen with Gran Fran (and it should also be noted here that Joe is an excellent cook in his own right, with one of his recipes appearing below), hanging around to see what she was making and how. But, when Gran Fran was cooking, you were a guest, not a participant. In those sessions, I learned how to make Brandade (salt cod with potatoes), Anchovy Pasta, and many Fillet of Sole and Red Snapper recipes.

Once they hit the table, the Anchovy Pasta was pretty much the only thing I’d put on my plate, until Gran Fran would prompt me with something like “What’s the matter-you? Get some of everything on your plate, or I’ll smack you upside the head.” (Occasionally, she would also threaten to break my feet. But she never did me any physical harm, in case you were worried.)

Reluctantly, I’d get the plate loaded up and eat as little as I could get away with, except for the Anchovy Pasta, which I kept stocking up on.As I got older, all the fishes began to taste good to me, so it has been a pleasure re-creating the Feast here in SF. My sister and I have prepared at least two fishes each every year for the past 16 Christmas Eves, with this year culminating in the ultimate seven fishes.

But more on that in a minute. I want to talk about Christmas Eve 2006, which is the only one I’ve spent in NYC, between 1992 and 2008.On this particular occasion, Gran Fran and Joe had a houseful of guests from San Francisco, including me and my family and my sister and her family as sleepover guests. By the time we hit Christmas Eve day, it was clear that with the crowd of 23 (which consisted only of my 4 siblings’ families, my family, and my parents), Gran Fran would need some help making the fishes.

As it turned out, I ended up making the Steamed Mussels in Sauce and tending to the Breaded Fillet of Sole.Within a matter of moments, I became the Queen of Gran Fran’s kitchen. Which, was great not only because I knew I could live up to the legacy of her cooking but also because it would be the last Christmas Eve we would have in my childhood home. The tomato sauce bubbled, the sole sizzled, and I stayed right on top of it all. The results were awesome.

I used everything I learned over the years when I hosted Christmas Eve, 2008. We did make the Brandade, the Anchovy Pasta, and the Fillet of Sole just like Gran Fran. But the other four dishes were new twists, contributed by our West Coast friends and family. We had Chestnut Soup with Lump Crab Meat and Chanterelles, Smoked Trout with Salad Greens, Pecans and Grapefruit Slices, Steamed Clams and Chilean Sea Bass over Greens.

Yes, it’s about the fish, but it’s about family, holiday cheer, and tradition.The tradition lives on, even with my daughter, Iz, who is into fish; she made it her mission that we hit the magic number seven by keeping track of everyone’s contributions. I know that in the future she will continue the fishy-madness and make Gran Fran proud.

This is a link to Gran Fran’s blog, theitalianpantry.com with the original post regarding the Feast of the Seven Fishes: http://theitalianpantry.com/2006/12/12/the-christmas-eve-feast/

Pasta with Anchovies

(Neapolitan)

Serves 8

You will need a heavy-bottomed non-reactive saucepan and a 5 to 8qt stock pot. Ingredients:

  • 2 cans best anchovy fillets wrapped around capers
  • 3 cloves of garlic quartered
  • 1/2 cup olive oil
  • Red pepper flakes to taste
  • 1/2 cup fresh bread crumbs ground from good quality white bread
  • 2 tablespoons chopped Italian flat leaf parsley
  • 1 1/2 pounds spaghettini

Method:

  • Put salted water on to boil for pasta.
  • While pasta is boiling, in a skillet heat olive oil until it shimmers.
  • Add garlic and cook until it is golden.
  • Add red pepper flakes and anchovies with their oil.
  • Stir rapidly to break up anchovies. Reduce heat.
  • Add bread crumbs and toss until crumbs are golden.
  • Remove skillet from heat. Drain pasta. Stir in sauce.

Note: The recipe above specifies salt only in the pasta water because the recipe contains salty anchovies.

Baccala

(Neapolitan)

Serves 6 as a side dish

Order about 1 1/2 pounds of dried cod that has been soaked at the fish market. (You have to order this several days in advance to give the fishmonger time to soak it. The fish will expand to about 2 1/2 pounds after soaking. If you think this won't be enough to satisfy your guests, order more, and adjust the recipe accordingly. The dish can be served reheated. Don't worry about leftovers.)

You will need a non-reactive 5 to 8qt stock pot. Ingredients:

  • Large white onion diced
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 3 T. anisette or pernod
  • 1/4 cup dry white wine
  • Pinch of salt
  • Sprinkle fennel seeds
  • Freshly ground pepper
  • Red pepper flakes to taste
  • Bay leaf
  • Package Pomi strained tomatoes
  • As soon as you get the fish home, place it in a large bowl of cold water in the refrigerator.
  • Change water about every two hours until you are ready to cook fish.
  • In a heavy, nonreactive pot, sauté the onion in the oil.
  • Add spices.
  • Reduce heat and carefully add the wine and anisette.
  • Over a medium flame, allow the alcohol to evaporate.
  • Stir in tomatoes.
  • Simmer sauce until thick and reduced by half--about 30 minutes.
  • Drain fish. Rinse well. Dry on paper towels. Cut into serving pieces.
  • Add fish to simmering sauce. Partially cover pot. Allow fish to simmer nicely about 40 minutes.
  • It should be totally opaque and flaky when cooking is complete. (Again, not too much salt because the fish is salty.)

Fritto Misto

(popular all over)

Serves 12 people (--but since it's a world-class favorite, you shouldn't cook less.)

You will need 2 large non-reactive frying pans; 2 jelly roll pans (baking sheets with a lip) Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 pounds well-soaked and well-dried baccala
  • 3 pounds calamari thoroughly cleaned and skinned, including tentacles
  • 1 1/2 lb. whiting (merluzzo) fillets with bones removed if possible
  • 2 pounds large shrimp, deveined and washed
  • 2 pounds scallops, well rinsed
  • 2 pounds lemon sole or flounder fillets
  • 3 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 2-4 cups olive oil (NOT extra-virgin)
  • 4 lemons sliced in quarters

Method: Preheat oven to 200 degrees (To make the best fried fish: Keep it refrigerated up to the moment of preparation. Then make sure the fish is absolutely positively clean. Wash, wash, wash until your hands turn red from the cold water.)

  • Heat frying pans and add enough oil to completely cover the bottoms with a layer about 1/8-inch thick. You'll add more oil as you need it.
  • Place the flour in a paper lunch bag. Before you add the salt to the flour, shake the baccala in the flour. Then remove the baccala and add salt to the flour.
  • While pans are heating begin to flour fish. Flour only a few pieces at a time. Fry fish in hot oil, making sure there is enough room between pieces to ensure even browning. As fish is fried place it on baking sheets.
  • Place sheets in oven to keep fish warm. Add more oil as needed to pans. If flour forms a heavy coating in pan, wipe out pan, add fresh oil, and start again.

Serve fish as soon as possible after frying. Pass lemon slices to accompany fish.

Fried Fish Salad

  • Early in day, select one of the fishes above, not the seafood, fry according to recipe above.
  • Arrange fish on platter.
  • Sprinkle fish with:
  • Red pepper flakes
  • Thinly sliced onion rings
  • Small quantity vinegar.Cover platter closely with plastic wrap. Refrigerate salad several hours before serving.

Mussels

Serves 6 as a side dish

  • 4 pounds cultivated mussels
  • 6 cloves garlic quartered
  • 1/2 c. olive oil
  • Freshly grated pepper
  • Pinch salt
  • 3 tablespoons anisette
  • 1 cup dry white wine
  • 1/4 cup chopped flat-leaf Italian Parsley

You will need a deep nonreactive skillet.

  • Scrub and debeard mussels.
  • Sauté garlic in olive oil, add salt and pepper, wine and anisette.
  • Let alcohol evaporate. Return heat to high.
  • Add parsley and mussels.
  • Cover pan closely. Shake pan occasionally until mussels open. Discard any unopened mussels. Serve with crusty Italian bread.

Baked Red Snapper

(Neapolitan) Serves 6

  • 1 whole red snapper, slit down one side, cleaned, gutted, head removed, well washed and dried
  • 1 large onion
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 1/2 cup freshly made bread crumbs from good quality white bread
  • Salt
  • Freshly ground pepper
  • 1/2 pound large shrimp, cleaned, deveined, washed, dried and diced
  • 3 tablespoons white wine plus 3 additional tablespoons

You will need a non-reactive skillet and an ovenproof nonreactive baking dish.

  • Preheat oven to 400 degrees
  • Rub fish all over with some of the oil.
  • Add a tablespoon of the oil to a large nonreactive baking dish. Rub the dish with the oil.
  • Heat the remaining oil in a skillet. Sauté the diced onion until it is slightly golden and translucent.
  • Add salt pepper, bread crumbs. Stir until crumbs begin to turn pale gold.
  • Increase heat, add shrimp. Saute shrimp until cooked through.
  • Add the 3 tablespoons wine. Stir. Remove from heat.
  • Mix shrimp, onion, and crumbs together to form stuffing for fish.
  • Stuff cavity of red snapper with mixture. Hold fish closed with toothpicks if necessary.
  • Sprinkle remaining 3 tablespoons of wine over and around fish.
  • Bake 25-30 minutes or until fish flesh is opaque, and skin is golden.

Hot and Sour Soup

I can't stop making soup. This is my third batch in two days. So, here it is, hold onto your hats, the best hot and sour soup recipe I've come across.

It involves a lot of steps, but it's not really that hard, just follow along and calmly work it. The original recipe came from Cook's Illustrated, but I've adapted it, enough, I hope, to call it my own. I use chicken instead of pork and since I am gluten-free, I use Tamari instead of regular soy sauce, as it has no wheat in it.

You'll want to get all your ingredients organized, lined up and measured out since some of the steps have a few sub-steps. It's well worth it, so hang in and have fun.

See that bottle? Chinese Black Vinegar. It's the secret ingredient for the flavor in this dish. Between this and the white pepper, it's amazing how much earthiness and valor these give to the soup. The white pepper is very pungent, use caution! As it is always easy to add more, but you can't remove it once it's in there.

The meat picks up an amazing texture when it is soaked in the cornstarch mixture.I've read that it helps to seal in the juices of the meat, which, if the soup is any example, then, yes, it works!

This is fun, don't over think it. But, do, go slow and try to make the drizzled stream as thin and consistent as possible.

Important Note:  Read the entire recipe all the way through first, please. You will need a bunch of small and medium bowls for this process. So grab them as you are reading and it should help start you off on the right foot.

Hot and Sour Soup 

adapted from Cooks Illustrated, 5/2006

  • 4 tablespoons tamari (gluten-free soy sauce) or soy sauce
  • 1 teaspoon toasted sesame oil
  • 3 tablespoons cornstarch , plus an additional 1 1/2 teaspoons
  • 8 ounces extra firm tofu, drained and cubed (see below for directions)
  • 1 boneless skinless chicken breast cut into 1 inch by 1/8-inch matchsticks
  • 3 tablespoons cold water , plus 1 additional teaspoon
  • 1 large egg
  • 6 cups low-sodium chicken broth
  • 4 ounces fresh shiitake mushrooms , stems removed, caps sliced 1/4 inch thick (about 1 cup)
  • 5 tablespoons black Chinese vinegar or 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar plus 1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar (see note above)
  • 2 teaspoons chili oil
  • 1 teaspoon ground white pepper
  • 3 medium scallions , sliced thin

First, drain the tofu:

  • Take the tofu out of the container, put it into a shallow pie plate (or any dish with a short rim).
  • Then, put a plate on top, and press down hard. Place two or three cans on top of the plate (I used canned beans) and leave to drain for about 15 minutes. Add more time if the tofu still appears soggy when you check it.
  • You'll know when it's ready to be cubed when the liquid has pooled at the bottom of the dish and the tofu appears much drier than it had been, but not super dried out.
  • Dice the tofu into cubes and set aside (though it's likely the broth will be simmered and ready by the time you've cubed your tofu).

Next Marinate the Chicken:

  • Whisk in a medium bowl:
    • 1 tablespoon tamari or soy sauce
    • Sesame oil
    • 1 teaspoon cornstarch
  • Thoroughly mix the chicken strips in the marinade and leave to soak for about 10 to 20 minutes.
  • The meat will become silky and somewhat fatter than it was when you began.

And Then:

  • Combine:
    • 3 tablespoons cornstarch
    • 3 tablespoons water in small bowl and mix thoroughly
    • Set aside, leaving spoon in bowl.
  • Mix:
    • Remaining 1/2 teaspoon cornstarch
    • Remaining 1 teaspoon water in small bowl
    • Add egg and beat with fork until combined. Set aside.

Start Putting it Together:

  • In a large heavy-bottomed pan, bring the chicken broth to a boil.
  • Once the broth has boiled, lower the heat to medium-low and:
    • Add mushrooms.
    • Simmer for about 5 minutes, until the mushrooms are nice and tender.
  • Add:
    • Tofu and chicken, including marinade, to soup, stirring.
    • Continue to simmer until chicken is cooked through, about 4 minutes.

Almost Done:

  • Remember the mixture you made that you left the spoon in? It's time to stir it and make it more liquid now.
  • Add to soup and increase heat to medium-high.
  • Cook, stirring occasionally, until soup thickens and turns translucent, about 1 minute.
  • Stir in:
    • vinegar (either the Chinese Black Vinegar, or the combo of Balsamic and red wine vinegar)
    • chili oil
    • white pepper
    • remaining 3 tablespoons soy sauce
  • Turn off heat.

Make the Egg Drops:

  • Get your egg mixture (the last bowl, I hope, that you have left with something you mixed earlier) and grab a spoon.
  • Do not stir the soup, make sure it's still when you start this next step.
  • Take your spoon and scoop up a bit of it into your spoon.
  • Very slowly, like you are just hanging out and not in any kind of rush, start drizzling the egg mixture over the soup, moving around the pot in a clockwise motion.
  • Let rest for a bit, about a minute.
  • Bring soup back up to a gentle boil over medium heat.

Serve it Up:

  • Remove from heat and give the soup a light stir, just enough to break up the egg drops, but not so fiercely that the nice thickness that the cornstarch leant to the mix.
  • Ladle into bowls and top with scallions.
  • Chicken Scarpariello: A Gift for Gran Fran

    There was a time that I couldn't deal with cooking things that had too many steps. I suppose I just became lazy at some point. Eventually, I came back around to the thrill of the multiple step recipe, that involves measuring cups and spoons and even multiple knives for different ingredients. It dawned on me that Gran Fran just keeps cooking, no matter how much mess, how many pots and pans or how long it'll take. If there is a recipe that needs to be made, she will make it no matter what.

    This year, for her birthday,one of my sisters asked me to shoot and make a bunch of Gran Fran's recipes so we could make her a nice little book as a gift. I didn't have much time, only a week and a half, so I tried to choose recipes that would be relatively easy to work through.

    A quick look through Gran Fran's blog, revealed to me that many of the recipes, though simple, involve many steps and ingredients. So much for making this project easy. Though it was challenging, due to time constraints (not to mention that Gran Fran planned a last-minute trip that landed mid-deadline, making me stop my work, so as to not ruin the surprise gift that was to come a few weeks later), I really did enjoy working on these recipes.

    The recipes I chose all turned out really well, flavor-wise, I think, because of the many layers of flavor. For this Chicken Scarpariello, the hot cherry peppers offset the sweet fennel sausage nicely. The steps are simple, there are just a lot of them. But, the end result is totally worth it.

    original recipe from The Italian Pantry, Fran Claro's Food Blog

    Chicken Scarpariello

    Serves six

    Ingredients:

    • 2 tablespoons olive oil
    • 3 cloves garlic, quartered
    • One 4-pound chicken, well rinsed, dried, cut into 10 pieces
    • Salt to taste
    • Freshly ground pepper to taste
    • 1 pound sweet sausage with fennel, sliced into 1/2 inch rounds
    • 4 to 7 hot cherry peppers in vinegar, diced
    • 1 cup dry white wine or dry vermouth
    • 1/2 cup chicken broth

    Method:

     

    • Add chicken to pan; sprinkle liberally with salt and pepper. 
    • Brown chicken thoroughly on allsides.
    • Remove chicken from pan; set aside.
    • In same pan, saute sausage until cooked through
    • To pan, add diced peppers, including seeds; stir.
    • Remove sausage andpeppers from pan; set aside.
    • Add wine to panand reduce by half; add broth.
    • Stir all scrapings from bottom of pan into the wine and broth.
    • Return all ingredients to pan; bring to a boil.
    • Reduce heat; cover closely.
    •  Simmer 30 minutes or until chicken is cooked through.
    • Remove sausage and chicken from pan; set aside.
    • Over medium heat, reduce sauce until it coats a spoon.
    • Pour sauce over chicken; serve with mashed potatoes.

    photocrati gallery

    I Love My Food Processor

    Have you ever seen anything so wonderful?

    If you've seen my previous posts, you may know that I grew up in a household without a food processor, let alone knives that had any kind of a sharp edge.

    I resisted for years, fearful that Gran Fran's paranoia about these machines with killer blades would come true.

    Well, I'm glad that I bit the bullet and got myself a new-fangled food processor. It is my new best friend (though that Microplane is coming in a close second).

    I never imagined how quickly it could take a ingredients to pulp, soup or otherwise smush lots of stuff together instantly and consistently.

    And, so, here are a few of my greatest hits: pesto, no-cook cranberry sauce and mushroom soup.

    Microplane

    You may know that I don't eat cheese anymore. It's a sad state of affairs, since I love some grated Parmaggiano-Regiano on just about everything, and don't even get me started on Gruyere. But, the ill side-affects keep my cheese consumption low these days.

    I didn't even own a cheese grater until about two months ago. In my most recent move, I guess I discarded the box grater I had, assuming I'd never need to grate cheese again. Well, I was wrong and began using a vegetable peeler to get something resembling grated cheese for guests' meals.

    All that changed when I threw down some cash and acquired my first Microplane.

    I want to grate everything now. The silky, tiny specks of cheese for the fig and speck pizza, the fully-zested orange in under 2 minutes for the no-cook cranberry sauce or the fresh ginger for the pumpkin bread .

    Alas, I'm in the market for all sizes now, seeing as I think you might be able to make some nice zucchini or cucumber ribbons with one of those larger ones.

    Yay for Microplanes!!