Tags
Wine grapes in Fabro
22 Tuesday Sep 2009
Posted in Bumbling Bites
22 Tuesday Sep 2009
Posted in Bumbling Bites
Tags
22 Tuesday Sep 2009
Posted in Bumbling Bites

Another recent recipe we made was potato gnocchi (Dad—you’re forbidden from trying this recipe. Just trying to protect Mom and Kaia) with the students. Our professor has a great, easy recipe, so if you’re motivated, try it out. We made our own special Taleggio cream sauce to go with, which was pretty tasty. Definitely enough calories for a couple days!
Potato Gnocchi
10-15 big potatoes
½ kg flour (type O)
fine salt
1 egg (if needed)
After having boiled and peeled the potatoes (the potatoes must be put on the cooker with cold water), mash them; if they are too mushy, add an egg. Place the mixed flour on a wooden board, add the potato mixture and make a dough. The dough must NOT be sticky. Roll the dough into a sausage-like form, as thin or thick as you prefer. Cut the gnocchi with a knife very quickly, without handling them too much. Sprinkle with flour.
To maintain them: the gnocchi can be cooked straight away in boiling salty water. When you take them out of the water (as SOON as they float to the top), transfer them into a big enough container and pour some olive oil on them; they can be stored in the fridge for up to 5 days.
Taleggio cheese cream sauce
Taleggio cheese (in Tucson, this can be found at Roma Imports…I haven’t looked for it elsewhere)
Bresciamella/cooking cream
butter
Cut the Taleggio—which has a nice, creamy texture and a subtle flavor similar, I suppose, to blue cheese or gorgonzola—into chunks for easier melting. Melt butter, cream and cheese together, stirring frequently. Serve immediately for best taste/texture—that type of sauce likes to form layers of skin if left too long. Add to gnocchi (or other pasta) and enjoy!
22 Tuesday Sep 2009
Posted in Bumbling Bites
So, I forgot to post about this before, but a weekend or two ago, Jeremy and I utilized a lovely flat pan and some leftover eggs to make a tasty little omelet. I’ve become much less vigilant about figuring out proportions; experiment!
4 eggs
pesto
cherry tomatoes
parmesan
milk
butter
In a small bowl, mix the eggs and a dash of milk to make them fluffy. Add a couple spoonfuls of pesto and mix. Dice the cherry tomatoes and grate parmesan cheese (this is all to taste, as a rule of thumb). Pour the egg mixture onto the pan and add the diced tomatoes and cheese; after it’s cooked, fold half over, omelet style. Serve with a cold glass of OJ (or ACE, if you can find it—orange, carrot and lemon juice. SO GOOD!)
09 Wednesday Sep 2009
Posted in Bumbling Bites, Expat Life in Italy
As promised, here’s another blog about food. The other night when we had our dinner with the pasta and prosciutto, I made a tasty fruit salad, too, that is mind-numbingly simple and so I thought I should share it:
Insalata di Frutta (per due)
1 kiwi
1 banana
2 nectarines
a couple tablespoons of sugar and honey
Dice and mix! Chill if desired. A fun twist is to add a little bit of prosecco or sweet white wine; sometimes as a dessert drink, Italians add chunks of peach to white wine to give it a nice, fruity bite.
Last night (Tuesday), Jeremy and I hosted our first dinner here at our new apartment. Three friends of ours who were still around after the dig came over; one, Alessandro, had promised he would cook. I had told him that it wasn’t necessary but when I joked about our anxiety for cooking for Italians, he laughed and assured me that he wanted to bring dinner. Evening came, and after it took him about half and hour driving around to find parking, Alessandro arrived with dinner in hand.
“Poi, che mangiamo?” I asked (So, what are we eating?). It turned out, he wanted to make a variation of what we had made just a couple nights before with prosciutto and crema! Neither Jeremy nor I said anything, but I had a slight feeling of pride, knowing that we had chosen something to cook that an Italian might have made.*
Our other two friends arrived shortly thereafter, and had brought a nice red wine (Sagrantino de Montefalco 2004). For dessert, I had decided to bring a taste of America to the table, and I tried a dear friend’s recipe for chocolate chip cookies, which turned out very well and even the day after are still moist despite being left out overnight. We ate and chatted about famous Italian archaeologists (Fun fact: apparently here, some have political power and lots of money…), mayonnaise, and sleeping in cariole. I would consider our first hosting experience a successful one.
*That being said, please see the edited version of Dinner Tonight for more variations and suggestions for the prosciutto/panna recipe.
06 Sunday Sep 2009
Posted in Bumbling Bites, Expat Life in Italy
Tonight was the first dinner we cooked in our new apartment. I’m going to try to get into a habit of posting recipes, etc. so you guys have an idea of the food we’re eating here, since Italy is so…Italy…and really one of the grand highlights is the food. This can also serve as proof that we are not bums and, although American, we know how to cook and enjoy doing it.
Prosciutto e Panna per Due
about 100 ml of cooking cream (Bresciamella, if possible)
about 250 mg of penne or any short pasta
about 4 slices of prosciutto cotto (cooked ham), diced/thinly cut into chunks*
parmigiano reggiano (optional)
Boil pasta and when you’ve drained it, add the cream and ham, stirring until well-blended. Grate Parmesan cheese to taste if desired.
We ate it with a side salad and for dessert, we had some cheese with honey (pecorino is good for this, but we had it with a softer cheese that is AWESOME for making grilled cheeses, called Torre Alta). We also had bread and olive oil & vinegar, as well as prosecco to toast to our new home. Buon appetito!
*An improvement to the recipe that I haven’t tried yet but think could improve this recipe’s texture is just to pan fry the prosciutto after it has been cut only until it’s slightly crisp.
**Note: A few days later, we had a similar dish with friends (See Cibooo e cena con amici) and he used tortellini with prosciutto and panna; the tasty addition: mushrooms. So, for a modified version, sauté a diced scallion with olive oil and add some diced mushrooms and the prosciutto to cook until the mushrooms are done. Add cream and sautéed ingredients to pasta, mix and serve.
03 Saturday Nov 2007
Posted in Bumbling Bites
Wow, I haven’t updated in forever. Our “fieldtrip” last week was a cooking class with Alba, our program director. She taught us how to make gnocchi and tira misu, which turned out beautifully and I’d like to try my hand at it at home.
Our big fieldtrip of the semester was to Pompeii, Naples, Paestum, Cumae and the Regia di Caserta. The compact version of that is that the south has the best pizza in the world, I think…Pompeii was pretty incredible but I almost enjoyed Paestum more, if only because it was less crowded and the weather was perfect and autumn-y and wonderful. The museum in Naples was incredible, too, because we saw some stuff that I’ve been studying since I was a freshman in high school (ie the best copy of the Doryphorous, which became the classical canon for beauty) and some amazing Hellenistic sculpture, which also happens to be one of my favorite artistic periods…Cumae was small but pretty and we could see horse-drawn chariots running along the beach (what the heck, right?) and the Regia di Caserta is actually the Italian version of Versailles. Ploy, Meghan, Jessica and I rented a 4-person bike and got a great workout riding around the Regia’s grounds, up hills and down…we had to push the bike up a couple hills, so I got my cardio in for the month I’d say…
Halloween is not really a celebrated holiday here, but we made it so. My friends and I were witches, some other girls were wine glasses, another was proseco, we had a scary creature, a moon goddess, a punk rocker, and a Roman senator, to name a few costumes. We hung out at a freind’s house and then went to the only club on top in Orvieto, which was a lot of fun.
As there was an Italian holiday, one of my roommates and I went to Rome and met up with Maddalena & co. We didn’t do much but we did watch an Italian teen 80’s movie called Notte Prima Degli Esami, which I think is like watching Breakfast Club or Pretty in Pink or something…it was actually great, I enjoyed it a lot. Thank you, English subtitles, p.s. The next day we met up with some other friends and did some shopping, saw the Piazza del Popolo, the outside of St. Peter’s, some Caravaggios, and got lost in Rome. Ate some phenomenal gnocchi and gelato (not at the same time).
Now it’s time to study for exams this week. Blah. I can’t believe how late it’s getting. I come home in about 4 weeks and I can’t imagine what it will be like. I have been to at least a bit of Europe and I love to see how each country has its own sappore, sabor, whatever you want to call it. Orvieto is full of such genuinely nice people, and Italy itself is one of the most welcoming countries I think I’ve been to.
Next post…the best fieldtrip we ever took.
27 Wednesday Jun 2007
Posted in Bumbling Bites
Haven’t you always wanted to go into a Christian Science Reading Room? I have. And today I did.
I have always been interested in the idea of a Christian Science, for one thing. For another, what do they need a reading room for? Is it the same thing as Scientology? They do both have “science” in them…well, this afternoon I needed to head down to Milwaukie to pick up my checks at BofA, and that’s a cute little area so I thought it’d be fun to walk around a bit before my bus came. I noticed a Christian Science Reading Room and thought, what the heck, now’s as good a time as any to go in and inquire. I’m not looking to convert or anything, but the desire to know what their religion was all about overpowered me and I found myself walking into the air-conditioned little store front. A nice woman greeted me. I explained that I really just wanted to know what they were all about. She sat me down and explained. Here’s basically what I learned, Wikipedia-style, if you’re interested.
I’m not sure how I feel about the doctor thing, but there is nowhere in their religion that says they can’t go to doctors, they just usually don’t due to their belief of why we get sick (caused by fear, ignorance or sin) and different methods of healing.
Overall, although it’s not a religion I myself would be interested in, I think there are some appealing aspects to it. Plus, I like the idea of a woman starting something in the late 1800’s, including a highly respected periodical, The Christian Science Monitor, when she was in her 80’s herself. I was glad I went in and asked about it. I’ll leave you to ponder their version of the Lord’s Prayer, which she gave me. The bolded parts are the standard version of the Lord’s prayer included in Eddy’s text, while the italicized are the interpretations written by Mary Baker Eddy in her book that serves as part of their text (along with the Bible), Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. (The ‘regular’ Lord’s Prayer isn’t even exactly what I’m used to, but whatever.)
Our Father which art in heaven,
Our Father-Mother God, all-harmonious,
hallowed be Thy name.
Adorable One.
Thy kingdom come.
Thy kingdom is come; Thou are ever-present.
They will be done in earth, as it is in heaven.
Enable us to know, –as in heaven, so on earth,–God is omnipotent, supreme.
Give us this day our daily bread;
Give us grace for today; feed the famished affections;
And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.
And Love is reflected in love;
And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil;
And God leadeth us not into temptation,
but delivereth us from sin, disease, and death.
For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever.
For God is infinite, all-power, all Life, Truth, Love,
over all, and All.
After my adventure to get my checks and to investiate Christian Science, I bought some Chips Ahoy! at Safeway. 2 for 1, baby! 🙂