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Sugo al pomodoro classico (classic tomato pasta sauce)

November 3, 2015 by natalie 3 Comments

Sugo rosso classico

Sugo rosso classico

 

Classic tomato sauce aka sugo.  

There is no reason any non-native Italian shouldn’t be able to make an authentic, reliable, tasty, easy go-to pasta sauce.  I advise you to just shrug off the casual snobbery / subtly xenophobic tendency that fellow Italians have, where they are deeply suspicious of any other nationality making anything from their classic culinary repertoire.

This classic red sauce will cause disagreements in every household and by my estimation is probably the primary source of initial rifts between daughters-and-mothers-in-law as there are as many recipes for it and opinions on it as there are families in Italy.   Often but not exclusively, each family hands their recipe down from mother to daughter (and of course sometimes son, look at Bottura, Carluccio, Contaldo, Locatelli et al) in this way for generations.  it’s not a secret recipe usually, it’s just a basic survival skill in all families an a very polarizing one at that.  IMG_2360Some don’t diverge from a minimalist, purist version (tomato, olive oil, garlic and salt and maybe (oooh!) a single basil leaf) – my friend Ute calls it “sugo finto” in her house (which means “fake sauce” and recommends this particularly with fresh, seasonal summery tomatoes – I will provide her exact recipe soon… others will only approve of a soffritto base and then the addition of tomato.  To give you another example of a totally valid yet surprising departure from the majority of recipes – from a bona fide, card-carrying Sicilian friend of mine, Elena who is a paediatrician living in the UK called her mother in a panic when pregnant in order to get the exact recipe for her sugo such were her cravings.  She used to make her own (just one of her mother’s variations) but the nostalgia component was insurmountable as she craved a particular recipe which had no soffritto or oil at all involved in the cooking.  Controversially Elena’s mother’s recipe involved boiling the tomato and carrot and celery and onion without the initial frying off, just the combining and boiling of all the ingredients and the addition of fresh, raw extra virgin olive oil just before serving….

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Filed Under: Gluten-Free, Mains, Recipe Vault, Recipes, Starters, The Abruzzo... the most underrated region of Italy, Tips, Tricks and shortcuts, Veggie Headliner Act

The great pasta debate, the food police and how to eat sensibly

October 22, 2015 by natalie 1 Comment

IMG_8017I am on a bit of a pasta jag at the moment.  Let’s be honest though -when, with kids am I not?  I say: “Eat pasta and be proud!”.  Since going back to school we have been through a Ragù phase, a pesto revival phase, an orecchiette ai broccoli phase (and all the brassicas in between), there is never a week that passes that I don’t have classic red sugo in the fridge ready to furnish my kids’ hot pots for school… I have done pasta al forno and all manner of seafood pasta.  But even I recall that here in England there was a time when pasta was considered exotic.  When I started being served it at playdates in the 80s in place of meat and two veg it was seen as groundbreaking, modern and sophitiqué yet also practical, tasty and quick to prepare.   It was a true case of how did we ever manage without it.  It was basically the denim jean of culinary traditions.  There were also aberrations like alphabetti-spaghetti and spaghetti hoops which would make my parents recoil in horror, but which I remember all of us kids universally liking at the time.  Those mass-produced tinned monstrosities were proof that pasta was hitting the mainstream, that it was a ‘legit’ food.  But then, along with sun-dried tomatoes (bleurghh!!), low-fat diets and white processed carb-based meals, pasta kinda lost its A-list celebrity status (outside the family-cooking arena at least).  Just like how the mum-jean ushered in the combat trouser uniform, suddenly we all turned against the tide, saw fault in it becoming suspicious of pasta, bread, all types of starch.  But just as jeans will be with us forever, just in reworked and improved, more lightweight iterations, I think there is a place for pasta, not just classic wheat past, and it is here to stay.  Even in Italy (if you ask me – and Massimo Bottura – one of the most gastronomically conservative countries in the world) I see change.  Pasta still features very regularly on my relatives’ tables but it is not necessarily served up every single day (revolutionary I know!), and when they do indulge, they now try and savour it and are quite careful to limit their serving size.  The spectre of type II diabetes and diet-led disease is top of mind across all cultures it seems.  Even more recently I have been amazed how such a closed culinary tradition has allowed kamut and gluten-free pasta in to the mainstream –  no-one  even bats an eye when these are available at restaurants these days.

Really I wanted to write this post because …

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Filed Under: Food & Health Trends, Parenting and Family, Recipe Vault, Topics from the School Run

The BASICS: How to cook pasta

October 16, 2015 by natalie 2 Comments

IMG_8030Apologies to anyone who doesn’t require these pointers but I do get asked frequently for the genuine, Italian method for cooking pasta.  I do find that many of my non-Italian friends get little things “wrong” and this does make things trickier / less reliable in terms of outcome.  My best friend in Italy, Ute who has the family run restaurant has whole banks of water on the boil, in the way that Brits would have deep-fat friers constantly on the go with wire baskets bubbling away, except in Italy these contain hot salted water.  Gluten-free vats are set aside to be left totally free from wheat contamination and this is now becoming the norm in Italy.  The tips below may seem to only define minor differences between the happy-go-lucky most cooks employ, but they make the difference between authentic tasting pasta and slop.  Trust me.

Here we go:

  1.   Use a larger pan than you think (at least a c.3L pan for 500g [ie. one pack] pasta)
  2.   Use more water than you think (fill the pan 3/4 full) and be prepared to top up the water from a kettle or boiling tap if the water looks overly cloudy or gloopy or simply insufficient if need be
  3.   Salt well (eg. at least one heaped tablespoon of salt for a pan that size) – you will get a hang of doing this by eye. I do it by throwing in a hanful of sea salt or one swirl of fine salt
  4.   Do not bother with adding oil etc. to the boiling water, if you stir it properly (and this is the only true way to avoid it gumming together) then it will turn out well
  5.   Be prepared to stir a lot in the first 5 minutes to prevent the pasta from gluing itself together and to the base of the pan
  6.   If you are cooking ‘long’ pasta (spaghetti, linguine, tagliatelle, fettuccine, bucatini, capelli d’angelo, chitarra etc.) then stand over the pas with a large wooden fork and twist the long stems into the water until they are all covered up and stir until flowing freely under the water with no clumping.
  7.   Remove the pasta before it is really cooked through to your desired bite level (very ‘al dente’ for me) and, crucially DO NOT OVER DRAIN it, leave a small puddle of cooking water in the pan (about 2-3 tablespoons) so that when you tip the pan, a corner of water can be seen.  This is because the pasta will keep on cooking and absorbing the water until you eat it and it can become ever so dry and stodgy in that time unless you pre-empt this.  Alternatively you can drain the pasta very cursorily (so it is still sopping wet) leaving plenty of milky-looking cooking water aside in case it is needed, until you dress the pasta and combine it properly with the ‘sugo’
  8.   OPTIONAL: you can stir in a tiny drizzle of olive oil if you are afraid of it sticking but only if there is a delay between cooking the pasta and adding the sauce.  In Italy most health conscious families tend to add fresh olive oil just before serving as it is healthier uncooked and is almost always a welcome addition
  9.   Lastly, a trick I see used at my bestie’s restaurant is to complete the cooking of the pasta with the sauce in a large sauté pan so that the pasta and the sauce “fuse” and really combine.  You can either do this in the boiling pan if your sauce is pre-made, or add your pasta to the sauce sauté pan which is still cooking away on the stove alongside the boiling pasta.  Not only does this allow me to serve pasta that is hot enough but more importantly it allows the flavour to penetrate the pasta and to perfect the “cuisson/cottura”, ie how al dente the pasta is.  This last step is not necessary but it does make a real difference.

NOTE:  I rarely if ever see a mound of naked boiled pasta with a pile of sauce pooled in the middle.  This is a bastardization of our way of serving that has been propagated by countless commercial pasta sauce adverts and is a method that Italians never use.  We might lightly stir in a sauce and then serve a blob in the middle for effect upon serving but that is it.  No-one is seasoning and stirring in their pasta on their plate as if it has been plopped there by some two part pasta dispensing process, it is messy and doesn’t allow the flavours to meld.

Now you know.

Filed Under: Gluten-Free, Recipe Vault, Recipes, The Abruzzo... the most underrated region of Italy

The Basics: Soffritto, my umami – how I love thee, let me count the ways!

October 3, 2015 by natalie Leave a Comment

IMG_1902I can’t keep up with writing up the volume of things that I think can be useful / interesting to share on here.   Sometimes I master something new and I think – wow, what took me so long?  There are countless other elements like broths and stock, and bread dough that I can pull together and which make the rest of my cooking more tasty, more flexible, more interesting.  It is definitely a confidence thing, being able to make any kind of soup, sling any fish of any size and shape in the oven and to not have to consult a  recipe book or double check the correct oven temperature, the ability to eye progress and adjust,  how to pre-empt ‘doneness’ by bearing in mind the residual heat a dish contains before you serve it…  At last, turning 40 a month from today, I actually have that elusive ‘feel’ for things – both in the kitchen and without.  It is as if the culinary trajectory runs parallel to other elements in life:  you become seasoned with a patina of firsthand exposure, layer upon layer of trials and tribulations borne of personal effort, time and experience that not matter how beautiful and fresh the greenness of youth may be, it simply cannot match it.

Recently I realized that I can make caramel by eye, and a few months back I mastered something that seemed so unfamiliar and Anglo/French and faux-grand that I thought it would be fiddly but it really wasn’t: roux and by extension, béchamel.  Then my friend Brooke said: “i feel I could do with a real intro in to the basics… like how to make a roux, or a soffritto as these things crop up all the time…”.  So I’m going to include this and many others on here, with hyperlinks so that you can refer to these recipes when they crop up as a subset of another recipe.  I would also be very open to suggestions (grateful) at what to include in the basics section, as I think different families and cultures have a particular “house style” and a different way of approaching things and therefore everyone has their ‘essentials’ list.  My take on cooking is that to be a successful intuitive cook (ie. someone broadly competent and comfortable in the kitchen), it helps to learn some of the extensive culinary alphabet.   For me, coming at this cooking lark from a definitely Italian angle, soffritto is definitely one of the basic building blocks.

Soffritto is one of those things that Italians assume everyone beyond the confines of Italy must familiar with, as it is a ‘starter’ and enhancer of simply so many dishes.    I use soffritto to make variations of “shepherd’s pie” and “cottage pie” that I would otherwise never be tempted to make for my family.  My childhood memories of eating Shepherd’s pie and its relatives, is one of a dark and muddy 2 dimensional gristly meat base taking its colour from bovril or bisto granules.  We do use stock cubes in our house, and Bouillon powder, but there is nothing that can compare with the savoury and wholesome tang that comes from frying over a little pile of diced vegetables.  The classic soffritto I am referring to is basically a sepia take on the Italian flag:

  1. Celery (green)
  2. Onion (white)
  3. Carrot (red – sort of!)

I have often heard that celery is rich in umami and this must be why it is a key vegetable in soffritto.  Apparently Parmesan is also rich in umami (no wonder Italian food is so addictive and why I end up using so much of these ingredients in my own cooking).  Anyway, carrot has sweetness, as does onion once golden, and combined they produce that perfectly synergistic collision of several of three of the five key tastes once you throw in seasoning ie. sweet, salty and umami.   According to Wikipedia:

Many foods that may be consumed daily are rich in umami components. Naturally occurring glutamate can be found in meats and vegetables, whereas inosinate comes primarily from meats and guanylate from vegetables. Thus, umami taste is common to foods that contain high levels of L-glutamate, IMP and GMP, most notably in fish, shellfish, cured meats, mushrooms, vegetables (e.g., ripe tomatoes, Chinese cabbage, spinach, celery, etc.) or green tea, and fermented and aged products involving bacterial or yeast cultures, such as cheeses, shrimp pastes, fish sauce, soy sauce, nutritional yeast, and yeast extracts such as Vegemite and Marmite.[26]

Many humans’ first encounter with umami components is breast milk.[27] It contains roughly the same amount of umami as broths.

There are some distinctions among stocks from different countries. In dashi, L-glutamate comes from sea kombu (Laminaria japonica) and inosinate from dried bonito flakes (katsuobushi) or small dried sardines (niboshi).

It would seem that most food cultures try and access that umami perfection but I had never consciously realized that the flavours I am drawn to most (many of the apparently eccentric elements in my store cupboard such as dashi, bonito, kombu, and less eccentric more widespread ones such as fish sauce and yeast flakes)  are precisely things that boost flavour in this category.  Umami is said to ‘magnify’ taste, which to me seems like a cook’s cheat, a way to just make things taste more, taste better.  Retroactively I feel less of an obsessive saddo for making my own fish stock and faffing around pouring it in to my baby weaning cubes and freezing it for future use as in fact I am just lusting after umami in my cooking.  To me it makes the world of difference but I get it that for a lot of people making stock is just a bridge too far in terms of hassle sometimes…  In which case I highly recommend soffritto as it gets you a lot of the way there in terms of amping up the taste of many a dish.

A soffritto can also contain garlic and chilli, (especially in Abruzzo) and in Italy we often use celery leaves rather than the stem.  This is probably due to the fact that the celery you find there is much more leggy and hardy, over all much greener and more wiry (when you buy it at a real market) than the water-rich, virtually albino variety found further north.  For this reason you may find that your frying time varies, depending on water content.

Lastly, when I make a pasta sauce for the kids and I want to morph it in to something more compelling and more dashing with heat and oomph, I will often slice up a clove or two of garlic and give it a gentle fry with some fresh chillies (or dried if that’s what you have to hand) and then heat the sugo up in the two-ingredient soffritto before adding to the pasta.  Soffritto is also the key to tomato sauce, most of my risotti, the key to making an amazing Ragù and basically anything you care to make with mince. Look no further:

IMG_2348

Slice off one edge to stop the carrot rolling then slice the removed edge and the remaining carrot into 3mm-deep slices…

 

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In turn flip the slices on to their sides, slice them up lengthways in to matchsticks and then once more slice these matchsticks crossways (perpendicular) to create tiny chunks…

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cut the stems of celery in to pieces roughly 10cm long and one inch across, then ribbon these in to long matchsticks as you did with the carrots…

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then slice these crossways into small cubes

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remove the core of the onion, peel it and flip it over for slicing finely…

IMG_2347

chop the slices perpendicular to the onion layers and little chunks will be the outcome

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place the vegetables for the soffritto into a heavy-based pan and fry gently in enough oil to cover the bottom of the pan and coat the veg… be sure to add the garlic once the onion starts to turn golden, not before or it will burn and ruin the flavour.

 

The Basics: Soffritto, my umami – how I love thee, let me count the ways!

Print this recipe
natalie
October 3, 2015
by natalie
Category Gluten-Free Pantry and Suppliers Recipe Vault The Abruzzo... the most underrated region of Italy Tips, Tricks and shortcuts Veggie Headliner Act
This recipe is a soffritto that would be suit a sugo that would serve c. 10 people (made with 2-3 x 700g bottles of passata). Simply halve this amount for a regular 2L saucepan size.
You don't need to weigh your veg unless you want to, it may be helpful first time around, until you 'get you eye in'. I know a large handful of each vegetable is a good measure for me, and should occupy most of the bottom of the sauté I use, once dropped in and spread thinly and evenly across the breadth.
Sorry to delve in to detail with the chopping technique, but it makes a whole word of difference to your speed and outcome. You could of course use an electric chopper appliance but it doesn't make cubes, it makes little chiselled pieces of varying size so your veg don't fry very reliably. I have done this many a time with no qualms, when horribly pressed for time.
Prep Time
10 minutes
Cook Time
5 minutes

Ingredients

  • 4 tbsp olive oil or 2-3 heaped spoons of coconut oil 'cuisine' (the odourless variety) or high-smoke point neutral oil of your choice.
  • 1-2 sticks of celery (70g approx or about 5 tbsp once chopped finely)
  • 1 medium carrot (c. 70g)
  • 1 small onion or large shallot (c.70g)
  • 3 large cloves garlic
  • additionally some people add herbs at the early stage or make preserve raw soffritto veg all prepped in jars with herbs, I will explain how to do this in a separate recipe.

Instructions

  1. You can start by pouring a thin stream of your oil or measuring out enough oil to cover the base of your pan well.
  2. No need to turn on the heat until your veg are all finely chopped (except the garlic)
  3. Take your celery and pare it down in to roughly 10cm lengths about 1 inch (2-3cm) wide (see photos in soffritto post) as this will make chopping it much faster and more systematic.
  4. With a sharp knife, slice through it lengthways, following the long fibres visible in the celery, slicing about every 3-4mm or so if possible. In places where the celery is thick, you may need to turn some of these slices over a quarter turn and slice them down their length again, in order to give them a square (rather than rectangular) cross-section.
  5. This is so that when you spin these long thin matchsticks round 90° to cut them crossways, they turn in to tiny cubes not rectangular prisms. This ensures they brown evenly rather than sweating on side and burning on another.
  6. Do the same thing with your carrot(s). Slice a sliver off its length so that it can sit without rocking.
  7. Then cut them into 3mm slices lengthways. These should now be long rectangular slices almost the same width as the diameter of the carrot (minus the part you pared away intitally) and about 3mm in cross-section.
  8. Flip these slices standing up on their side, over a quarter turn so that they lie flat and slice these flat fat slices in to 3mm matchsticks lengthways again. Turn these matchsticks round 90° and chop through them in to tiny fine orange cubes.
  9. For your onion, peel off any dry outer layers of skin, slice lengthways from hairy root to leathery top and then peel off the outer, fiddlier layers until you reach the first of the fresh, juicy unblemished onion layers.
  10. Remove the heart of the onion (see photo) to ensure the acrid, sulphurous quality of the allium is toned down. I do this by scoring a deep pyramid around the root and lifting out the flame-shaped bulb that attaches to it.
  11. Do the same to the other half.
  12. With the onion lying flat half down, pungent core removed, leathery top to your left (if right- handed) control the opposite outer edges of the onion with your fore-finger and thumb of your free hand. With your knife-wielding hand, slice horizontally from the tip of the onion to the base, the onion top and your hand combined, will ensure the onion stays together instead of fanning out in to a mess.
  13. Then as you did with the other veg and slice perpendicularly through the cuts you have made. The onion layers will break up along with your slices to give fine white onion cubes. Perfect!
  14. Turn on your heat and when the oil is warm throw in your finely chopped soffritto vegetables.
  15. Stir regularly to avoid sticking and uneven colour.
  16. While these are slowly going golden, peel and finely slice your garlic (don't chop as the greater surface-area will make it burn faster if you do)
  17. When the onion is turning from transparent to a light golden colour at the edges, slide the garlic in to the pan with the other veg, and stir.
  18. Do not let the garlic burn (ie. it must be lightly crispy and yellow not brown in colour) or else it will taste horribly bitter and ruin your dish.
  19. Proceed with your dish of choice!
© 2025 Recipes property of www.WoodsmokeandWildStrawberries.com

You can also, if you are the kind of person who in your more manic moments likes to batch cook and store for a rainy day, you can make an industrial amount and preserve it in jars…

All you do is up the quantities of the above veg in proportion, (you might want to skip the garlic as then you have the option of adding it without too much hassle when needed), salting it (1 part salt to 4 parts veg, in weight –  1:4).  In Italy they often advise the following:

1/2 kg rock salt

1kg carrot

1kg celery

1kg onion

2 tbsp fresh parsley / thyme (I don’t recommend basil as it doesn’t keep well at all so is best added fresh).

… Make sure these are, as ever, all finely chopped and then sprinkled with the salt and allowed to sit for 10 minutes in a large bowl.   The veg are then strained and patted dry and then mixed with olive oil so as to be thoroughly coated, and then spooned in to glass jars (sterilized if you prefer, but I never bother) and covered over with more oil.   Make sure you bang these jars firmly on a tea-towel on a work surface to allow any air-bubbles to escape, then top up again with oil, so that unlike an iceberg, no single point of the soffritto mix is surfacing above the oil. Close with a lid and store somewhere cool such as a cellar or fridge or shed for a month or more.  When my aunt does them they keep for months!

As you use the jars, but perhaps don’t finish them, simply top them up with more oil to create an air-seal and continue to store.  Voilà!  Next time you are making something on the hoof, no faffing with peeling and chopping, two heaped tablespoons and you’re done.  Just be sure not to add any more salt to your final dish as the preserving salt will be quite potent.

Filed Under: Gluten-Free, Pantry and Suppliers, Recipe Vault, The Abruzzo... the most underrated region of Italy, Tips, Tricks and shortcuts, Veggie Headliner Act

Buttermilk, why to use it, alternatives and how to make your own!

September 22, 2015 by natalie Leave a Comment

IMG_1312

Buttermilk substitute! just milk and a bit of lemon juice

There are a host of benefits to consuming cultured sour milk products which, in addition to the calcium and protein they contain (I know, the big dairy debate) also contain probiotics.  Products such as kefir and yoghurt and buttermilk have a host of very practical uses in the kitchen too.  Firstly – being sour – they tend to keep well and so make a fabulously dependable standby to keep in the door of your fridge.  I have been known to use the same carton of mine for a shameless 3 weeks from opening and live to tell the tale.

IMG_1384

This Annie Taintor magnet is on my fridge – and about sums up my world view based on an upbringing at the hands of parents who are the products of WWII.

but are also tasty consumed on their own.  They can also be lightly dressed up with a natural sweetner such as honey or chopped fruit as a drink, used in smoothies or morphed in to a delicious savoury base for dressings (coleslaw, potato salad, lettuces).  From a culinary and technical standpoint, they also have a very useful attribute in that they have a wonderfully tenderizing effect on baked goods and in meat-preparation.  I have used buttermilk for coating meat before dredging and frying and it makes it quite succulent.

I make U.S style breakfast pancakes, occasionally waffles and very often my veggie pancakes and the basic batter recipe for these being the same, the key to making all these turn out well (ie. fluffy, light, tender) is to not over mix (a few lumps are fine), and to use a soured dairy product (or soy substitute) for the binding mixture.  Kefir, yogurt (if thick this can be thinned with water), soured cream and smetana all work well.  Yoghurt is great for flavour  and any dairy product with a boost of acidity will do the trick (milk, cream) but buttermilk is subtler and runnier than most yogurts and therefore often more suitable for combining with flour. You can buy it as it is from most good supermarkets or, here comes the interesting bit, make your own, by a very simple form of chemical mimicry.  It is ultra useful when for example you only need a small amount for a recipe and don’t want to buy a whole carton, or if you don’t have any at home and need to rustle up something similar…

You can use whole milk and add some lemon or white vinegar and even if this mixture won’t be as viscous and unctious as buttermilk, it will mix in to batter beautifully.      You can also thin regular thick yogurt with a little water until it is the consistency of a smoothie, Yogurt: Mix 3/4 cup plain yogurt with 1/4 cup water to thin. Use as you would buttermilk.

This “recipe” makes about 1 cup (c. 250ml).

Homemade buttermilk substitute

Print this recipe
natalie
September 22, 2015
by natalie
Category Recipe Vault Recipes Tips, Tricks and shortcuts
For thicker buttermilk you can use cream and add lemon or vinegar to it, or Apparently even 1/2 tsp Cream of Tartar. My favourite is lemon. Let whatever mixture you make curdle stand 5-10 minutes until slightly thickened and "split". Generally though, I find that whole, full fat milk is ideal for making a drinking yogurt consistency buttermilk sub.
If you are dairy-free you can also make it with soya milk!
Prep Time
2 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 cup (approx 250ml) milk, preferably whole, or even single cream
  • 1-2 tablespoon lemon juice or white vinegar (lemon has a great flavour, I have even used lime juice which is wonderfully fresh and aromatic)

Instructions

  1. Simply squeeze the lemon / lime juice, strain / remove excess pulp and all seeds.
  2. Pour in to milk / cream and let stand and curdle for a few minutes. Ideally the buttermilk should be at room temperature for optimum cooking results.
  3. You will know the buttermilking effect has taken place as you will be able to identify small curdles and a thicker consistency upon stirring.
  4. Voila'
© 2025 Recipes property of www.WoodsmokeandWildStrawberries.com

Filed Under: Recipe Vault, Recipes, Tips, Tricks and shortcuts

How to clean clams and mussels

August 10, 2015 by natalie Leave a Comment

20150715_191758 (1)

“Trabocchi” the traditional fishing outposts as seen all along the Adriatic, in particular the Abruzzo. This one is in San Vito Chietino

I have rarely found good clear explanations from the pros on how to do this.  It can be a maddening thing to get a straight and fool-proof method.  I feel like this about mushroom-picking a risky enterprise unless you have been lucky enough to grow up with an experienced picker teaching you the ropes.  Both lean on a body of knowledge that is privvy to a few experts and which a novice will clearly find daunting due to the considerable risk of the downside (not usual in most culinary endeavours): sickness or worse!

My disclaimer is that I have followed the method below and have never got ill, nor had to chomp through sandy seafood.  I have been sick from clams prepared in restaurants however.  Use your common sense and eat your seafood as fresh as earthly possible.  In essence if you consume shellfish that has been dead much before cooking, you are going to regret it.

If you have do have to keep them for a day or two before using them, the best method to store them fresh, according to Vicky from Channel Fish at my Farmer’s Market, is to leave them in a bowl in the fridge or somewhere cold (outside in the winter), in a newspaper or with some ventilation (ie. not in a bag, suffocating slowly but in a breathable environment).  They will die if left in sweet water or if suffocated so they ought not to be immersed until you have sorted any dead ones from the live, fresh ones that are ok to cook not more than an hour or so before cooking.

IMG_1414

aaah, vongole…

CLAMS:

Unwrap and turn them on to a work surface lined with greaseproof paper.

If they have been somewhere very cold, it may take them 15 minutes or so to warm up.  This is necessary as some may appear dead because their reactions are so slow.  You don’t want to be throwing out expensive seafood just because it is sleepy!

Any cracked, chipped or open shells should be thrown out.

Any open shells should be gently tested by being knocked on the counter top and if alive, they will clamp themselves shut.  These can go in to the “yes” bowl.

Any which remain open after your interference should be thrown away.

Scrub all the clams that are good under running water, and remove and sand and barnacles you can.

Let the clams sit in fresh tap water for 15 minutes or so.  They will churn the water and spit out any sand that has accumulated in their shells.

Rinse them and let them sit another 5 minutes.

By now they should be clean and the water should be clear around them.  They are now safe to drain and be used.

 

MUSSELS:

Same as for the clams above, but be sure to de-beard as the last step before cooking as the de-bearding kills them.  The beards if trapped inside, can be removed at the table, it’s no big deal.

The debearding should be done by pulling the furry beard towards the hinge of the shell (the pointiest, narrowest part of the shell) and should come away easily.

 

 

Filed Under: Recipe Vault, Tips, Tricks and shortcuts

So shoot me, I make my own Pesto

June 10, 2015 by natalie 3 Comments

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Pesto made and snapped by me. It is in a flavour-league all of its own.

I absolutely advocate shortcuts in family life.  There is so much general friction just in getting out the door every day that if I can cut corners without compromising the end result too much then I’m all for it.  I sometimes shake may head in numb disbelief at how much time of my life I spend just mechanically loading and unloading the dishwasher multiple times a day, scrubbing pots, emptying potties and picking peas up off the floor.  It is hard to cook wholesome food that doesn’t generate lots of prep and clearing up etc. so, since  I really am committed to wholesome food, I need to make it count and I need to know that nutritionally, my meal is going to blow the doors off to make it worth it.  Pesto is one of those things that can vary in quality hugely.   We’ve all fallen upon the odd jar of Sacla in our hour of need but I must say that I always feel underwhelmed and kind of disappointed after I’ve eaten it.  It’s basically fast food masquerading as proper food.  No aroma, no depth, cloying, too much acidity, and most probably very limited nutritional value. It is all about balance –  would it be easier to just open a jar?  Yes.  Would it taste as good?  No.  Would it be as good value both nutritionally and economically?  No. Too much of a compromise for me in that case.

One thing that makes me feel not so much old as very different from the childless segment of the population born after 1985 is their complete obliviousness to the fact that there will most likely come a day when you will have to put yourself last.  It’s like a baptism of your own when you have kids.  A watershed moment after which nothing is ever the same. You can’t unbreak eggs, just as you can’t unknow parental responsibility and love.  I am a bit obsessed with those turning points in life that give you a sort of shell shock. It’s like the Gayle Forman quote:

“We are born in one day. We die in one day. We can change in one day. And we can fall in love in one day. Anything can happen in just one day.”

It’s like losing your virginity – you can’t imagine it will ever happen, and then suddenly you are on the other side of it and one of the initiated.  At first you look around you, and at your parents and your neighbours and teachers and think “they all do this weird thing, it’s so weird!”  The same temporal jump happened with all the crucial watersheds, school exams and then Finals, your driving test.  It is that mind-blowing notion that you graduate to new dimensions of experience /achievement.  When my mum died I just suddenly felt the door opening and shutting and and a cool realization that I had had scales on my eyes, that I was ignorant to so much, to what so many people deal with in their lives every day.  I felt small.  I actually felt dumb, I felt I had barely scratched the surface of life and what its purpose is.  I became aware that I had seen, like a pre-enlightenment citizen, my world as flat, as mostly sunshine and light, with my concerns only stretching as far as my own eye could see, when in reality the world is spherical, riddled with hidden depths, dazzling light as well as the darkest shadow. It makes you realign your priorities, painfully reinvent yourself, give less of a damn and generally shake off much time-wasting and dithering.   Death when it strikes close can prompt you to finally eliminate the chaff, be it badly written books from your bedside table, destructive relationships, clutter, with no guilt.  One of the best blogposts I ever read was this one.  I think it captures what happens as you feel more comfortable in yourself as you age.

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Filed Under: Mains, Parenting and Family, Recipe Vault, Recipes, Sides, Starters, Topics from the School Run, Veggie Headliner Act Tagged With: basil, children's meals, chives, kale, nutrition, nutritious, parenting, parmesan, parsley, pesto, pine nuts, quick meals, shortcuts, super-food, superfoods, time-poor

New beginnings (… how to cook the perfect soft-boiled egg)

May 21, 2015 by natalie Leave a Comment

What better way to start a blog than with a piece about the humble egg. The primordial symbol of new beginnings.

The ones I am enjoying at the moment I discovered at my local greengrocer in Hampstead. They swiftly achieved cult status in our household… this is because they are basically freaks of nature, albeit natural and very delish ones: They are double yolkers!  “How do they manage to get those?” I hear you ask. Well I DID ask and apparently a fresh and plucky young rooster is introduced to the flock at regular intervals, which, much as Beatles fans might have thrown their underwear on stage in paroxysms of lust, causes the hens to go all libidinous and fertile and provokes intensified ovulation resulting in double egg sacks in their gorgeous eggs.  ==>  I had to revise this last piece of info as I asked my farmer of H G Witt and Son, at the Parliament Hill Farmer’s Market and apparently there is a much less romantic answer.  Around 5-7% of conceptions are twins, these result in larger eggs and they are visible and selectable simply by virtue of their size.   This farmer does the most wonderful raw milk, the best actually (see here). Anyway… Each egg is quite frankly, HUGE, which makes a real feast of eggs and soldiers in our house.  They are from Haresfield Farm and are not their regular extra large organic free range eggs.  They have a special red XL label.  Anyway, all this to say that we have a bit of an eggs-n-soldiers obsession – somewhat fuelled by this new egg-eating experience: instead of an unsatisfying couple of stabs at a little egg swiftly resulting in a pile of dry crusts and no more interior unctiousness, these eggs are quite literally a wholesome and creamily delicious meal in themselves.

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Filed Under: Recipe Vault, Recipes, Uncategorized Tagged With: boiling an egg, egg prick, eggs with soldiers, how to cook an egg, runny yolk, soft boiled, technique

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Musings and culinary endeavours of a polyglot mother of three, shining a spotlight on family life and food from the Abruzzo region and beyond.
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