Bruschetta with Taggiasche Olive Pesto and Feta 

Bruschetta with Taggiasche Olive Pesto and Feta 

Bruschetta-with-Taggiasche-Olive-Pesto-and-FetaYou might be wondering what that weird foreign word is in the title. It’s the variety of one of my favorite Italian olives and is pronounced taj-jas-kay. These small greenish-purplish-brownish olives are cultivated on the rocky mountain slopes :: pendenze of the Italian Riviera in Liguria.

Bruschetta-with-Taggiasche-Olive-Pesto-and-FetaTaggiasche olives have a meaty texture and a slightly tart salty flavor. They are perfect ground up in this pesto or just plopped into various salads or entrees, especially with white fish like rockfish :: lo scorfano.

Bruschetta-with-Taggiasche-Olive-Pesto-and-FetaIf there is one thing I beg of you, it’s to use a good rustic bread, not the store bought sliced kind.  Mr. Italicano and I shot a video this weekend at our favorite bakery :: forno, Forno di Mario, located in Correggio. The video will be coming soon but in the meantime we took home a loaf of miracle bread made with natural yeast and antique grains. This bread was perfect for a light and crunchy bruschetta.

Bruschetta-with-Taggiasche-Olive-Pesto-and-Feta

Bruschetta-with-Taggiasche-Olive-Pesto-and-FetaThis appetizer :: antipasto is perfect for last minute guests as you can whip it together in just 5 minutes. It helps to have a jar of good quality taggiasche olives in the cupboard for occasions like this.

Bruschetta with Taggiasche Olive Pesto and Feta
 
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This appetizer is perfect for last minute guests as you can whip it together in just 5 minutes.
Serves: 10-12 bruschette
Ingredients
  • 6 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
  • 12 ounces (340g) taggiasche olives, drained
  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice (about half a lemon)
  • 1 clove garlic, minced
  • 1 cup (10g) loosely packed Italian flat leaf parsley
  • 1 loaf of rustic bread, sliced
  • Crumbled feta, as needed
Instructions
  1. Put the oil, olives, lemon juice, garlic, capers and parsley in a food processor or blender and mix until slightly chunky. Add more extra virgin olive oil if needed to arrive at the desired consistency.
  2. Serve with toasted bread, some crumbled feta and parsley.

Here’s some other great recipe to try with taggiasche olives:

Rosemary and Taggiasche Olive Dinner Rolls

 Rosemary and taggiasche olive dinner rolls 

Marinated Feta, Basil, Taggiasche Olives and Sun-Dried Tomatoes

Marinated Feta, Basil, Taggiasche Olives and Sun-dried Tomatoes

Baked Goat Cheese with Tomatoes and Olives

Baked Goat Cheese with Tomatoes and Olives

Italian chickpea, sun-dried tomato, pesto and olive flatbread

Italian chickpea, sun-dried tomato, pesto and olive flatbread

Scafata 

Scafata 

ScafataLast weekend I was invited to Umbria (a region in central Italy) along with six other wine, food, and travel bloggers, to participate in a three day educational tour. You can read about this incredible experience and get some travel tips :: consigli di viaggio from my previous post about Umbria. Now, let’s talk about a delicious traditional dish I tried called Scafata.  Oh my, if you haven’t tried this Italian stew with fava beans :: fave you are in for a treat!

ScafataFava beans, or broad beans as they are often called, are the oldest known beans. Like lentils, they are used in various European and Mediterranean dishes. Fava beans grow in a soft fuzzy pod :: baccello, but are much larger than peas. In France and America it is custom to peel the transparent skin off the bean, but here in Italy, we just shuck them from the pod and eat them raw, or cook them in various dishes.

ScafataFava beans are the main players in this dish. From here you can toss in a variety of seasonal vegetables. I’ve used a sweet Tropea onion, freshly shelled peas and a large bunch of Swiss chard :: bietole. Asparagus would work well, which I unfortunately didn’t have on hand.

ScafataScafata is good when eaten warm right after being cooked, but like many great Italian dishes, it becomes absolutely darn right mouthwatering when made a day or two ahead and eaten cold or heated up. The traditional recipe doesn’t call for cheese :: formaggio, but Mr. Italicano tried it with grated Parmesan as well as a spoonful of Burrata, which were also great variations.

Scafata
 
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"Scafata" is a traditional dish from Umbria, Italy that is loaded with vegetables and perfect for summertime.
Cuisine: Italian
Serves: 4-6
Ingredients
  • 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 garlic clove, finely chopped
  • 1 red or Tropea onion, finely chopped
  • 3 cups (400g) shelled fava beans (or frozen)
  • 2 cups (285g) shelled peas (or frozen)
  • 13.5 oz (400g) cherry or datterini tomatoes, without the skins*
  • 12.5 oz (350g) Swiss chard, chopped
  • 1 handful basil or mint, chopped
  • Salt and freshly cracked black pepper, as needed
  • Grated parmigiano reggiano (parmesan cheese), as needed (optional)
Instructions
  1. Bring a medium pot of water to boil. Don't add salt to the boiling water as the peas and fava beans will toughen up. Salt the dish at the end of the recipe.
  2. Put the extra virgin olive oil in a skillet. Add the garlic and onion and cook for a few minutes over medium heat.
  3. When the water is boiling, cook the fava beans for 2-3 minutes then drain them (reserving the hot water) and put them in the skillet with the garlic and onions. Add the tomatoes, swiss chard and half of a ladle of the hot water. Cover the skillet and cook for 15-20 minutes, stirring occasionally and adding more water if necessary to keep the mixture from sticking to the pan.
  4. Now that the stew is ready, bring the water reserved back to boil and cook the peas for 1-2 minutes; drain and add to the fava mixture. Add the basil or mint, salt and pepper to taste. If desired, add the parmesan cheese. Cook for 1-2 minutes. Serve warm o cold. This dish is best made a day or two in advance and eaten cold or reheated.
  5. *To easily remove the tomato skins, stick the tomatoes in the freezer over night and run them under lukewarm water to remove the skins; or, boil them for 1 minute and then run them under cold water and the skins will easily come off.

Here is another great recipe to try with fava beans: Avocado and Fava Bean Dip

Avocado-and-Fava-Bean-Dip

 

Quinoa Salad with Peas and Shaved Asparagus 

Quinoa Salad with Peas and Shaved Asparagus 

Quinoa-Salad-with-Peas-and-Shaved-AsparagusLast week here in Correggio (Emilia-Romagna, Italy) it was hot and humid, but now it’s rainy and cool outside. It feels good to wear a sweatshirt and Mr. Italicano’s big warm blue sweatpants. I don’t think I will every get use to the humid air that steals my energy like a sneaky pickpocket :: borseggiatore steals wallets on the crowded metro. Before you know it, what you had is gone. Such injustice, I tell you.

Quinoa-Salad-with-Shaved-Asparagus-and-Peas

Quinoa-Salad-with-Peas-and-Shaved-AsparagusI’m in my Italian kitchen—5500 miles from Seattle, but I feel like I am there. I look out my window and see the same dreary grey sky that I spent so many years staring out at from behind closed windows of all shapes and sizes in libraries, offices, coffee shops, restaurants, gyms and various apartments. Some may hate this drab :: scialbo weather, but I find it comforting and soothing. It’s as though I am nestled by big pillows of sheep fur, the sensation is so cozy that it makes me want to curl up and read and write or relax cooking with a warm cup of tea and some mellow music.

Quinoa-Salad-with-Peas-and-Shaved-Asparagus

Quinoa-Salad-with-Peas-and-Shaved-AsparagusI think of Mr. Italicano as I snap open these peas for this quinoa salad. He’s gone off to the Adriatic Sea for a sailing course. Poor him. Every time he goes he encounters bad weather and an angry sea :: mare. Yet, maybe it’s for the better. As a good English proverb says, “A smooth sea never made a skilled sailor.”  How true this is, and so applicable to our daily lives. The challenges we face, the obstacles we have to hurdle are the things that benefit us in the future. It is this hope that I can realize my dreams and passions that helps me to not give up when things get tough, reminding me that these challenges will only make me stronger. (Even though it’s not always easy!)

Quinoa-Salad-with-Peas-and-Shaved-AsparagusI am making a big bowl :: ciotola grande of this quinoa salad with shaved asparagus and peas. It’s the perfect healthy dish to warm me up today, and we’ll eat it cold tomorrow when my hungry sailor returns.  I hope you have a great weekend wherever you are and enjoy your day, rain or shine!

Quinoa Salad with Peas and Shaved Asparagus
 
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This wholesome quinoa salad with peas and shaved asparagus is perfect for healthy weeknight dinners or a large get-together.
Serves: 6-8
Ingredients
  • For the quinoa:
  • 4 cups water
  • 2 cups (370g) quinoa
  • 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, peeled
  • 30 stocks of asparagus, ends snapped off and shaved
  • 1 cup shelled peas, fresh or frozen
  • For the parsley basil pesto: 
  • 2 handfuls Italian flat leaf parsley
  • 2 handfuls basil
  • 1 small lemon, juiced
  • ⅓ cup extra virgin olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons pine nuts (or walnuts)
  • 1 clove garlic, finely chopped
  • Salt and black pepper, to taste
Instructions
  1. Bring a medium saucepan of water to boil. Add the quinoa, cover, lower the heat to simmer, and cook for 15 minutes.  Remove the saucepan from the heat with the lid still on and rest for 5 minutes.
  2. In the meantime, make the parsley basil pesto. Toss all of the ingredients into a food processor or use a hand immersion mixer and mix until smooth. Add more extra virgin olive oil if needed to arrive at a runny consistency.
  3. Heat the extra virgin olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat then add the whole garlic cloves and shaved asparagus. Cook for 2-3 minutes then add the peas and cook for an additional 2-3 minutes. Discard the garlic.
  4. Fluff the quinoa with a fork and pour into a big serving bowl. Add the asparagus, peas and parsley basil pesto and stir until combined. Serve warm or cold. A great make-ahead recipe for large gatherings.

Here is another delicious quinoa salad to try.

Black-Quinoa-Salad

 

Spring Rolls 

Spring Rolls 

Spring Rolls
Whenever I travel to a new country, I make it a rule to eat only local food. I see it as a chance for me to learn, discover and explore a culture through its gastronomy :: gastronomia.  After all, I never know if I will be back. I fear that I might miss out on some spectacular dish or some new flavor sensation that will push my tastebuds to a new level.

Spring Rolls Years ago, when I was traveling with my friend Suzanne in South East Asia, we stuck to this rule.  From what I recall, we only cheated a few times: Mexican food in Vietnam (it was just too irresistable); and, maybe a Starbuck’s coffee in an airport or two. Apart from those few occasions, we spent six months together traveling to over nine countries, eating like locals. We shopped at rowdy markets, ate street food :: il cibo venduto per strada every chance we could, participated in cooking classes and arranged home stays so we could stay and dine in some local’s homes and get a real authentic experience of the culture.

Spring Rolls For me, food is not just a way to nourish :: nutrire my body, but a way for me to satisfy my curiosity and, more importantly, a way for me to remember. A lot of my memories of a country are associated with food. That is just how my brain works. After month or even years have passed after a trip, I usually can never remember the historical sites or famous works of art in museums, but I can remember the memorable food that I ate.

Spring Rolls These spring rolls bring back great memories of Thailand. I am on Railay Island. It is dark out, but Suzanne, Brian (another friend who was traveling with us for a few weeks) and I use our head lamps to keep from tripping on the dirt and stone path leading to an open air restaurant tucked a hundred yards inland. We walk up the stairs and find a table by a railing on the expansive porch. We sit on dark wooden stools and look out towards the Andaman Sea where we can faintly make out the waves crashing on the beach. Wafts of mosquito spray, sweet flowers and thai spices fill the air. Oh, that sticky air that makes your face shiny and your clothes cling to you. We order our food and shortly afterwards, our appetizer :: antipasto arrives: fresh spring rolls. I take a bite.

Spring Rolls Now I find myself back in my kitchen. I am alone…no friends, sea or humid air; but, for a fleeting moment I was there. With a bite of these spring rolls :: involtini primavera I had been transported back in time to a country thousands of miles away. I had been sitting with my dear friends and enjoying an incredible meal in a foreign place. I never knew when I would have gone back to Thailand, but today for a moment, I did.

Spring Rolls
 
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These spring rolls are a light and easy-to-prepare appetizer; perfect for spring and summer.
Ingredients
  • 2 oz (100g) vermicelli noodles
  • 2 carrots, cut into julienne
  • 1 cucumber, cut into julienne
  • Avocado, cut into julienne
  • Basil, roughly chopped
  • 12 rice papers
  • 1 bowl warm water
Instructions
  1. Bring a medium pot of water to boil. Put the vermicelli noodles in a large bowl. Once the water is boiling, pour it onto the noodles and let them soak for 4-5 minutes. Drain and let cool.
  2. Set up your work station with the noodles, carrots, cucumber, avocado, basil and warm water. You’ll also need a cutting board to roll and cut each spring roll.
  3. Soak one rice paper at a time for about 10 seconds then place it on the cutting board. It should be pliable but not too wet it tears. Load the rice paper with a small amount of rice noodles, carrots, cucumber, avocado and basil. Fold the sides in and then roll tightly. Cut in half. Repeat with the remaining ingredients.
  4. Serve with soy sauce, peanut sauce or chili sauce.

 

 

Black Quinoa Salad

Black Quinoa Salad

Black-Quinoa-SaladMr. Italicano and I principally eat a Mediterranean diet: a lot of vegetables, fruits, whole-grains, legumes, beans :: fagioli, healthy fats, cheese, wild caught fish and good red wine.

Black-Quinoa-Salad

Black-Quinoa-SaladQuinoa is one of our favorite whole-grains (or “psuedo whole-grain because it is the seed of a beet relative). It can be prepared in a variety of ways: in soups :: zuppe, in fillings, as a flatbread, as small cakes and most commonly, as a salad.

Black-Quinoa-SaladBlack-Quinoa-SaladQuinoa is extremely nutritious; it contains all 9 essential amino acids that are essential for humans.  On the package of my black quinoa box :: scatola, it even says that NASA is studying it as a possible alternative food source ::  to add in the astronauts’ diets, especially on long voyages. It’s quite impressive; it really is a superfood.

Black-Quinoa-SaladThere are many varieties of quinoa, but the most common are white, red and black. The white variety is fluffier while the red and black varieties are on the crunchier side. I always add in a bunch of seasonal vegetables :: verdure di stagione, a good vinaigrette and in half an hour I have a created a delicious and wholesome meal.

Black Quinoa Salad
 
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Add seasonal vegetables and a dijon vinaigrette to this black quinoa salad to create a delicious and wholesome meal under half an hour.
Serves: 2
Ingredients
  • For the quinoa:
  • 2 cups water
  • 1 cup (200g) Black Quinoa
  • 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 garlic clove, skin peeled but left whole
  • 1 leek, thinly cut into julienne strips
  • 4 asparagus, the bottoms snapped off then shaved with a vegetable peeler or thinly cut into julienne strips
  • 3 heirloom tomatoes, chopped
  • 1 bunch Arugula (1.5oz, 45g), chopped
  • 2 carrots, grated
  • 3-4 dashes of sweet paprika
  • For the vinaigrette:
  • ¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
  • 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
  • ½ shallot, finely chopped
  • Salt and black pepper
Instructions
  1. In a medium size saucepan bring the water to a boil, add salt then pour in the quinoa. Turn down the heat to a low, cover and cook for 28 minutes (or the time stated on the package.)
  2. In a large skillet add the extra virgin olive oil, garlic clove, and leek; cook over medium heat for 5-6 minutes. Add the shaved asparagus and cook for another 3-4 minutes. Remove from heat and discard the garlic.
  3. In a small bowl combine the extra virgin olive oil, red wine vinegar, dijon mustard, shallet, salt and pepper.
  4. When the quinoa is ready, pour it into a large serving bowl and fluff with a fork. Add the tomatoes, arugula, carrots, paprika, and vinaigrette. Top with the cooked leeks and asparagus. Buon appetito!