Tag: tube

Lasagna in a tube: the culinary invention of Valerio Braschi – Italian Cuisine


At the 1978 Restaurant in Rome, the chef proposes to "brush your teeth" with a lasagna cream, as he did as a child. A childhood memory turned into a dish (provocative)

Very young and eclectic winner of MasterChef in 2017, for a year Valerio Braschi is the chef of 1978 restaurant in Rome. And it is his culinary provocation which these days is animating the world of gastronomy inside and outside the social networks, that is lasagna in a tube. That's right, one of the dishes par excellence of the Italian tradition served as if it were a toothpaste. Aware of being so daring, when the twenty-three year old posted his creation on social media he got his hands on: "Maybe a bit extreme for purists," he wrote. "But I can assure you that, despite the change in appearance and texture, the taste has remained intact".

valerio-braschi-ristorante1978
Chef Valerio Braschi of the 1978 Restaurant.

Lasagna in a tube (but also a pasta brush and broth mouthwash)

And to say it is not only the inventor of the dish, but also a Romagna doc. The idea came to him from the memories of his childhood (he is originally from Santarcangelo di Romagna) when the morning after the holidays he happened to do breakfast with leftovers of the day before, including a portion of lasagna. How to brush your teeth with that flavor, in short. There was no shortage of negative comments on the creation on social media, but the chef assures that customers liked the idea, so much so that Valerio then decided to accompany the lasagna toothpaste to one egg paste toothbrush and to a Parmesan broth mouthwash 60 months and 180 months.

lasagna2021 valerio braschi

Lasagna 2021 it is part of the tasting menu Valerio 2k21 (10 courses for 100 euros): «The total transformation of a great Italian classic, explains the chef. «This is the beauty of our work. The thing that strikes the people who work with me is to do new things every day, experiments, combinations .

Rosemary Honey “Pull Apart” Dinner Rolls – Because You Love Them…Right?

Entertaining during the holidays usually means plenty of
costly, complicated, and time-consuming recipes, so absolutely no one would blame you if
you simply tossed a tube of store-bought dinner rolls into the oven to save a
little time and effort.


Of course the problem with that, at least for loyal
followers of this blog, is that some or all of your family members will have
seen this video by then, and you may get a few looks. Not that they would never
question your undying love and devotion to their happiness, but hey, why take a chance?

Assuming that you have an electric mixer, besides a few
minutes of cutting and balling the dough, these really aren’t that much work to
make. If you don’t, and would have to knead this by hand, then let your
conscience be your guide. I think I speak for your entire family when I say, we
know you’ll do the right thing.


Anyway, as far as holiday dinner rolls go, these are pretty
lean. You can certainly up the melted butter amount, and toss in a egg or two,
but since these are generally going to be eaten with fairly rich food, I prefer a lighter approach.

Please feel free to embellish with anything else you’d like
to toss in. I’ll toss out garlic, herbs, cheese, seeds, and nuts just to start
the brainstorming session. I hope you come up with something amazing, and give
these a try soon. Enjoy!


Ingredients for about 32-36 small dinner rolls:
1 packet (2 1/4 teaspoon) dry active yeast
1/4 cup warm water (100-110 degrees F.)
1 cup milk
4 tablespoon unsalted butter
1 or 2 tablespoon honey
1 teaspoon salt
2 tsp minced fresh rosemary leaves
about 3 cups unbleached all-purpose white flour, plus more
if needed (NOTE: add about 2 1/2 cups of flour at the beginning of the mixing,
and then add more in smaller increments until the dough just starts to pull
away from the bowl. Remember, you can always add more, but can’t remove too
much! Better a little too sticky than too stiff and dry.)

2 tbsp olive oil (to oil the dough)
egg wash (one egg beaten with a teaspoon of milk)
coarse sea salt

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