Tag: Bresaola

Bresaola rolls: 5 recipes – Italian Cuisine

Bresaola rolls: 5 recipes


Bresaola rolls are a delicious and easy to prepare appetizer. And not just with the cheese filling. Look at that wonderful alternatives!

The bresaola rolls they are a delicious and easy to prepare appetizer. Do you know that you can make them in so many ways?
We offer you 5 ideas.

Bresaola is good to consume naturally, raw, without too many seasonings, if not a drizzle of oil, parmesan flakes or a few drops of lemon or balsamic vinegar. Just cooked does not make and not even added to particular seasonings.
There is also a way to bring to the table this delicious sliced ​​typical of the Valtellina in its simplicity, enriched however by a soft filling: the rolls.
To prepare them, just wrap a slice of bresaola after spreading a creamy filling in the center.
The bresaola rolls always conquer everyone and are also very popular with children.

Rolls or bundles

You can wrap the bresaola forming rolls or use it to prepare dumplings, just as nice to serve.
To close them always use chive strands that, in addition to giving color, can also be eaten and have a fresh taste.
Whether it's dumplings or rolls, we recommend choosing a nice bresaola cut. That it is freshly sliced ​​and not too subtly otherwise it risks darkening quickly.

Salad yes or no?

A few green leaves look good on it, both inside the roll and in the serving dish to be used as a bed. Adds color and freshness.
You can choose the more tender ones like valerian, songino or spinach, or you can opt for something more crunchy like endive and radicchio, provided they are finely sliced.

Five recipes of roulades with bresaola

Bresaola rolls with goat cheese and pistachios

The slightly acid taste of goat cheese goes perfectly with the sweetness of bresaola.
Then a pinch of salt and pepper and the mixture is ready.
Just add even coarsely chopped pistachios in the filling to give a little crunchiness.

Bresaola and ricotta rolls

If you don't like the taste of goat cheese, replace it with ricotta, which is lighter and more delicate.
Remember to sift it a little to soften it and season it with salt, pepper and lemon peel to add a touch of freshness.

Bresaola rolls with spreadable cheese

Another perfect cheese paired with bresaola is the classic fresh spread.
You can use it alone or add it to goat cheese or ricotta. He is also very good with robiola.
Always to add a little crunchiness, add some dried fruit. Nuts, for example.

Bresaola and guacamole rolls

Who said that the filling must always be made with cheese?
We suggest the classic Mexican sauce made with avocado, cherry tomatoes, onion, lemon and Tabasco.
An unusual combination that will win you over.

Bresaola and chickpea rolls

Another delicious filling as unusual: this time made with chickpeas.
Not a real hummus, but a cream prepared with cooked and well drained chickpeas blended with oil and lemon juice.
Lemon juice must be very present because it counteracts the flavor of bresaola and enhances the delicacy of the legume filling.

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Bresaola according to Sadler – Sale & Pepe – Italian Cuisine

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From a typical Lombard specialty of the Valtellina tradition, the bresaola has become a widely used excellence, with a 45% increase in consumption over the last 15 years. It is the only product of our delicatessen made from beef, light thanks to the almost total absence of fat and rich in noble proteins. Nutritional characteristics that, added to its definite but delicate taste and its versatility, make it appreciated by eight out of ten Italians.

172198These data would be enough to satisfy established companies like the historian Panzeri, a 76-year specialist in the processing of Bresaola della Valtellina PGI: today the two Chiavennaschi plants produce 12,000 bresaola per week, most of them sliced ​​and packaged, for a total of 15 million trays each year. However Nicolò Panzeri, at the head of the family salami factory, was looking for something more: to give new impulse to the product-symbol of a territory, but without distorting its character and the process of production. Nice challenge. The launch of the ball went to the Michelin-starred chef Claudio Sadler, who after two years of testing and experimentation came to formulate the recipes of four types of bresaola capable of combining tradition and innovation, as they say in these cases.

172201Signature bresaola

Sadler's idea was to intervene in a precise phase of the salami processing process, the only one that leaves room for personal interpretation: salting the meat. The composition of the tanning with which it is impregnated before being seasoned is in fact a mix of salt, spices, herbs and natural flavors, according to different recipes for each producer, which in a certain way represent the "signature". Sadler therefore thought of using wholly new aromas for bresaola, from ginger to dwarf pine, also in appropriate combinations with alcohol instead of wine sometimes used for tanning / marinating.

172204The combinations

Thus four "variations on the theme" were born: bresaola with fresh notes like la Tonica (with ginger and Gin Tonic) and la Montanara (with mugo pine and grappa), or with an intense and decisive flavor like the Tartufata (with natural tubers, without synthetic oils) and the Wrong (with Bitter Campari and chilli). All are perfect as an appetizer and to accompany the aperitif, ideal for food pairing (the trend that sees the combination of cocktail and food), because the alcohol component is already defined at the start. As an alternative, a centrifuge of apple, ginger, celery and carrot is fine with the Tonica, with the Montanara an apple juice, while at Sbagliata you can combine a light red wine instead of the famous Negroni that inspired it.

172210The recipes

Like the classic typology, le Bresaole d'Autore you can taste them as they are, on happy hour sandwiches or to enrich mixed salads with cheeses, but they are also suitable for creative dishes. Provided you use them with similar ingredients, capable of enhancing them and adding them right on arrival, so as not to alter their flavor and aroma. As in the risotto with lime with marinated prawns and Tonica, in the pancotto with Tartufata, in the Sbagliata rolls on artichoke salad, in buckwheat ravioli with Montanara. These are the recipes prepared ad hoc by Claudio Sadler that can be found on the mini site bresaoledautore.it.

Paola Mancuso
March 2019

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