Tag: chanterelles

Pappardelle recipe with onion cream, chanterelles and mullets – Italian Cuisine

Pappardelle recipe with onion cream, chanterelles and mullets


  • 500 g Tropea onions
  • 300 g chanterelles
  • flour 00
  • 8 filleted mullets
  • 4 yolks
  • 2 eggs
  • a clove of garlic
  • marjoram
  • thyme
  • burnet burner
  • dry white wine
  • extra virgin olive oil
  • White wine vinegar
  • salt

For the pappardelle mix the flour with the eggs, egg yolks and a pinch of salt and let the covered dough rest for an hour. Flour the work surface and roll out the dough, obtaining a sheet of one mm thick; cut the pastry with a knife, obtaining pappardelle about 3 cm wide.
For the onion cream, peel the onions, cut them into slices, keeping a few layers as a final garnish, and cook them in a saucepan with 3 tablespoons of oil and a pinch of salt for 5-6 minutes, then add a cup of white wine and a cup of vinegar and continue cooking for another 10 minutes. Browse 4 ametti of marjoram and add the leaves to the onions, stir, let them cook for a minute, then turn off the heat. Blend the onions with a cup of water, seasoning with salt.
For the chanterelles, peel them and cut them into pieces. Cook them in a pan with a tablespoon of oil, salt and the garlic with the peel for 4-5 minutes.
For the mullet, remove any bones from the fillets (use tweezers) and season with a drizzle of oil. Cut half of the fillets into small pieces and cook the others, whole, in a non-stick pan for one minute, seasoning with salt. Add the chopped mullet fillets to the mushrooms and cook for 1-2 minutes. Brown the slices of onion kept aside for a couple of minutes in a pan with a drizzle of oil and a pinch of salt.
Cook the pappardelle in abundant boiling salted water, until they come to the surface, drain with a slotted spoon and transfer them to the pan with mushrooms; add half a ladle of the cooking water of the pappardelle, a few leaves of lemon thyme and pimpinella and leave to flavor for 2-3 minutes.
Distribute on the plates a few tablespoons of onion cream, then place the pappardelle and garnish with 2 sautéed mullet fillets, a few drops of onion cream and the browned layers.

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Cream of onion and celeriac soup with chanterelles – Italian Cuisine

Cream of onion and celeriac soup with chanterelles


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1) Clean i mushrooms, wash them under running water, dry them, cut the biggest ones in half and keep them aside. Peel and slice the onion, peel the celery rapa and cut it into pieces. Peel the apples (except one half to keep aside) and cut them into pieces. In a saucepan, heat 4 tablespoons of oil and simmer the onion for 2-3 minutes. Add the celeriac, apples, one grated nutmeg, half of the thyme, laurel and about 1 l of vegetable broth. Salt, pepper, bring to a boil, cover and continue cooking for 15-20 minutes until the celeriac is tender if pricked with a fork.

2) Meanwhile, turn on the grill. Align the slices of bread on a baking sheet lined with baking paper and toast them on one side. Turn them over, sprinkle them with provolone and put them back under the grill until the cheese it will have melted and will be slightly golden.

3) With an immersion blender, blend the ingredients of the cream until you get a smooth cream; adjust the density by adding a little bit of hot broth, salted and peppered.

4) In a non-stick pan, heat 2 tablespoons of oil and let it jump the mushrooms on a high flame for about 3 minutes, until the vegetation water has evaporated; add the apple kept aside cut into cubes and brown it for a minute; add the coarsely chopped chestnuts and let them flavor. Season with salt, pepper, perfume with the remaining thyme, mix and remove from heat. Distribute the soup on individual plates, complete each portion with the mixture of mushrooms, apple and chestnuts, pepper and serve with cheese croutons.


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Drumstick, chanterelles and other woodland delicacies – Italian Cuisine

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Mushrooms are among the best treasures of the autumn tables. Let's discover some lesser known varieties, but able to give great satisfaction in the kitchen!




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Passion mushrooms: from August to mid-October we are in full season for hunters and gourmets, who can finally go hunting and then taste porcini, chanterelles, eggs, drum mallet and the many other varieties of edible mushrooms.

Encouraged by the theories of those who say that mushrooms are good for the immune system, however, they should not exaggerate people who digest them hard: they may be lacking in some enzymes able to reprocess substances such as mannite, trialose and chitin. Even if raw in salads they are delicious, for those who find it hard to digest them it is better to consume them cooked.

In general, the most delicate step is that of cleaning: you have to remove the earthy part well and then proceed with the preparation.

Drum mace
The drum mallet stands out for its showiness and beauty in the woods and moors.
When these mushrooms are still young they look just like drum bats, hence the name; once ripe, when the hats open, they appear umbrellas so much so that they are called parasols or parasol mushrooms.
The stems, slender and slender, are generally discarded because they are fibrous; while the hats have white and delicate meat and, once breaded and fried, they become a real delicacy. They are consumed exclusively cooked.

Chanterelles

Chanterelles, on the other hand, are also known as chanterelle mushrooms, gallucci or chanterelles and with other regional names.
They have a delicate flavor, are characterized by a yellowish color and a trumpet shape, in a single body with the stem.
They are fleshy, firm, with a smooth surface and dense elongated gills on the stem. They are generally small in size. They also hold up well for long cooking.
They give their best in risottos, pasta sauces, in oil and as a side dish.

Barbara Roncarolo
September 2020
photo credits: Martina Palazzolo / CC BY-SA

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