Tag: cheese

Montèbore, slow food cheese by Leonardo da Vinci – Italian Cuisine

Montèbore, slow food cheese by Leonardo da Vinci


Have you ever tasted Montèbore? It is a rare cheese chosen by Leonardo da Vinci for the magnificent wedding banquet of Gian Galeazzo Sforza and Isabella of Aragon. Find out more about this fine Slow Food Presidium

Leonardo da Vinci, the Tuscan genius with a multi-faceted personality, is remembered for his infinite legacy composed of thousands of works of art, thoughts, ideas, projects, writings, and more, from Atlantic Code to Last dinner until to Flying cars and the Montebore. In the year of the five hundredth anniversary of his death celebrated with exhibitions throughout Italy, we like to remember the man symbol of Italian culture with a culinary curiosity, which perhaps you have never tasted.

Not everyone knows that Leonardo da Vinci has always had one unbridled passion for cooking and food. In recent years, there are several books that have dealt with this aspect of his spectacular life (such as the doubt about his being a vegetarian or not), although there are no certain sources. In fact, according to the discussed Codex Romanoff, the young Leonardo would have been an apprentice and cook Tavern of the Three Lumache on the Ponte Vecchio in Florence during his formative years at Verrocchio's workshop. Then he would open the inn The Three Frogs of Sandro and Leonardo along with nothing less than Sandro Botticelli, another great representative of Italian art. His way of thinking outside the box would have led him to reinvent the way food was placed in the dishes as well as the use of napkins, for example, up to useful inventions still today such as the rotisserie or corkscrew, documented by drawings and projects totally visionary.

Genius in the kitchen even with quick starter recipes or rose water, the gastronomist Leonardo da Vinci also left us the Montebore, the ancient Piedmontese cheese, which next October will be the guest of honor of the fourth edition of Forms, an event dedicated to the Italian dairy industry of excellence in Bergamo. The shape of Montèbore resembles a wedding cake – and it is certainly not a coincidence. In fact, it was inserted in 1489 by Leonardo da Vinci as exceptional Master of Ceremonies as single cheese on the wedding banquet menu between Gian Galeazzo Sforza, grandson of the Duke of Milan Ludovico il Moro, and Isabella of Aragon.

Even today, the Montebore is a rare cheese made from raw cow and sheep milk, whose origins are lost over the centuries. It takes its name from a small town in the Val Curone, on the watershed between the valleys of the Grue stream and the Borbera river. For centuries produced and exported to Genoa and Lombardy, practically every trace had been lost. In 1999 the Slow Food Presidium traced Carolina Bracco, the last custodian of the traditional dairy technique, recovering the ancient processing technique, passed to the manufacturer to date Roberto Grattone of the Vallenostra Cooperative. The precious recipe is now in the exclusive hands of Grattone and his wife Agata Marchesotti: "We are the only producers in the world". Impossible not to thank the visionary thought of Leonardo da Vinci in the recovery of this tasty tradition.

Recipe Salad with feta cheese, dried tomato pesto and fried tagliolini – Italian Cuisine

Recipe Salad with feta cheese, dried tomato pesto and fried tagliolini


  • 6 pcs lettuce hearts
  • 2 pcs feta slices
  • 150 g fresh tagliolini
  • 60 g dried tomatoes in oil
  • 20 g peeled roasted hazelnuts
  • dry oregano
  • pickled taggiasche olives
  • peanut oil
  • extra virgin olive oil

For the salad recipe with feta, sun-dried tomato pesto and fried tagliolini, sauté the feta in the pan with a
extra virgin olive oil for 2-3 minutes: it will become soft and even more aromatic. Blend the drained dried tomatoes with 20 g of hazelnuts, a pinch of oregano, 70 g of extra virgin olive oil and 30 g of water, obtaining a red pesto. Divide the tagliolini into skeins and fry them, one by one, in boiling peanut oil few seconds. Cut the lettuce hearts in half, distribute them on plates and season with a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil; add olives, chopped hazelnuts, a pinch of oregano, crumbled feta, red pesto and crispy noodles. Complete to taste with sprouts and dried flowers.

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Recipe Carpaccio of beetroot, oranges and goat cheese – Italian Cuisine

Recipe Carpaccio of beetroot, oranges and goat cheese


  • 1 pc fresh beetroot
  • 200 g fresh goat's cheese
  • 500 g milk
  • 1 pc orange
  • dill
  • apple vinegar
  • extra virgin olive oil
  • sugar
  • pepper
  • fine salt
  • salt in flakes

For the recipe of beetroot, orange and goat carpaccio, peel the beetroot and cut it into very thin slices. Arrange the slices in a large baking dish, trying to overlap them as little as possible. Season with 1 teaspoon of salt and 1 teaspoon of sugar and leave to marinate for 20-30 minutes. Bring 500 g of water to the boil; add 4 tablespoons of apple vinegar, stir and pour over the beetroot; let it rest for another 10 minutes. Drain the beetroot slices from the marinade and distribute them on the plates. Add the milk and 1 teaspoon of chopped dill to the goat cheese and stir until creamy. Peel the orange, divide it into wedges (if desired, remove the skin). Cut the cloves into small pieces. Spread the cheese on the beetroot slices, add the orange pieces and season with a little oil, a few flakes of salt, some freshly ground pepper and a few leaves of dill.

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