Tag: Cucina

50 years with strawberry – La Cucina Italiana – Italian Cuisine

50 years with strawberry - La Cucina Italiana


The new May issue is on the newsstands: an inviting strawberry tart red on the cover. Today as exactly fifty years ago. Discover the 1969 cake

The nine years are all important for La Cucina Italiana which, born in 1929, celebrates significant birthdays. In 1969 the magazine "opened the door" and for the whole year a coccardina published under the head remembered the anniversary. In May the cover was dedicated, just like this year, to a strawberry cake, a fruit that reaches its peak of goodness this month. Here are the two photos in comparison. Below, the recipe from 1969, while for today's one, run to the newsstands!

The cover of the May 1969 issue and the one you find today at the newsstand

Strawberry cake

Ingredients

500 g strawberries, 400 g flour, 270 g butter, 250 g caster sugar, 150 g almonds, 100 g icing sugar, 12 eggs, 1 liter of milk, Galliano liqueur, a sachet of vanillin, Cognac

Method

Pour the flour on the pastry board, make the fountain, put in half g 260 of chopped butter and a little softened, then knead it with uend flour, a little at a time, plenty of cold water enough to have a paste of the right consistency; without working a lot, make a ball with the dough, wrap it in a sheet of wax paper and put it in the refrigerator for about two hours. Immerse the almonds in boiling water for an instant, then peel them, spread them on a plate and place them in a preheated oven to dry well, they will not have to color, then remove them and let them cool. Clean the strawberries, wash them in very cold water and let them drain. Pour the icing sugar into a bowl, add about half a glass of liqueur and half of the cognac and mix until the sugar has melted, then add the strawberries, mix gently so that they can all flavor well, place a plate on the pan and store them in the refrigerator. Put the almonds, now cold, in a mortar and, from time to time, add a little granulated sugar, crush them well until they become powdered; sift the powder and also crush any crumbs left on the sieve. Allow the milk to cool. Butter a cake pan with high edges and possibly hinged with a diameter of about 24 cm. Remove the dough from the refrigerator and roll it out with a rolling pin making a disc wide enough to line the bottom and edges of the mold, then coat it, trim the dough at the edges so that it is all the same height and with a fork strain the bottom. Pour into a bowl eight rolls and four whole eggs, the vanillin and the remaining granulated sugar: with a small whisk, beat energetically, quidni, gradually add all the warm milk, mix in the almond powder, pour everything into the mold, finally pour it into the mold put it in a preheated oven (180 ° C on the thermostat) leaving it for about an hour (when a stick immersed in the cream comes out dry the cake is cooked); remove it from the oven and let it cool, then place it on a serving plate. Drain the strawberries from the liqueur, place them on the cake and serve. If the cake should wait, keep it in a cool place (not for many hours).

From "La Cucina Italiana", May 1969

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The ABC of rose wines – La Cucina Italiana – Italian Cuisine

The ABC of rose wines - La Cucina Italiana


An intriguing palette of shades, ranging from pale pink to claret, from cherry to coral pink, to deep pink. It's time to rose wines, after years of being relegated to the role of Cinderella. The queen of production and consumption remains France, but the demand for Italian rose wines (we are the fourth largest producer country in the world), especially abroad, with the United States increasing sales in the last year by + 31.8% in value and + 21.1% in quantity. The enthusiasm of Italian consumers towards the type is still tepid: we are convinced, however, that this distrust derives from the lack of knowledge of the products and of the historical production areas. Here is a small one vade mecum to orient yourself in the offer. In addition, for those wishing to learn more, we recommend the book "The best 100 Italian rose wines" just published by Slow Food Editore.

How they are born

There are four methods to produce rose wines, but before seeing them in detail it is important to remember that the substances that "color" the wine are in the grape skins, while the must is a transparent colored liquid that will take the final shade from the contact more or less prolonged with the skins: to produce pink wines, it will therefore be necessary to start from red berried grapes: depending on the time in which the must is in contact with the skins, it can take on a color that goes from very pale pink to very high pink (and if the contact between must and skins is prolonged for days you will have red wines and not more pink). The shade of the rose depends not only on the contact time between the must and the skins, but also on the grape variety (in fact, there are grapes with greater coloring capacities than others) and on the temperature with which the vinification takes place.
1) from direct pressing: after crushing, the must is immediately separated from the skins; in this case, the color transfer is minimal and there will be an almost imperceptible pink color.
2) with very short maceration on the skins: in this case the contact between must and skins lasts a few hours (usually from 2-3 hours, up to a maximum of 12 hours).
3) with prolonged maceration: it is a production method equal to the previous one, but the contact between must and skins can vary from 12 to 24 hours; in this case there will be more full-bodied and full-bodied pink wines.
4) from drainage: the quality of this type of rose wines is variable, since it is a technique used by those who want to produce more full-bodied and concentrated red wines; the main goal of the producer, in this case, is to produce a good red and not a good pink wine.

Historical production areas

Abruzzo
Cerasuolo d'Abruzzo Doc, from Montepulciano d'Abruzzo grapes: it was the first Doc of Italy to be destined solely to pink wines, which are round, of good structure and intensely fruity, especially when they are produced near the Adriatic coast.
Calabria
Cirò Rosato Doc, from gaglioppo grapes: wines of intense color and good structure, which smell of cherry and pomegranate. The sip is tasty and satisfying and the food is very interesting.
Lombardy
Valtènesi Chiaretto Doc, mainly from groppello grapes, with a balance of barbera, sangiovese, marzemino and rebo; the wines smell of rose petals and fruit such as peach, wild strawberry and raspberry; when tasted, they are savory and delicate, with light spicy notes.
Puglia
Castel del Monte Rosato Doc and Castel del Monte Bombino Black Docg, from bombino nero grapes: fresh and delicate wines, which smell of flowers, red fruits and citrus fruits; they are fragrant and savory when tasted.
Salice Salentino Rosato Doc, from Negramaro and black Malvasia grapes: in this territory the Five Roses of the De Castris company, the first bottled rose wine in Italy, was born. The wines are fresh, well balanced between acidity and softness and great drinkability, with fruity, iodine, citrus and balsamic notes.
Veneto
Bardolino Chiaretto Doc, from corvina and rondinella grapes (the same ones used for the production of Amarone): wines of very light color and delicate taste, of good sapidity and acidity, with notes of citrus fruits like mandarin and grapefruit, which we add nuances of spices, if drunk after a few years.

The labels not to be missed

Cerasuolo d'Abruzzo 2017 Valentini
Cerasuolo d’Abruzzo Piè delle Vigne 2017 Cataldi Madonna
Cerasuolo dʻAbruzzo Rosa-a and 2018 Torre dei Beati
Cirò Rosato 2018 Librandi
Bardolino Chiaretto Ròdon 2018 Le Fraghe
Bardolino Charetto 2018 Albino Piona
Valtènesi Chiaretto The Drunken Wife 2018 La Basia
Valtènesi Chiaretto Preafète 2018 Podere dei Folli
Castel del Monte Rosato Bombino Nero Pungirosa 2018 Rivera
Castel del Monte Rosato Parchitello 2018 Giancarlo Ceci
Five Roses 2018 Leone de Castris
Girofle 2018 Severino Garofano Vineyards and Cellars
Mjere Rosato 2018 Michele Calo & Figli

The combinations

The rose wines are very versatile on the table and, depending on the type, lend themselves to accompany most of the recipes of the Italian tradition. They are unbeatable with pizza and fish soups, interesting with pasta dishes, savory pies and vegetarian recipes. Serve between 10 and 12 ° C.

Strangolapreti recipe from the Trentino – La Cucina Italiana – Italian Cuisine

Strangolapreti recipe from the Trentino - La Cucina Italiana


  • 200 g stale bread without crust
  • 200 g leaf spinach
  • 150 g milk
  • 60 g onion
  • 40 g flour
  • 30 g butter
  • 2 pcs eggs
  • sage
  • salt
  • Grated Trentingrana

For the recipe of the strangolapreti at thirty, cut the bread into small cubes. Add the milk and the eggs, then cover with a cloth and let stand for 2 hours, stirring occasionally. Wash and blanch the spinach in plenty of salted water, cool them, chop them and sauté in a pan with the butter and chopped onion, then add them to the dough. Also add 80 g of grated Trentingrana and then the flour. Let it rest for another 1 hour. Form the strangolapreti like big oval dumplings and cook them in salted water for a few minutes, draining them anyway when they come to the surface. Arrange on plates, sprinkle them with Trentingrana and sprinkle with plenty of melted butter and sage previously fried in a pan.

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