Tag: Eat

San Daniele: where to eat – Italian Cuisine

San Daniele: where to eat


A journey to discover the best places in Friuli to taste the ham that the whole world envies us

Before leaving: the raw ham is it better cut with a knife or slicer? This always remains an open debate, but a San Daniele they have no doubts: the slice must be cut by machine and must be very thin, almost a transparent tissue, so that it melts immediately in the mouth, giving off all its aromaticity in a flash.
Having made clear the best way to taste the ham made in San Daniele, you can best face a journey to discover this all-Italian marvel, or better, Friulian.

In San Daniele: where to eat the best ham

Pass by this small town halfway between the sea and the mountains, without visiting a ham it would be a heresy: to better appreciate a product you obviously need to know its origins! The advice is to go to one of the Consortium of San Daniele DOP, better if crafted, to discover the true art of this production. Such as the Prolongtificio Prolongo, where since 1957 is made the seasoning manually. The two brothers Prolongo, Arianna and Alessio, know how to welcome visitors and convey all their passion for this, which is not a job, but a real family affair (and love). What makes Prosciutto di San Daniele really special is the miraculous air you breathe here, fresh in the evening coming from the sea and dry in the morning coming down from the mountains, but the only way to ascertain this theory and go there in person!
The best time to visit San Daniele is during "Aria di Festa", a weekend full of events, organized in early summer, to celebrate this breeze that makes everything special!
If, on the other hand, you are not going through this period, we advise you to stop at the Al Bersagliere tavern, under the arcades next to the main square, the tagliolini at San Daniele here are truly memorable!

Recipe: what to combine with San Daniele

Who better than Antonia Klugmann, a Friulian doc and starred chef with his restaurant The bank in Vencò in the province of Gorizia, could he recommend us a perfect match for San Daniele? However, do not imagine elaborate recipes, the San Daniele itself marries the best of simple things. "As with a plum or cherry from your own garden, as I used to do as a child at a snack" remembers Antonia Klugmann "We must rediscover our local fruit, and do not always think only of ham and melon". It is important to consider for the combinations also the fat part of the ham, fundamental for its softness, perhaps using the fiordilatte ice cream flavored with sage, to the rosemary or al basil (depending on what you have fresh at home), so you create an excellent summer dish.

Wine pairing with San Daniele ham: the best Sauvignon in Italy

The Sauvignon the best in Italy according to the World Sauvignon Competition is that of Pitars, a historic winery that stands near the banks of the Tagliamento. Stopping here while you go to San Daniele can be an excellent idea, and its combination with ham will really win you over.

Where to eat well in Udine and surroundings

A few kilometers from San Daniele lies Udine, one of those unexpectedly beautiful cities, which preserve a wealth of incredible history and a very interesting variety also in the catering sector. With that calm and authentic rhythm typical of Italian provincial cities, it knows how to conquer even the most attentive visitors. Here is a small selection of typical bars and taverns to experience the city like real locals:

Caffè Contarena

Close to the Piazza della Libertà, this historic bar is a beautiful example of liberty style. Stop here for an aperitif or a coffee while admiring its extraordinary interior decorations.

Caffè Grosmi

In Piazza Matteotti, also known as Piazza San Giacomo, there is this small roasting, It can be said that it is the favorite bar of the people of Udine for the quality and variety of the coffee, being also a small emporium where to buy the best of local food products and not .

Alla Vecchia Maddalena

A typical cuisine revisited with a contemporary twist. Fresh ingredients and excellent quality in a renovated environment that does not forget its past. Here we tried the traditional ones Cjarsson (ravioli stuffed with cheese, spinach and raisins) and frico with polenta (a typical dish made with potatoes and melted cheese) in 3 versions: traditional grilled, baked and with chips. Finally, a taste of the typical biscuits paired with Ramandolo, a truly delicious passito wine.

Talk about Friuli without mentioning the star chef Emanuele Scarello it would be impossible, his Locanda Agli Amici 1887 it really is an institution here and certainly a cornerstone of Friuli cuisine. A few years ago, a more informal concept restaurant opened in Udine, where he mainly uses the vasocottura technique, the Gnocchi Kitchen Bar, a tribute to the symbol of the home cooking of the Godia territory, the gnocchi.

A special note also to the Costantini Restaurant in Collalto di Tarcento (UD) where you can find the summer version of the Cjarsson with seasonal herbs. The owner is a lover of design and likes to personally produce really interesting tableware, creating a sort of curiosity cabinet in his room.

How to prepare (and where to eat) the best dumplings in the world – Italian Cuisine


We have been in Val Renon in search of the secrets of the famous South Tyrolean recipe. A path between farms and woods in search of the secret ingredient, to make them delicious

If you are a fan of dumplings yes you know, theSouth Tyrol it can be your Paradise. Here every farm, the ancient medieval farms now converted into hotels or private residences or stables, keeps its personal secret to prepare them in an excellent way.

An ancient dish

These large stale bread dumplings in fact, also known by the name of Knödel, Klöße (from the German "knot", or "knot" or "lump") are in fact a delicious first course or dish prepared in many variants both savory (the most common, prepared with spinach, wild herbs and mushrooms), both sweet (like i Marillenknödel, the apricot dumplings or the Zwetschgenknödel, plum dumplings). But the most classic are the Speckknödel, served strictly in broth or with melted butter. Here are a couple of addresses where you can taste them and learn how to prepare them really well.

The gourmet farms, where to enjoy them

One of the best stops to taste the local cuisine is certainly theHotel Kematen, converted from an ancient noble complex, complete with a small church, barn and natural swimming pool obtained from a small pond dotted with water lilies. You meet him on a sunny hill above Collalbo on the plateau of Renon at 1322 meters. The rooms and the restaurant are housed in an ancient noble house of 750 years, protected to the north by a forest, with spectacular views of the western Dolomites. In the kitchen there is Mrs. Elizabeth, who now runs the hotel with her husband and daughter. Think of the dishes to be served in the cozy and rustic restaurant on the ground floor of the ancient barn. The ingredients are zero km and, in addition to the dumplings in all their variations, the homemade desserts (including a superb wild berry tiramisu) and a selection of Speck Alto Adige Igp, from the fresher to the more seasoned, including the biological version. The ideal is to combine them with one of the 200 local labels. Even the breakfast, served in the ancient gothic stube deserves (where brunch is also served on request) and, for the most romantic, there is also a dinner for two under an ancient centuries-old ash tree.

Henrich's recipe and secrets

For a real tutorial on dumplings, the ideal is another historic farm: the'Hotel Naturidylle Geyrerhof, which you can find about 1 km from the center of the village of Soprabolzano, a pleasant town connected to Bolzano in 15 minutes by the now famous cable car. We are in a 17th century farm, transformed in 1974 into a hotel with a spa and a very welcoming outdoor pool. Surrounded by meadows, the place has also annexed a wild breeding of Hungarian pigs and deer from which excellent cold cuts and homemade Speck with a particular mixture of herbs, a family secret, are made. The farm, once belonging to the Habsburgs, extended over 10 thousand square meters.

To do the honors, in typical Tyrolean costume is Kurt, who runs the family business with his father Henrich. The latter also holds cooking classes and reveals the secrets of his famous dumplings. "The genuine ingredients are the base," he says, who is also famous for his homemade bread, seasoned with walnuts and figs or hazelnuts. Even the eggs used (and served for breakfast in various recipes), are another gem to take into account: strictly organic, they are provided by small local farms. Chives is stewed onion complete the picture. What remains to be seen live is the skill with which the cook and landlord handles the balls of seasoned bread, born as a recovery recipe about a thousand years ago. The same skill with which the South Tyrolean chef also prepares his Strudel (apple, pear, apricot) or waters flavored with currants or raspberries picked on their property, also offered in the famous rolls of sponge cake and in home made jams.

Are you curious to try? Here is the recipe.

Canederli with Speck Alto Adige PGI

Ingredients for 4 people

250 g of stale bread

40 g of butter

40 grams of speck cut into a banner

1 glass of whole milk

2 eggs

1 onion

chopped parsley

chopped chives

flour 00

salt

pepper

Cut the bread into cubes and toast it in the oven at 150 g for 15 minutes. Let it cool and, in the meantime, brown the onion, finely chopped, in the butter until it is well braised. Mix the eggs with the milk and pour them on the bread; add the parsley and chives (about 2 tablespoons of each), stir and let the dough rest for an hour. The trick? "Mix the bread from time to time so that the dough absorbs the liquid evenly: in fact, the bread must become moist and soft but without crushing". Then add 50 g of flour and mix without crushing the dough. Wet your hands in warm water then form dumplings with a diameter of about 4-6 cm, gently rolling the dough on your palms. Boil the dumplings in the broth or water for 15 minutes. In the second case, drain and serve with melted butter and sage.

Ever massaged Speck's "mustache"?

Browse the gallery

The itinerary to discover the «perfect dumplingCould not exempt from a visit to one of the establishments of the Speck Alto Adige PGI, one of the 29 members of the Consortium for the Protection of this salami. The choice falls on that of Citterio, historic Milanese brand that produces various types here, also in the organic version.

"At the base of a good product there are firm pork thighs coming from recognized and controlled farms," ​​he explains Massimiliano Seno, Plant manager, while he shows me the spice mix with which the Baffa, or the typical cut of meat with which the Speck is prepared.

To better understand, I try directly in the preparation of the salami, massaging the Baffa homogeneously with one of the workers, Salvatore. «Each producer has his own personal recipe secretly kept for the exact mixing of salt, pepper, bay leaf, juniper and rosemary. One thing is certain: the final salt must not exceed 5% ".

Applied a special plate with name, number and code of the mustache, it is dry-cured for three weeks in a cool environment.

Afterwards the bees are subjected to alight filling dry for 5 days: the use of little resinous wood is fundamental and the smoke temperature never exceeds 20 ° C.

Here we are: hours le baffe now they can season for 22 weeks (at least). They will lose a third of their weight to become the symphony of flavors and aromas that we all know. A special mold will form on the meat that will give the typical Speck aroma and will be removed at the end of seasoning.

Finally, each piece will be branded with the seal, effectively becoming a product IGP.

At this point the circle and the caneder close in a perfect shape.

Tonight we eat fish (and spend little) – Italian Cuisine


Eating fish in the summer is a real must. Grilled, fried, baked and raw, that's all we want to find on the laid table, but …
The but in question is the price. Which raises the bill for the restaurant and the dinner shopping. In the kitchen, however, experience, information and a bit of organization are ingredients that make every dream possible. Also that of prepare three fish courses with a small budget!

For the appetizer: the mussels

These shellfish are rich, meaty and tasty and much cheaper of other foods usually chosen as an appetizer for fish dinners. Especially if served with the classic impepata accompanied by a toast of toasted bread for each diner they will allow us to start our cheap dinner with a large plate at a small price.
Once purchased, leave them to soak in cold water for a few minutes, clean them by scratching them with a straw and firmly grasp the protruding filament (byssus) pulling it upwards. Now you can proceed with the preparation of the most classic of the impepate or try something new with these recipes.

WE COOKED FOR YOU

Mussel soup

WE COOKED FOR YOU

Mussels with chilli, coriander and pecorino cheese

WE COOKED FOR YOU

Mussels and peppers in the pan

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Golden mussels with pepper

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Mediterranean mussels

The first course: sardines

The traditional Sicilian recipe of the pasta with sardines is the perfect example of resource optimization. A fish rich in vitamins, mineral salts and omega 3 and capable of transforming every first course into a real (economic) dive into the bluest sea. Here are some ideas for cooking them.

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Fusilli with sardines

WE COOKED FOR YOU

Pappardelle, sardines and chervil emulsion

WE COOKED FOR YOU

Tagliatelle with peppers and sardines

The second: mackerel

One of the cheapest fish on the market is mackerel. Tasty and consistent, it is also rich in omega 3. Why not choose it to prepare a tasty second course? Sara delicious grilled, baked, salt and baked. But not only. Here is a collection of perfect recipes to enhance the flavor.

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Mackerel grilled with candied tomatoes

WE COOKED FOR YOU

Spicy mackerel

WE COOKED FOR YOU

Mackerel in foil

WE COOKED FOR YOU

Stuffed mackerel

Mussel soup
Mussels with beans, cherry tomatoes and basil
Mussels with chilli, coriander and pecorino cheese
Mussels and peppers in the pan
Fusilli with sardines
Sicilian-style pasta with sardines
Pappardelle, sardines and chervil emulsion
Tagliatelle with peppers and sardines
Mackerel grilled with candied tomatoes
Mackerel fillets in pepper sauce
Spicy mackerel
Mackerel in foil
Stuffed mackerel

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