Tag: Gorgonzola

Crispy cannoli with goat's gorgonzola and red onion compote – Italian Cuisine

Crispy cannoli with goat's gorgonzola and red onion compote


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1) Peel the onions and cut them to the veil with a mandolin. Dissolve 10 g of butter in a non-stick pan, add the onions and simmer them gently for 5 minutes. Adjust of salt, wet them with vinegar and wine, join the honey and i sprigs of thyme, tied together in a bunch. Cook them on very low heat, partially covered, for 20 minutes. Remove the thyme and let them cool. Meanwhile, put the gorgonzola in the freezer for 30 minutes.

2) Eliminate the crust al gorgonzola, cut it into slices 1 cm thick and then into sticks about 8 cm long. Transfer them back to the freezer. Melt the remaining butter in a double boiler. Roll out a sheet of phyllo dough on the work surface, brush it with very little butter, cover it with the remaining sheet of dough and cut many rectangles 6-7 cm wide and 10 cm long. Brush them with the beaten egg.

3) Place a cheese stick at the base of a long side of a rectangle, cover it with a teaspoon of compote onions, then start rolling the dough, fold the side edges over the filling and finish rolling in order to seal everything. Repeat until the end of the ingredients aligning the cannoli prepared on a plate, lined with baking paper, and put them in the fridge as they are ready.

4) Bake the cannoli in the oven at 220 ° for 5-6 minutes until the dough turns golden. Let them cool slightly and serve in combination with beer cocktail, with the compote of onions remained in a separate bowl.

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Savory pie with spinach, gorgonzola and hazelnuts – Italian Cuisine

Savory pie with spinach, gorgonzola and hazelnuts


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1) Bring plenty of salted water to a boil, then pour it over baby spinach collected in a colander; let the vegetables and drain it. Unroll the pastry on a baking sheet leaving the paper that wraps it on the bottom, fold the edges inside forming a cornice, prick it and bake it at 200 ° for 15 minutes.

2) Meanwhile, squeeze and chop the spinach. Cut the gorgonzola into small pieces, transfer it to a bowl, work it with a spatula and mix it with the baby spinach and a few leaves of thyme. Peel the beets, slice them and let them drain on kitchen paper. Coarsely chop the hazelnuts.

3) Remove the base from the oven, spread the dough in the center spinach and gorgonzola, distributed on the surface le beetroot slices and sprinkle with hazelnuts and the remaining thyme. Put it back in the oven for 10 minutes until the pasta is golden brown and serve.

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Gorgonzola and the others: all the goodness of mold – Italian Cuisine

Gorgonzola and the others: all the goodness of mold


There is not only the Gorgonzola; there are others cheeses with molds. Sharp in flavor or sweet in its flavor. Soft, melting or firmer and with a more penetrating smell: the Gorgonzola it has two faces, two shades of spiciness. It is one of the greatest cheeses blue-veined of the world, a treasure trove of technique and history. Recognized at European level since 1951, it is among the best known in Italy, among the most exported and among the most counterfeited. Not everyone loves him, as happens with things and people with a strong character, but his fans are on the rise. Even the compact and super-spicy type, called "two-paste" or "ancient", which is found more rarely and is preferred by gourmets, gathers new followers. This delight belongs to what we call in Italy blue-veined, cheeses that have green veins. Responsible for this "marbled" effect are the noble molds of Penicillum Glaucum, which are inserted in the processing to give the cheese its characteristic vein.
Gorgonzola was born, perhaps by chance, centuries ago: the legend he says of an enterprising innkeeper who found a batch of cheese with some mold in the cellar and decided to serve it anyway, especially when the customers were already well supplied with wine and therefore not too sober. According to the technicians, however, two curd milks were put together by mistake at different times, with a doughiness difficult to blend, which produced cracks where the whey stagnated and molded: and here are the greenish streaks, which have since been produced ad hoc.

All shades of green and blue
Whatever the case may be, Gorgonzola, obtained from cow's milk, takes its name from the town not far from Milan which was the stage of the autumn return of the herds from the mountain pastures. Its origin is Lombard Piedmontese. If the word blue cheese comes from parsley (erborin in Milanese) because of the green, abroad the cousins ​​of Gorgonzola are called "Bleu"for the dominant color of their molds. So it happens for the Roquefort, the most famous French: sheep's milk, exquisite spiciness on a salty base. The Stilton, made with cow's milk, is the English champion of the category. Other French are the Bleu de Bresse, the Bleu d'Auvergne, the Bleu of the Upper Jura. Among the Germans, theEdelpilz, with a not too pronounced flavor and the Bergader, raw pasta and strong taste.
Among the Swiss, the Bellelay, fat, soft and delicate. The Straw, which is actually a gorgonzola. The most common blue is the Danish Danablu: full and decisive taste, streaked firm texture. Another quality Italian blue cheese is the cuneese Castelmagno. Very ancient, it is hard and made with cow's milk. The dough, which was crumbly at first, becomes compact, aromatic and tasty. The Moncenisio Blue, made with cow's milk with possible small doses of goat cheese, comes from the mountains between France and Piedmont and can be sweeter or spicier depending on the seasoning; that of Aosta, made with cow's milk, always has a strong taste.

Study the combinations
Is in the kitchen? Alone or with butter, milk, cream, mascarpone, the blue cheeses are a wonderful dressing gnocchi of potatoes, the polenta, the risotto and even a simple one pasta durum wheat. They look great with nuts, good with pear. Wonderful with other fresh cheeses on pizza dough, in savory pies and focaccias: crêpes, for example with Castelmagno, were traditional in the production area. We can use them for canapés and aperitif sauces. Since their flavor and character tend not to mix with other pronounced tastes, combinations must always be carefully treated.

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