Tag: pair

the Piedmontese appetizer to pair with the fondue – Italian Cuisine


It comes from poor cooking and is a recipe with simple ingredients, but it will make you look great

There poor kitchen has come back in vogue in recent years, with its genuine flavors and simple ingredients. In this wake we suggest you a typical hot appetizer of the Piedmont, the tartrà. Her country origin, between Langhe is Monferratomakes it one quick and easy recipe to prepare, which does not require you to spend a lot of time in the kitchen or to be an expert in soufflé. Halfway between a pudding and a flan, it is based on milk, flavored with herbs to taste and often served with Fondue or a light sauce. Let's find out how tartrà is prepared.

The recipe for Piedmontese tartrà

Ingredients

To prepare the tartrà for 4 people you will need: 4 whole eggs + 2 yolks, half a liter of whole milk, 250 ml of fresh whipping cream, 2 generous spoons of Parmesan cheese, 1 large shallot, 2 tablespoons of already chopped aromatic herbs, such as sage and rosemary, 1 bay leaf, 1 tablespoon of flour, butter to taste, salt, pepper and, if you like, nutmeg.

Method

Melt a knob of butter in a saucepan. Add the finely chopped shallot and let it brown. Once it has dried, season with the aromatic herbs and turn off the heat.

In a saucepan, bring the milk to a boil with the bay leaf. Remove from the heat, add the fresh cream and remove the bay leaf.

Add the whole eggs and the yolks to the Parmesan with the help of a whisk and add all the compounds prepared previously (milk and cream and shallot and aromatic herbs). Complete with flour and, if you like, with a grated nutmeg.

Butter some single-portion molds, transfer the mixture, and bake in a preheated oven at 170 ° C in a water bath for 20 minutes.

10 wines to pair with the hamburger – Italian Cuisine

10 wines to pair with the hamburger


Before combining the burger with the usual light beer, read here. And you won't feel it.

What happens when Italian wines meet one of the most famous American recipes? Of course, there is immediately a feeling, especially when it comes to beef and red wine.
Light wines or, at best, medium-bodied wines that do not cover too much the flavor of the meat and that go well with the sweetness of the bread and sauces go very well. But they are sparkling wines and sparkling wines are also interesting, able to cleanse the mouth from the greasiness of sauces and cheese. We looked for the most suitable, from the north to the south of Italy, finding the best companions both in very famous wines, such as Lambrusco or Chianti, and in some goodies to be discovered, such as Rossese di Dolceacqua.

Here are our choices:

Franciacorta Annamaria Clementi Rosé 2009 – Ca ’del Bosco
And who said that a good burger can't become a gourmet dinner to remember for a long time? Try combining it with this rosé bubble, one of the most exclusive ones produced in Italy. Its elegant effervescence will help to refresh the palate between mouthfuls and the pinot noir structure will perfectly accompany the beef.

Cerasuolo d'Abruzzo Villa Gemma 2018 Masciarelli
A rosé of great structure from one of the most suitable regions of Italy for the production of these wines. It has intense aromas of pomegranate, black cherries and rose petals and an intense, fresh and balanced taste.

Lambrusco Grasparossa from Castelvetro Vineyard Cialdini 2018 – Cleto Chiarli
Lambrusco is a sparkling red wine produced in Emilia Romagna, one of the most joyful regions of Italy. The character of its inhabitants is also found in the glass: bubbly, delicious, with a flavor reminiscent of red fruits, it is perfect for dissolving the oiliness of the hamburger.

Il Borro 2015 Il Borro
A full and concentrated red, made with the international merlot, cabernet sauvignon and syrah vines, which here return all the essence of Tuscany. The aging in barrique gives softness and great elegance. Good immediately, it's even better with a few years of rest in the bottle.

Valpolicella Classico Superiore Ripasso 2017 – Tommasi
This red from Veneto is the "younger brother" of Amarone: it is produced with the same grapes (corvina, rondinella and corvinone) and "ripassato" on the marcs of Amarone, as its name says. It has delicious hints of ripe cherry and spices, such as pepper; it is perfect to add a touch of flavor to the classic hamburger.

Barbera d’Alba 2017 Cordero di Montezemolo
Barbera is one of the most typical and famous wines of Piedmont. It has a medium body and a delicious acidity that allows it to accompany meat dishes, especially those rich in flavor such as hamburger.

Primitivo di Manduria Lirica 2017 Winery Manufacturers of Manduria
From southern Italy, a full-bodied and soft wine with an enveloping taste. It seems made to go with the beef topped with ketchup.

Chianti Rufina 2017 Selvapiana Farm
One of the most classic combinations, because in Tuscany this famous red is always accompanied by grilled meat. Choose a fresh one, such as those produced in the Rufina sub-area, which will also be perfect with sauces.

Pomino Pinot Nero 2017 Frescobaldi
Fruity, floral, fresh and balanced. These are the characteristics of this Tuscan Pinot Nero, which masterfully combines freshness and flavor with the warmth of alcohol. Medium-bodied, it is intriguing in its aromas of small fruits, sweet spices and toasted notes.

Rossese di Dolceacqua Superiore Posaù 2017 Maccario Dringenberg
Fresh, light and pleasant, this rare red from Liguria is also very popular with Hollywood stars and is often compared in body and ease of drinking to the pinot Noir from nearby Burgundy. Among the best of the denomination there are certainly those of the producer Giovanna Maccario. Posaù comes from a single vineyard and has spicy, iodine and slightly earthy notes. You will love it, not only in combination with the hamburger.

Duck and pancake (sort of)

I spent almost my entire first pregnancy worried about how much harder and worse it would be to be pregnant with a toddler in tow.

Of course, I was right to be worried. It’s absolutely horrible. I have also got much fatter and stiffer quicker this time and am out of breath and feel queasy and faint at any sort of physical effort. Bending down makes me feel dizzy and lightheaded and if I pick Kitty up I feel like my bum is going to fall off.

But in some ways, being pregnant the second time around is easier. No-one pushes you around. No-one lectures you about how shit/marvellous having a baby is. Basically no-one really cares and it is great.

I also now know how long nine months is. It’s a fucking long time. So you might as well take your coat and shoes off and arrange all your stuff around you nicely and get comfy because you’re going to be in this state for a flipping age. My friend AC compares it with flying long-haul, economy. Just when you think you can’t stand it any more, it turns out you’re only in Dubai and you’ve got another huge slog left.

Mistake #1 that I am not going to make with this pregnancy is to look like a horrible slob. Last time around I just slopped around in disgusting denim jeggings and filthy Converse and ugly jersey tops, thinking that money spent on maternity jeans, or tights or new shoes or underwear or anything was a waste.

No fear. Not this time. I went out and bought, on the advice of my wardrobe guru Becky B, a pair of J Brand black skinny jeans for £185, which the nice girl in the shop, (Trilogy in Hampstead), sent off to get turned into a pair of maternity jeans. Then after you’ve had the baby, they turn them BACK into a pair of normal jeans! Let no-one say I am not thrifty. Although frankly they are probably going to be so knackered by next May that won’t be much left to turn back into normal jeans.

And I’ve got a dress from Isabella Oliver, and ankle boots and a Zara tweed jacket with leather sleeves (I know! I AM fashion!), and some smart harem trousers and THREE new pairs of maternity tights and loads of these t-shirts from Top Shop, which are an absolute life saver.

Giles hates all of it. But as Becky B said as she saw me hesitating over the harem trousers “Don’t ask yourself whether Giles will like it. He will only think you look nice if your arse and boobs are all hanging out.” Becky B is Scottish via Blackheath and I always do whatever she tells me.

But I am, basically, doing all this for Giles. Because the person who really suffers during my pregnancy frump-outs is him. But it’s not for him, him – if that makes sense – because he is a bit wary of all these rather @ManRepeller new clothes, but for other people, looking at him. I don’t want people in restaurants to go “Oh look, there’s Giles Coren and there’s his…. really frumpy… dowdy…. fat… wife… urgh,” I want them to say “Wow Giles must be really cool to be married to someone who wears harem pants!!!”

Mistake #2 I am going to try not to make this time is to get incredibly fat. I’ve already put on a stone, in the first trimester sugar/carb/neausea feeding frenzy – but I am wondering if all the eating I did last time in my 2nd and 3rd trimesters wasn’t done out of self-pity and boredom, rather than actual hunger. I don’t mean going on any sort of diet, I just mean when I’ve got a raging thirst I might try to quench it with sparkling water first, rather than a giant thing of Coca Cola.

(I once read in a pregnancy magazine, by the way, a thing that said “By five months, your jeans might be feeling a little tight.” A LITTLE TIGHT??! Fucking hell, in both pregnancies I was in stretchy waistbands at EIGHT WEEKS. I wanted to set fire to the magazine but it would have made a terrible smell.)

What gives me hope is that I’m not as in to full Sunday roasts and lots of carbs as I was first time. All I really want is sushi. Sashimi, nigiri, california rolls, spicy tuna rolls. Maybe a seaweed salad? Cheeky little hot sake? It’s all I can think about. Large bits of roast meat, creamy things, sticky, rich things all turn me green.

But that’s still what my husband likes to eat, so I bought for his dinner the other day some duck breast. And then it sat in the fridge for days as I found excuse after excuse not to cook it because I just couldn’t face it.

Then I came up with an idea, which was to use it in a sort of ersatz duck-and-pancake thing. I didn’t hold out much hope for this as I only had fajita wraps for the pancake and a bottle of bought hoisin sauce for the sauce and duck breasts for the duck rather than leg.

But it basically worked. Which makes me think that if you could actually get some duck pancake pancakes from somewhere (one of you smartarses must know where?) you’d be really sorted.

I also discovered a very good way of cooking duck breasts, which gives you a really crispy skin and doesn’t fill the kitchen with blue smoke.

1 Score the skin of the duck in a diamond pattern and then place on some kind of grill or grid suspended over the skin then pour 1/2 a kettle-full of boiling water over them.

2 Dry the duck very well and then put in the fridge to dry out completely – all day is great but 45 minutes will make a difference.

3 When you are ready to cook the duck, season with salt and pepper and five spice (if you want) and then put in a dry frying pan skin side down.You don’t need any oil or anything because the duck is going to leak a lot of grease. If you have a skillet that will go in the oven use this. Cook this very gently for about 10 minutes, until the skin is brown and the pan is full of duck fat. Then turn the duck over and cook the bottom for 4 mins.

4 Now put in a 180C oven for 8 mins for medium and 10 for well done.

And that’s it. Eat with your sliced up cucumber and spring onion with plum or hoisin sauce on whatever pancake type thing you can lay your hands on. Close your eyes and you could almost be in Chinatown.

 

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