Tag: PDO

Taleggio PDO: 7 delicious recipes to try – Italian Cuisine


And the table is a fairy tale: 7 characters create 7 crazy recipes with Taleggio DOP, all explained here to try them together

With the Taleggio D.O.P. the table is a fairy tale. Fairy tales have the extraordinary ability to never tire of us and to always be able to conquer new generations. Just like the Taleggio D.O.P which with its unmistakable flavor becomes the protagonist of the most loved stories of all time, giving them a whole new taste, which will make all the characters happy and content.

Here are 7 recipes based on Taleggio PDO created by as many 7 characters:

ANGELICA MASSERA / Risotto with Taleggio DOP, apples, speck and walnuts

Ingrediants:
200 g Carnaroli rice (or other type for risotto)
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 tsp butter
1 shallot
q.s. vegetable broth
70 g speck (approx.)
30 g walnut kernels (approx.)
60 g Taleggio PDO
q.s. Parmigiano Reggiano DOP (grated)
1 apple

Method:
For the Risotto with Taleggio PDO, apples, speck and walnuts, prepare a vegetable broth or simply a granular or classic nut broth.
In a pan, lightly heat the extra virgin olive oil with the butter and sauté the finely chopped shallot.
Add the rice and toast it over high heat for a couple of minutes.
Pour a ladle of hot broth and mix.
Add a pinch of pepper and salt and always cook the risotto over high heat, adding hot broth from time to time and stirring.
In the meantime, cut the speck and apples into cubes.
In another hot pan pour a drizzle of oil, add both the speck and the apples, sauté them over high heat and brown them.
When there are 4-5 minutes left to cook the rice (which usually takes 15-18 minutes) add the speck and diced apples.
Complete the cooking of the risotto, and only when the heat is off, add the chopped walnut kernels, the Taleggio cheese cut into small pieces and the grated Parmesan cheese.
Mix well to melt the Taleggio and whisk the Risotto with Taleggio PDO, apples, speck and walnuts making it even more creamy.

LUCAKE – LUCA PEREGO / Cheesecake with Taleggio, Nuts and Honey

Ingrediants:
For the base: biscuits, nuts, butter
For the cream: taleggio, ricotta, powdered sugar, cream, gelatin
For the decoration: pears, sugar, butter, rum

Method:
Blend biscuits and nuts until they are powdered, add melted butter and put them in the mold
Heat the cream, the icing sugar, add the taleggio cheese to make it melt, then the gelatin previously softened in water. When the mixture is at room temperature, add ricotta. Pour into molds and place in the fridge to cool.
Cut the pears into slices and cook and caramelize them in a pan with butter, sugar and rum. Leave to cool.
Remove the cheesecakes from the molds, place on serving plates, decorate the surface with caramelized pears

MAURIZIO ROSAZZA / Sword roll, walnuts and Taleggio PDO With Mediterranean Herbs And Salt Salad Of Mixed Pear, Celery And Mint

Ingrediants:
4 slices of swordfish
10 walnut kernels
Extra virgin olive oil to taste
Pepper as needed.
Mixed flavors: thyme, basil, parsley, rosemary to taste
Paprika to taste
120 grams of Taleggio PDO
3 pears of different types
mint to taste
Fresh white celery 200 grams (also leaves)
Vinegar

Method:

Take the swordfish slices, remove the skin and place them between two sheets of parchment paper. With a rolling pin tap and roll out.
Season with the aromatic salt obtained by blending salt and herbs. Put a pinch of paprika and insert the taleggio cheese in the center.
Bake at 200 degrees until golden brown.
Close by way of a roll.
Cut the pears into strips, keeping the peel and removing the core.
Cut the celery lengthwise and put it in ice water.
Create a salad with celery, pears, oil and vinegar.
Compose the dish.

GNAMBOX / Khachapuri with Taleggio D.O.P.

Ingredients for a khachapuri:
350 g pizza dough
100 g mozzarella
80 g Taleggio PDO
1 yolk
fresh chili
pepper
extra virgin olive oil

Method:
Heat the oven to 220 ° C with fan.
Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. On a lightly floured surface, roll out the dough giving it a circular shape of about 25 cm.
With your fingers, take the ends of the dough and raise it, stretch it slightly then begin to create raised edges by rolling them on themselves to form the shape of a boat and insert the grated mozzarella and the Taleggio D.O.P. cut into pieces.
Bake the khachapuri until the crust begins to brown and the cheese begins to melt, about 15 minutes.
Remove from the oven, brush the edges with oil then put it back in the oven for another 5 minutes until the crust is crisp and the cheese begins to toast.
With a spoon make a small hole in the center of the filling and lay the yolk down.
Serve with some fresh chilli pepper cut into slices, a grind of pepper.
To eat it, mix the yolk into the cheese mixture using a fork, then tear off some pieces of bread and dip them in the cheese while it is still hot.

ALIDA GOTTA / Onions stuffed with Taleggio PDO fondue

Ingredients for 6 people:
6 large blond onions
800 g of Taleggio
200 gr milk
100 g of dry macaroons
Butter to taste
salt and pepper

Method:
Soak the taleggio cheese for 1 night in diced milk, the next day melt it in a bain-marie until you get a smooth fondue.
Wash the onions well with the skin and cook them in the oven for a couple of hours at a low temperature (about 120 ° C).
Cut them in half and empty them inside. Chop the emptied part of onion and let it lose its water in a colander.
In the meantime, add the softened taleggio fondue and the chopped onions, lastly add the crumbled amaretti; season with salt and pepper if necessary.
Stuff the onions with the filling obtained, sprinkle them lightly with a little macaroon powder and a flake of butter. Gratin the onions in a preheated oven at 180 ° C.

MOCHO / Fame da Lupi – Taleggio Burger, Burger with breaded Taleggio slice, spicy strawberry jam, sautéed mushrooms, herb mayo

Ingrediants:
1 thick slice of taleggio cheese (200g)
80g porcini mushrooms
50g strawberry jam
30g mayonnaise
2 Slices of Pancarrè
1 clove of garlic
aromatic herbs (thyme, marjoram, parsley)
chili powder QB
100g breadcrumbs
1 l frying oil
1 egg
flour to taste
extra virgin olive oil QB
salt & pepper to taste

Method:
Cut a thick slice of Taleggio cheese and put it in the freezer on a baking sheet with parchment paper for 15 minutes
Cut the mushrooms and sauté them in a pan over high heat with, oil, garlic and parsley.
Mix the strawberry jam with the chilli powder and mix.
Finely chop the thyme and marjoram and add the herbs to the mayonnaise.
Coat the slice of taleggio with flour, eggs and breadcrumbs. repeat egg and breadcrumbs for double breading.
Fry the taleggio cheese until golden.
Toast the bread and assemble everything.

LORENZO BIAGIARELLI / Scones with a Taleggio PDO foam and mushroom jam

Ingrediants:
250 gr flour 0
125 ml cold milk
70 gr butter
half a sachet of baking powder
1 pinch of salt
a spoon of sugar
200 gr porcini mushrooms
two shallots
extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon of sugar
1 splash of vinegar
fresh thyme
salt and pepper
200 gr taleggio cheese
200 gr fresh cream

Method:
For the scones: cut the butter into cubes, mix all the powders and cover the butter, stirring with a spoon. Add the milk, blitz in the food processor for a few seconds until the mixture is raw, compact it with your hands and leave in the fridge for half an hour. Remove from the fridge, form the scones (round or triangular), bake at 220 for 10 minutes.

For the jam: caramelize the shallots with oil, salt and pepper, for about twenty minutes over low heat, adding sugar and vinegar at the end. Aside, sauté the diced mushrooms with the thyme, then incorporate the rest of the mixture by caramelizing for a few minutes.

For the taleggio mousse: whip the cream, melt the taleggio cheese in a bain-marie (keeping a little crust aside) and then incorporate the cream with a spatula. Garnish at the end with a piece of crust.

MATRICOMIO / JACK PANINO Sandwich with wild boar ham, taleggio cheese and hazelnut sauce

Ingredients for 1 sandwich:
2 slices of homemade bread
60g wild boar ham
70g Taleggio PDO
For the hazelnut sauce:
250ml of milk
80g of toasted hazelnuts
1/2 golden onion
25g of 0 soft wheat flour
4 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
1 sprig of rosemary
Salt to taste
pepper as needed

Method:
Brown the thinly sliced ​​onion together with the oil in a saucepan. Combine the flour until it forms a sort of roux, then dilute with the milk to obtain a sauce. When it begins to thicken, add the chopped hazelnuts, rosemary, salt and pepper.
Leave on the heat for a few moments until thick, then blend.
Toast the slices of bread, then fill with taleggio cheese and wild boar ham, spreading the hazelnut sauce on both slices.

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Gorgonzola, an Italian PDO legend – Italian Cuisine

Gorgonzola, an Italian PDO legend


The gorgonzola, one of the blue cheeses best known in Italy, it has been recognized as DOP only in 1996. But how did this type of cheese come about and how can it be used in the kitchen? Let's take a leap into the past and trace its origins.

A centuries-old cheese

The name gorgonzola derives fromhomonymous locality, in the province of Milan, where it has been produced for centuries. In fact, legend has it that this cheese was born from the carelessness of a cheesemaker who, by mixing the evening curd with that of the morning, favored the formation of mold, decreeing the birth of the so-called "stracchino with gorgonzola cheese".

The first certainties about the use and production of gorgonzola, however, date back only to the 19th century, when a harder blue cheese than today's was eaten in the Lombard countryside with slices of grilled polenta.

The gorgonzola of the Betrothed

It may not be just a coincidence if the "stracchino di gorgonzola" appears in the Betrothed, first great nineteenth-century novel. Leafing through the pages of Manzoni's masterpiece (chap. XVI) we read that an old landlady offered Gorgonzola to Renzo on the run from Milan, just when the spinner had identified the fictitious goal behind which to hide the plan to reach Bergamo in the village of Gorgonzola.

From 900 to today

Instead, the custom of spreading gorgonzola on a slice of homemade bread, like the traditional and crunchy Milanese michetta, dates back to the 1900s. Today the production of the cheese takes place mainly in Gorgonzola but, according to the regulations approved in Europe, it can also be produced in Bergamo, Brescia, Como, Biella, Como, Cremona, Cuneo, Lecco, Lodi, Milan, Pavia, Vercelli, Varese, Novara, Verbano-Cusio-Ossola.

A little wild card in fast cooking

Gorgonzola is a raw cow's milk cheese with characteristic bluish-green streaks (deriving from the aging of mold Penicilium, placed in the milk during the cheese-making phase), which can be used as jolly of fast cooking. In fact, there are several small recipes that see it as the undisputed protagonist, both in a sweet and spicy version, combined with other ingredients. It is, for example, used to season polenta, risotto or gnocchetti; it is proposed in the form of slices of cake interspersed with chopped mascarpone and walnut kernels or used for other small delicacies. Let's see some examples.

4 tips on how to use gorgonzola

Gorgonzola is a blue cheese that goes well with other ingredients and therefore is very versatile in the kitchen. Here are some examples of use, from appetizers to second courses.

1) Pinzomonio cream

Blend the gorgonzola with mascarpone or a few tablespoons of whipped cream and serve with crudité, bread sticks, apples and pears;

2) Creaming for the risotto

Stir risotto alla parmigiana, in addition to a knob of butter and chopped walnuts, to give an extra touch of flavor to the dish. Finish the dish with a drizzle of honey and caramelized pear slices.

3) Pasta sauce

Melt it on the stove with a little milk and use it as a sauce for pasta. In this case, a handful of raisins and chopped hazelnuts will suffice to dampen the flavor and give a crunchy note.

4) Filling for rolls

Spread it on the slices of meat, add a cured meat to taste (cooked ham, speck) and grilled vegetables (courgettes, aubergines), roll up the rolls and seal them well by fixing them first with a toothpick and then browning them in butter. Alternatively, you can first cook the escalopes and, just before turning off, add the gorgonzola so that it melts and forms a savory sauce.

The PDO for Piave cheese turns 10 – Italian Cuisine

The PDO for Piave cheese turns 10


The DOP del Piave, the hard cooked cheese, originating in the Belluno area which saw its first shape in 1960. In fact, ten years ago this product obtained one of the most important recognitions for a food, the PDO, Denomination of Controlled Origin. Made with milk originating in the province of Belluno only derived from cattle breeds typical of the production area, such as the Italian brunette, the Italian Pezzata Rossa and the Italian Friesian, over the years this cheese has made itself known beyond the borders of the Veneto and has received many awards, including that of Best Cheese Italian hard cheese at the International Cheese & Dairy Awards in Nantwich (UK) and that of cheese perfect in the guide Italian cheeses of "l'Espresso".

All the numbers of the Piave Dop cheese

The Piave DOP has a cylindrical shape of about 30 cm in diameter, with a height of 8 cm for a weight that can vary from 5.5 to 7 kg, depending on the seasoning. On the market, in fact, it is possible to find more or less aged forms, starting from 20 days for the fresh variety, up to 18 months for the Piave DOP Vecchio Riserva cheese. A longer seasoning corresponds to a more savory and decisive flavor. Perfect as a table cheese, it is also used as a basic ingredient in traditional recipes such as I formed frit, that is, fried cheese accompanied with polenta and sauerkraut. Aged 12 months, it is also highly appreciated as a grating cheese, to enrich the flavor of typical dishes of the national cuisine and with its very low lactose content it is also indicated for those intolerant to this milk sugar.

Piave DOP cheese is also a super hero

In addition to being known all over the world, Piave DOP cheese is also the protagonist of the European campaign "Nice to Eat Eu", aimed at Austria, Italy and Germany and created to help the consumer recognize products with the protection mark DOP, increasing both the level of awareness in terms of food safety, authenticity and traceability, both their consumption. This project is aimed in particular at younger consumers, primary school children, to whom he has dedicated an articulated multimedia project starring Captain Piave, a super hero committed to defending the cheese of the Belluno Dolomites and all productions bearing the protection mark DOP from abuse and counterfeiting, which with over 80 thousand views on YouTube she is already a star.

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