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Meringue bread and jam, a timeless recipe – Italian Cuisine

Meringue bread and jam, a timeless recipe


Meringue bread and jam, preparation

1) Preheat the oven at 180 °. Wash the lemon and grate the zest; chopped the breadcrumbs in the mixer e unite the zest. Reheat the milk with 50 g of sugar, pour it over the mixture e let it rest for 15 minutes.

2) Separate the yolks from the whites, add the first to the prepared mixture and pour it into a lightly greased pan with 22 cm in diameter. Bake in the oven for about 30 minutes.

3) Mounted the egg whites with the remaining sugar and a pinch of salt, remove the pan from the oven and spread the surface of the cake with the jam.

4) Cover with the whipped egg whites and sauté the cake in oven for 15 minutes or until the meringue turns out golden. Let it cool and serve.

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Posted on 09/11/2021

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South Tyrolean breads: ancient recipes and flours for timeless flavors – Italian Cuisine

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We went on a journey through the valleys of South Tyrol to discover traditional bakeries, their most typical products and the millenary history that intertwines agriculture and white art




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Enclosed by majestic mountains, theSouth Tyrol jealously guards gastronomic traditions whose origin is lost in the mists of time. One of the most fascinating is that of bread and of flours rustic with which, in the area of South Tyrol, has been kneaded for millennia.

Traces of Emmer were found among the mummified remains of Ötzi, the shepherd who lived in these areas more than five thousand years ago. While of the rye We have news since 800 BC, when it seems to have come from distant Asia Minor, only to find fertile ground in these areas and become one of the most used cereals for white art, as bread making is called.

Even today, rye is widely cultivated, often by the same bakers who collect and grind it in their mills. Some even use machinery dating back to the late nineteenth century, such as the svecciatoio in the photo, which is still in operation on the farm today Roatnocker from Georg Weiss, high Val di Non, which separates the beans according to shape and size.

Among the specialties baked daily in South Tyrolean bakeries are the Paarl, loaves kneaded with rye and spelled that change according to the mix of flours that compose them. So, for example, they are called Vollkotnpaarl those entirely of wholemeal rye.

They are called instead Urpaarl the breads of pure rye typical of Val Venosta, the "granary" of Tyrol. The prefix "Ur" recalls the ancient city of Mesopotamia, the cradle of cereal. There eight shape, obtained from the union of two rounded loaves, symbolizes the union of marriage (in the photo, the offer to the bakery of Peter Schuster in Laudes, in Val Monastero).

The technique with which the thin discs of the Schüttelbrot: the dough is placed on one circular shovel which is made to rotate, by the skilled hands of the baker, until it widens and thins at the right point.

The result is round, low, toasted and very crunchy bread, the emblem of South Tyrol and typical of every production.

The distinctive taste of Schüttelbrot, Paarl and other specialties is given by the trigonella, an aromatic herb that grows in the mountains and produces pale blue flowers.

After the harvest, the trigonella comes dried and ground. The scent is halfway between anise and cumin: the latter, moreover, is also part of the bouquet used in typical recipes.

Among the seeds that enrich the preparations, those of pumpkin and those of sunflower, used for large loaves, small rolls, crunchy cracker (in the photo, those of Furnaria Seppi, in Val Badia). The seeds of poppy.

There puccia is a characteristic specialty of Ladin community, settled in the valleys surrounding the Sella dolomitic group. The traditional loaf of these areas is mixed with 70 percent rye flour and 30 percent wheat and there is also a dry and flat version.

Not just rye: also the wheat flour finds greedy application. For example in the Laugenbrot which, like the classic German and Austrian pretzels, are immersed in a soda bath which makes the crust brown and shiny.

They are light in color and quite soft, again due to the presence of wheat flour, even i Puschtra Breatl, round and low loaves. In the photo, one of the loaves baked in the bakery laboratory Feichter to Dobbiaco, high Val Pusteria.

In short, the doughs and shapes of the loaves change from valley to valley and from village to village. And there is no shortage of contaminations such as the use of flours that come from afar (in the photo, a spelled bread and Sicilian Timilia flour from Merano Ivo de Pellegrin).

To enrich the proposal of South Tyrolean bakeries, even one pastry shop simple but delicious. How to resist the Biscuits double, stuffed with jam?

When it is season, here comes the raisin bread. Less sweet than you might think, it is suitable for breakfasts and snacks also, why not, in combination with salty ingredients.

Finally, it is inevitable apple strudel, symbolic delight of South Tyrol. According to the traditional recipe, the delicious filling is wrapped in a casket of shortcrust pastry crumbly. One bite is enough, and the oven is served.

The addresses
Roatnocker farm, Weiss family, Obere Innere 12, Senale San Felice (BZ), telephone 3487686627
Bäckerei Schuster, Laudes 139, Malles Venosta (BZ), phone 473831340
Furnaria Seppi, Strada Col Alt 34, Corvara in Badia (BZ), telephone 0471 836 863
Bauernhof Familie Feichter, Zipfanger 1, Dobbiaco (BZ), telephone 0474972324
Ivo De Pellegrin oven, Via delle Corse 141 °, Merano (BZ), telephone 3338593629

Photo by Felice Scoccimarro for the reportage made for Sale & Pepe by Riccardo Lagorio
September 2021

Posted on 09/28/2021

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The timeless charm of Italian trattorias – Italian Cuisine

The timeless charm of Italian trattorias


They are the beacon of our catering, not only in the province. Now a volume tells thirteen great signs that have linked each other: beautiful stories of men, territory and food

The fact that the heart of our restaurant is represented by the restaurants / taverns cannot be discussed. The historical sentence of Gualtiero Marchesi ("Italy is a country of hosts and trattorias") should not be considered limiting, but if anything, it was the awareness of the importance of developing a valid haute cuisine and the spread of formats often not very attentive to quality. From here, the eternal need for places dedicated to good food and good drinking. On this Carlin Petrini, the god of Slow Food (born for the record at Osteria Boccondivino di Bra) has always had very clear ideas. «The restaurants are the engine of a community. For quality food and wine, but above all because people are confronted there: there is more than ever a need to be together, to conviviality by following the rules. That's why I always say to the hosts who have a social role, they manage a meeting place and not just a place where you eat and drink. "

Often familiar signs

Now, a book brings together thirteen of these jewels along the peninsula: it is titled Award-winning Italian trattorias – published by Gambero Rosso and sold for 26 euros – and tells the story of these places, not only at the top of the guides, but protagonists in the area. Because they have been able to best interpret what local nature and nearby companies offer: an aspect that is always meritorious. A food alphabet, the result of deeply rooted traditions, portrayed in the images of the photographer Lido Vannucchi and told by Sara Favilla. The signs are thirteen, from north to south, as gathered in the associative hat of the Award-winning Italian trattorias. Thirteen very different stories, united by the love for hospitality handed down from parents to children. «We consider ourselves rewarded not by presumption, but by time and by our customers" He says Federico Malinverno (president of the Association, as well as being the latest generation managing the La Crepa coffee in Dovarese Island). In fact, in the rooms you see in the gallery, relationship, continuity and exchange with your guests is fundamental, as if you were in a large family which also includes suppliers.

The secrets of the dishes

The most delicious part is entrusted to the recipes, true cult for fans. From the Risotto alla Milanese of the Antica Trattoria del Gallo in Gaggiano (Milan) to the marinated soup of Lo Stuzzichino in Sant'Agata dei Due Golfi, on the Amalfi coast, passing through the Gnocchi of leavened pasta with rabbit ragout of the Devetak Inn in Savogna d 'Isonzo (Gorizia) and the Cuniggiu Magro de La Brinca in Ne, on top of Liguria. Malinverno further underlines: «Every now and then they ask us what a trattoria is. We see it as a gateway to the territory, a key to understanding cultivated and wild horizons. A timeless place that keeps the flame of memory alive, but also the ardor of contemporaneity. The book tells thirteen different family stories in which to grasp, each time, the dignity of an identity never lost and constantly renewed ". It is so.

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