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April 6, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Schiacciata di Pasqua Senese – Sienese Easter Bread

Schiacciata di Pasqua Senese

In Italy, each religious holiday brings baked goods and sweets made only and specifically for that season. This is especially true for Eastertime. The many breads, cakes and cookies differ depending on the region of Italy, and the traditional sweets from my family are different from what I find in Tuscany. At Easter in the province of Siena, they make a sweet bread flavored with anice seed, orange and mint. Called schiacciata di Pasqua, it is tall, yeasty and dense, with a rich yellow color, decorated simply with a dusting of powdered sugar. It’s rarely found in a bakery because it is still a traditional dessert baked at home, the recipe passed down from generation to generation.

My very good friend, Oriana Bindi, born and bred on a farm halfway between Siena and Montalcino, is intensely passionate about this aromatic bread. She can’t wait until Spring so she can make batch after batch to enjoy for breakfast, merende (snacktime), or dessert, gifting to friends the cakes that turn out especially well. That’s the thing about these special holiday treats – you only make them for a few weeks during their season and then move on. For instance, one would never think of making this in August or September, no matter how badly one wanted to eat it. In this way, the foods of each season remain precious.

Oriana slaves over her schiacciata, planning ahead and worrying over her complicated instructions, ecstatic if it turns out well, downhearted if it doesn’t. The recipe she uses, passed down from an aunt, has many special instructions printed in bold capital letters of WHAT NOT TO DO. If you call the house during these days, you’re told that Oriana is in the kitchen “con la schiacciata”, which is code for she can’t be disturbed with a phone call. I usually run over to watch and discuss the proceedings, trying to understand this special Tuscan recipe while giving her morale support to help ease her nerves.

For anyone who understands the science of baking, the recipe is unnecessarily complicated. For anyone who doesn’t bake often, the complications inspire fear. Oriana finds the name “schiacciata” to be the strangest thing about this recipe. Generally any bread in Tuscany with that name, and there are several, is almost always flat. But this bread is tall and dense. Schiacciare means “to break”. Since this cake is made in the Spring, when the chickens typically laid too many eggs to use, they say you had to break a lot of eggs to make a good schiacciata. Hmmm.

I think the strangest thing about her recipe… actually, there are a couple of strange things about this recipe. The first is the addition of an entire grated orange! An entire grated orange – zest, pith, membrane, segments, juice – you take a whole orange and a box grater and you start grating it, “come un pezzo di Parmigiano”, like a piece of Parmigiano. The first time I saw her do it I was speechless! Anthropologically speaking, this step is most likely based on the inherent frugality of the Tuscan people: if they were fortunate enough to have an orange, they used the whole thing.

The second, and even stranger thing, is the amount of YEAST that is used. 130 grams of cake yeast to 3 pounds of flour! Since most of us don’t have access to cake yeast, let me do the math for you: the equivalent of dry yeast is 65 grams. Consider one envelope of dry yeast weighs 7 grams, that is 9 (nine) packets of dry yeast for just 13 cups of flour to make just three 8” cakes! That much yeast can’t be good for you.

But I think I understand why this recipe calls for so much yeast. Remember that this is a traditional recipe, handed down for generations. Before commercial yeast was made widely available, home cooks used a biga (“mother” or starter) for making bread. Once commercial yeast became widely available, home cooks were faced with having to make the conversion between their home starter and cake yeast. They weren’t food scientists, they didn’t know about conversion rates. Whereas you would need a large amount of starter, commercial yeast is more potent and you need to use considerably less. They wanted a tall cake and using a lot of yeast got them there.

I worked with Oriana’s recipe and developed one without an exceptional amount of yeast, one that works the dough gently and gives the yeast a chance to rise and do its job. An understanding of the process allowed me to remove the scary warnings in Capital Letters, another very odd thing that I’d never seen in a recipe. If you understand the science behind working with yeast, you can be confident of the joyous results and enjoy this lovely bread.

Many Tuscans are adverse to change, their feet firmly rooted in the past. At first Oriana resisted using less yeast, but this year she tells me she took my suggestion and left out half of the yeast with great results. She sees it as another beautiful example of celebrating the seasons with lovely time-honored traditions!

Below please find the recipe I rewrote for Oriana.

Buon appetite and happy Easter! Gina

Schiacciata di Pasqua Senese

I’ve cut this down from the original recipe so that instead of making three 8” round cakes, it makes only one. I also cut the yeast way back so it’s an appropriate amount to raise the dough, but not to overwhelm it with a yeast taste. The only other thing I changed is using just the zest and juice of an orange as opposed to grating the entire thing on a box grater. If you’d like to try it, please do so, it’s an interesting experience and not as hard as it sounds! Just watch your knuckles!

3 ¼ cup flour

1 packet dried yeast, dissolved in ½ cup water

2 eggs

½ cup sugar + 1 tbsp

2 tbsp olive oil

2 tbsp butter

½ cup Vin Santo, or semi sweet sherry or marsala

½ cup mint rosolio or 1 tbsp crème di menthe

1 tbsp anice seed

Pinch of sea salt

Zest of one orange

Juice of same orange

Powdered sugar

Place all the flour, one teas sugar and the pinch of salt in a large bowl. Make a well in the center and add ½ of the yeast and water and one beaten egg. With a fork, mix a small amount of the flour into the wet ingredients. You must not mix in all the flour, only enough to make it thick but still very soft and moist, leaving this starter, or “lievitino”, in the center like a volcano. Mix it well and then cover it and allow it to rise an hour in a warm place.

Meanwhile, mix together in a small pan the remaining sugar, oil, butter, orange zest and juice (or the whole orange if you’ve gone that route), anice seeds and liquors. Heat the mixture until the sugar is melted, without bringing it to a boil. Take it off the stove and allow it to cool.

Butter your round pan, either a cake or spring form. If you can find the brown paper pans that are used to make panettone, all the better.

Remove the bowl of flour from its warm resting place, add in the remaining yeast, the other egg and all the liquid mixture. Mix it well, preferable with the dough hook of an electric beater. The mixture is very soft and you won’t be able to knead it on a board. Pour the dough into your cake pan and allow it to rest and raise in a warm space another hour. Heat the oven to 350 and place the schiacciata in the oven. Bake it until it is risen and browned, about 30-40 minutes. When the cake is cooled dust it with powdered sugar.

Filed Under: Blog Categories Tagged With: schiacciata, sienese easter bread

April 5, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Lobster Rolls on a Jaunt to New York City

When you think “New York City”, lobster rolls aren’t usually the first things that come to mind. Unless you’re me. I’m crazy about lobster rolls and since I spend most of the year where they aren’t readily available, I tend to go a little overboard when they are.

My sister, Mary, was the first in our family to discover lobster rolls. Years ago she went to Boston on business and happened to call on a client at the shore. The business call evolved into an unexpected detour at the water’s edge in a small town on Cape Cod, at a shack with big signs that said “Lobster”. Too early in the day for a whole lobster (is that possible?), she went out on a limb and got something called a “lobster roll”. And then she called me and told me about it. Now, I’ve been a lobster nut since I was a little girl, obsessing over my grandma’s baked lobster with spaghetti. But the thought of someone else cleaning a lobster and putting the meat on a buttered roll rocked my world. I couldn’t wait to get to Massachusetts, or wherever I was going to be able to get my hands on one.

It wasn’t long after that I found myself planning a trip to Rhode Island for a friend’s wedding and realized it was only a short drive to the most lobsterish of states, Maine. I got out there three days early and rented a car specifically to eat lobster and search out the lobster roll of my dreams.

I’ve eaten a lot of lobster rolls since then and I take every opportunity to enjoy them when I’m in New England. The best one I ever had was at Red’s Eats in Wiscasset Maine, the meat of an amazingly fresh lobster stuffed into a toasted, buttered hot dog bun, whole claws sticking out each side. Once on my way to the Boston airport to fly to Portland, Oregon, I ate one for lunch at the Clam Box in Ipswich, Massachusetts; it was so good I got another to go to eat for dinner later. Best decision I ever made. There I was at 30,000 feet, unwrapping the roll with the other passengers staring me down. I could have retired on the sale of that lobster roll, which made eating it all that much more enjoyable.

Fifteen years ago they were almost unheard of in New York City, just a memory of summer at the shore. Then the Lobster Place opened in the re-born Chelsea Market and since then it’s been a steady stream of great lobster roll opportunities.

I was recently in New York City and over the course of four days I tasted three of them. Here are the rolls I had and how I rate them.

The Lobster Place, Chelsea Market

Aside from ordering food, the Lobster Pound is a great space to hang out and gaze at all the shellfish. Their lobster rolls are freshly made but not lobstery enough; I think they’ve been out of the ocean and in the tanks too long. There’s a small amount of celery, chive and mayo, which you don’t need if the lobster is really tasty.

Jean-George Vonrichten’s Spice Market

Nice little twist, rolled into rice paper with a little, cool dill gelee, srirachi mayo for dipping. A yummy little appetizer but obviously not the real thing. I loved Spice Market tho and went back again.

Luke’s Lobster, 7th Street between 1st and 2nd Ave

I think Luke’s has the best in town. The lobster has a great fresh taste – just lobster meat on a toasted bun. This time they added a little melted butter, which oozed out as you were eating it. It was overkill, but it was delicious! Now Luke’s has locations all over town with one in the Financial District, the original in the East Village and another on the Upper East Side. Plus I hear they have a mobile unit that shows up in farmer’s markets! Mobile lobster roll units. If I can just get them to park outside my door.

Filed Under: Blog Categories Tagged With: lobster rolls, lukes lobster

March 15, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Carciofini Sott’Olio – preserving baby artichokes under olive oil

I’ve been missing artichokes this winter. I’m in the US and while I see them in the stores, they just aren’t as fresh and beautiful as what I get in Italy, plus the price is astrological. So I’ve been missing them. Sometimes I succeed in talking the produce manager into discounting old artichokes he won’t be able to sell, but generally not. Apparently they’d rather throw them out than sell them cheap, but I keep trying!

So I was thrilled yesterday to find a beautiful pile of firm, fresh baby artichokes at a little produce store, and I snapped them up and ran home to preserve them, pretending I was in Tuscany, which I will be again shortly.

 

 

 

 

The Tuscans preserve most of their vegetables under oil, as opposed to southern Italy where they tend to preserve things in vinegar, pickling vegetables like eggplant or peppers, or the mix of carrots, celery, cauliflower and onions known as “giardiniera”. In Tuscany we preserve “sott’olio”, or under oil, grilled eggplant and zucchini and fresh porcini or chanterelles when they’re in season. But artichokes are especially good under oil and very easy to make, although a little labor intensive on the front end.

Baby artichokes are especially plentiful in the spring. Contrary to popular belief, they are not a variety of artichoke, but actually what any artichoke plant will bear after the adult bud has been picked. With almost no choke at all and with the exception of a few layers of outer leaves, the whole thing is edible.

Cut off the top of the artichoke, peel off and throw away the outer dark green leaves and carefully peel the stem. Bring to a boil a mixture of white wine vinegar (or cider vinegar), white wine and water, enough to cover the artichokes, add them and boil for no more than 4 minutes. Take them out and drain them upside down on paper towels. After a few hours remove them to a rack and allow them to airdry at least 12 hours.

Next get large jars that have been sterilized in the dishwasher, and pack the artichokes in, layering them with whole garlic cloves and a sprig of mint, pressing them down to compact them in the jars and squeeze the air out. Cover them with good quality extra virgin olive oil, making sure that the oil completely covers every bit of artichoke, mint, or garlic, with a good ½” on top. If any food is exposed to the air, mold will grow and you’ll have to throw the whole thing out. Believe me, it’s a tragedy when that happens.

You don’t need to run them through a hot bath to seal the jars. That actually will cook the artichoke more and heat the oil, which changes the flavor. The oil acts as a natural seal, preserving the vegetable in the semi-crisp state that it was blanched in.

These will keep for months and are wonderful on an antipasto platter or in a salad. They make a wonderful warm dip pureed with garlic and a little mayonnaise, and the oil can be reused in a salad dressing.

This is just the beginning of the preserving season, followed soon by spring strawberries and early summer cherries and mulberries. But more on that later. Buon Appetito!

Filed Under: Blog Categories Tagged With: artichokes, preserved artichokes, under oil

March 9, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Making Salami in Winter

Italians eat with the seasons. That’s about the only way you can generalize Italian food, except maybe to say that their food is always fresh and simply prepared.Which is a direct result of eating what’s in season.What is seasonal generally is taken to mean local fresh fruit and vegetables, harvesting what’s growing in the gardens and ripening on the trees and bushes.But in the past, the winter season was pig-slaughter and salami-making time, fresh roasted meat was only available during the cold months, and eating with the season was more than just vegetables and fruit.

December, January and February was traditionally the time of year when Italians butchered their pigs to make salami, prosciutto, sausages, and other cured products because only then was it cold enough outside and in the slaughter house to butcher the meat safely, ensuring that it wouldn’t spoil or rot before they could get it cured.While today the butchering and curing goes on inside climate-controlled environments all year long, you do still find small operations and individual households that stick to the tradition of only butchering and curing meats in the wintertime.And if you only butchered animals in cold weather, that usually meant that for the mostly poor and agriculturally based population, fresh roasted meats were a wintertime delicacy.

I have several friends in Italy who always buy a pig in September and spend the winter fattening it up with table scraps and corn.Then after the first of the year, they schedule a weekend of sausage and salami making.The pig is killed on Thursday night, they pick it up on Friday and three days of cutting, seasoning and hanging meat begins, culminating with a big Sunday lunch of fresh grilled ribs and roasted pork loin. Friends pitch in and bring desserts and antipasti or fresh tagliatelle. A big fire is started early and by the time lunch comes it’s burned down to a nice bed of coals for grilling pig liver wrapped in caul fat, pork steaks and ribs.


Filed Under: Blog Categories Tagged With: salami, sausage making

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