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May 16, 2016 by Gina Stipo 2 Comments

Mary and Gina are Ecco la Cucina, offering culinary adventure tours in Italy!

frontOur spring trip to Tuscany is just a few weeks away and we are both excited to get back to Italy!   Our June culinary week is based in our favorite villa on an historic estate south of Siena and we have an exciting week of food and wine events planned for our group!  June in Italy means cherries and apricots, new onions and garlic, and an explosion of roses and poppies covering the countryside and towns with color.  The season begins for outdoor food festivals and we’ll take the group to our favorite sagra celebrating pasta and grilled meats.  IMG_1667

While we’re in Italy, we will also be visiting Piedmont and Emilia Romagna to put the finishing touches on our 2017 culinary tours to Alba, Asti and Bologna for next spring and fall.  Think truffles, Barolo wine, balsamic vinegar and Parmigiano!

IMG_1344Our tours are all inclusive:  we stay in lovely villas that become your home for the week, all meals and transportation to excursions are planned to help you relax and we’re there every step of the way to show you the best each region has to offer.IMG_1415

wine touringOne of the things that rate our tours above our competitors is the attention to detail and personal service we offer and we consistently hear that our value for cost is exceptional.  We lead small groups of 8-12 people where everyone stays together in a beautiful villa and excursions are carefully thought out to entertain and educate, introducing you to local people who love to share their vineyard or city or farm with you.  It surprises us when we read itineraries of other tours that leave their guests at the hotel “on their own for the evening”, supplying them with a list of suggested restaurants to pick from. On our tour, when the culmination of the day arrives, we are there offering cocktails and wine before we all enjoy dinner together at a favorite restaurant!  We’ll guide you through the menu and help you order and enjoy the best the season and locale has to offer. IMG_6496

When you travel with us, Mary is there from the beginning to help you pick the best airports and to plan things to do and see before and after you join our culinary adventure.  Gina’s knowledge of the area and fluent Italian from her years living there, helps ensure that the week goes smoothly and you are able to immerse yourself in the culture, history and culinary delights of Italy without worry.  Our guests also receive our comprehensive guide on traveling to Italy and have access to our local guides to maximize your touring experience, wherever you go.IMG_3001

We hope you’ll allow us to show you Italy!  Check out the Ecco La Cucina website for more information

Filed Under: seasonal & summer fruit, Tuscany, Wine Tagged With: culinary adventure, culinary tour to Italy, culinary tours, ecco la cucina, food tours to Tuscany, Italy tours

March 2, 2015 by Gina Stipo 1 Comment

Winter Blood Oranges

tarocco orangesI tasted my first blood orange the first winter we were in Verona when I was six.  They were newly arrived at our local market from Sicily, and we thought what a wonderful place Sicily must be to have such beautiful ruby red oranges when everyone else had snow.  We looked forward to their arrival every year and greatly missed them when we moved back to the United States, where all the oranges were, well, orange.

Blood oranges, or tarocco in Italy, are a late crop and come to the market after all the tiny mandarins and clementines are finished.  In Tuscany I see them as late as May, picked in the winter and held till the spring.  While the skin can be orange or pale red, the inside is a beautiful dark maroon.

I’ve found them this winter at Trader Joe’s.  They’re not from Sicily but from California, where they’re smaller than what we get in Italy, but just as tasty and beautiful.  In Italy the Arancia Rossa di Sicilia is a registered DOP food product and is most often found as juice in the grocery store.blood orange fennel salad

The skin of the blood orange is thin and sweet.  I like to eat them like an apple, biting through the peel into the juicy pulp that’s as brilliant and colorful as a sunset.  They’re versatile, just as wonderful in savory dishes like roasted rabbit with oil-cured olives, rabbit w oranges e olivesor sliced with fresh fennel in a salad, as they are for dessert.

crepes w nutella e orangeOne of my favorite desserts is crepes stuffed with Nutella and topped with blood orange slices that have been warmed in butter and Grand Marnier.  I served it for dessert recently and after eating it, one of my friends at the table put his fork down, looked around and said “that might be the best dessert I’ve ever tasted.”  The taste of orange and chocolate never fails to make a big impression!

So here’s a wonderful dessert for a winter night.  The crepes are easy to make ahead and keep covered in the fridge for several days.  You can use regular oranges, but for a special elegant look, try to find blood oranges.  Buon Appetito!

Crespelle with Nutella
Crepes:  makes about 25
2 ½ cup flour
4 eggs, beaten
2 tbsp melted butter
2 cups milk, more if needed
dash nutmeg
½ teas salt

Mix liquid ingredients together, make a well in the flour and add the liquid ingredients to the flour.  Whisk together, add salt and nutmeg. Strain the crepes batter through a fine sieve to remove any lumps.
Using a non-stick skillet or crepes pan, heat a small amount of butter or oil, add a small scoop of the batter to the heated pan, tilting and turning the pan quickly to evenly distribute the batter before it sets. The crespelle should be thin and even. Turn the crespelle as soon as it is cooked through, before the bottom browns. Stack them on top of each other as they are done. They won’t stick together, cover with plastic  wrap and keep in the fridge.

For the sauce: Slice 2-3 oranges, enough for each person to have 2-3 slices.  Melt 2 tbsp butter with 1 tbsp sugar the juice of one orange in a sauté pan, add the orange slices and tbsp Grand Marnier or Cointreau and allow to cook for 2 minutes.  To serve, place two crepes on each plate, arrange 2-3 orange slices on top and pour a small amount of sauce over all. The orange slices should be eaten peel and all.
To warm the crepes: Place a teaspoon of Nutella on a crepe, fold in half, then half again so the crepe forms a triangle.   Place the triangles on a baking sheet like shingles, one overlapping the other, and put in a 350° oven for 5 minutes.

 

Filed Under: seasonal & summer fruit, Sicily, Tuscany, winter Tagged With: arancia rossa di Sicilia, blood oranges, nutella crepes, tarocco

September 9, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Summer peaches in wine

peaches in market         The Italians have the loveliest way to eat fresh summer peaches: they pick a nice, ripe peach at the end of the meal and slice it into their last glass of wine.  Then after letting it marinate for a few minutes, they eat the peach slices.   Dinner is over when the last of the wine has been enjoyed.

I watched my grandfather do this many times while I was growing up and it’s one of my favorite summer treats.   The peach’s flavor is brightened and intensified in the wine, which becomes delicately scented and flavored with the fragrant peach juice.

You can also make marinated peaches ahead of time by slicing peaches into a bowl  and pouring a little white or red wine over them, maybe adding a sprinkling of sugar.  The peaches are marinated in the wine for several hours and then served for dessert.

But I prefer the simplicity of the ritual performed at the end of the meal, just you, the peach and the wine.

 

 

Filed Under: seasonal & summer fruit, Wine Tagged With: peaches, peaches in wine, wine

August 22, 2012 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

August heat and al fresco living

It was over 100 degrees in Siena today. The usual precautions of closing the shutters during the day against the hot sun, then opening them later in the evening to get a breeze, did nothing to keep the house cool.  At 8 p.m. it still registered 101 degrees.

When it gets this hot, Americans disappear into their air conditioned houses and cars, but Italians come out to live on the street, in their gardens, on their terraces, under their neighbors’ noses. All the windows are open to the warm night and the still air is filled with voices of the neighborhood chatting about the days’ events, silverware clinking on plates as the evening meal is shared al fresco. Normally private conversations are open to everyone. Nothing is concealed in the still heat. Clothes come off, people come out and the entire town becomes your living room.

The simplest of meals is served. Tomatoes tossed with fresh basil, olive oil and salt. Sliced salami and cheese. Cold tuna and white beans, maybe a slice of frittata from lunch. Glasses of chilled white wine. Nothing that requires turning on the stove or oven. It’s too hot for heat.

An ice cream is suggested and we walk to the crowded bar to see what might be left in the freezer case.

Filed Under: Blog Categories, seasonal & summer fruit

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Interested in seeing Italy with Chef Gina?
Then check out her schedule of immersion cooking classes and tours in Italy through Ecco La Cucina!

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