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April 20, 2019 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Mozzarella and Burrata, two of our favorite Italian cheeses

We’ve always loved mozzarella.  Polly-O was the brand our grandmother served for breakfast.  It was a treat that we only got when visiting her in New York as it wasn’t available in our market in Washington DC way back then.  Mozzarella was the cheese of her roots in the old country and she lamented that Polly-O paled in comparison to what she grew up with.  We thought it was pretty delicious and loved to play with it, pulling off strings of the cheese a little at a time.  Mozzarella is the original string cheese.

Even though mozzarella is now industrially made even in Italy, its roots are in the southern regions of Campania, the capital of which is Naples, and Puglia, which is the ancient, and yet somehow stylish, heel of the stiletto boot of Italy.  You can still find the little neighborhood caseificio’s that make small-batch, fresh mozzarella every morning and sell it at the counter in front of the store.  Made with fresh cows’ milk, mozzarella curds are melted and formed into balls or braids and kept in salted water until used.  Great eaten as is, the soft, stringy cheese also melts beautifully and is delicious when eaten hot.  Perfect for pizza, another delectable invention from Naples!  

But Puglia has managed to take mozzarella to a whole new level by inventing burrata!  Made by forming fresh mozzarella into a bag and stuffing it with fresh buttery curds of the same mozzarella, burrata is delicate and creamy.  Fresh burrata is best enjoyed simply: a drizzle of great olive oil, a sprinkle of salt, some ripe tomatoes and a little lettuce is all you need to really enjoy it.

As a fresh cheese, mozzarella and burrata are best eaten the day they’re made.  After all, they’ll make more tomorrow morning and you’ll go back down to the shop to buy it fresh.  That’s what the southern Italians do:  buy what they need, eat or use it that day, then go back to get what they need tomorrow.  Such a luxury!

 

 

Because fresh mozzarella and burrata don’t travel well, most of what we find for sale in the US is made domestically.  It’s not bad.  Some of it is quite decent and delectable, in its own way.   Some of it, like the low fat/part skim plastic-packaged variety is quite bad to eat on its own but passes muster when melted on a pizza.  And the “homemade” or “house made” mozzarella you see in specialty stores and restaurants isn’t really any better.  You too can purchase industrially made curd and melt it on the stovetop to come up with “fresh mozzarella”.

There is nothing like the artisan mozzarella and burrata we eat when we visit the small, family-owned caseificio’s on our tours to Puglia and Campania!  There is something viscerally satisfying when you bite into a ball of fresh mozzarella, and milk, not water, drips out from the fresh curds.

That experience alone is worth a trip to Italy!

Filed Under: Blog Categories, Campania, cheese, Puglia Tagged With: burrata, campania, fresh cheese, italian cheese, mozzarella, naples, puglia

October 9, 2015 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

…and jumping straight back into summer!

eggplant parmigianaThe reason autumn is my 3rd favorite season is that it gives you a little taste of lovely cooler weather, and then snaps you back into the beautiful heat of summertime!  Which is exactly what happened here in Louisville this past week.  I love that.

I’m confused about the produce cycle in the US.  So often when I’m looking for a seasonal vegetable or fruit, none are to be found.  There is the constant cycle of everything all the time.  Piles of apples and oranges in June when there should be mountains of apricots and cherries.  In August, at what should have been the height of its productivity, I was desperate for an eggplant.  One large grocery store had none; another smaller market had exactly 3 soft ones at $3.99/lb.  I was so disgusted I posted it on Facebook.

Now it’s October and eggplants are two for a dollar.  That’s 50 cents a piece.  Go figure.slender eggplants

So I bought them and in honor of my 2nd favorite season, Indian Summer, I’m putting eggplant parmigiana on the menu all weekend!  It’s a bit labor intensive but is so worth the effort and really the ingredients are simple.  Just a matter of putting them all together. The recipe is below.

simple red saucemozzarella

I would serve it with the last of the rose’ wine.  Buon appetito!

Parmigiana di Melanzane (eggplant parmigiana)fried eggplants

4 eggplants, peeled and sliced thin
Peanut oil for frying
Simple tomato sauce (olive oil, whole garlic, tomato puree, salt)
Fresh basil leaves
1-2 lbs whole milk mozzarella, sliced
2 cups pecorino romano, grated

Slice the eggplants thinly, lengthwise and salt them in layers, leaving them for several hours to release their water.  Rinse them and pat dry with paper.
Heat the peanut oil until 350 degrees and fry each slice until golden brown. Drain on paper towels. Prepare a large baking dish with a drizzle of olive oil and a light coating of tomato sauce. Place a layer of fried eggplant in the pan, pressing down firmly. Add a light coat of tomato sauce, some whole basil leaves and a layer of mozzarella and a sprinkle of cheese. Continue to layer in this way, making sure that you consistently press the eggplant slices firmly into the pan. In this way, once it’s baked you will be able to slice it and it will maintain its shape.  Bake at 375 til bubbling.  Serve with a salad.

Filed Under: Blog Categories, Campania, Puglia, seasonal vegetables Tagged With: eggplant, eggplant parmigiana, mozzarella, naples, summer dishes

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