Mussels with potato soup, leek, turmeric and coconut milk

This is one of the recipes proposed in September by me and my staff (Terrace Bartolini), at the Show Cooking in the Magazzini del Sale in Cervia.

At the public present he loved it. The recipe is simple … so why do not you try it?

Mussels with cream of potato, leek, turmeric and coconut milk

Mussels with cream of potato, leek, turmeric and coconut milk

Ingredients for 4 people :

750 g potatoes
100 g leek
1.5 g Turmeric
1300 g water
10 g salt
50 g coconut milk

for 100 g of soup 1 g of lecithin

Peel the potatoes, wash, cut in half, then sliced.
Clean the leeks, keeping aside a little part green (as you will need to garnish by the end) finely chop all the other and make it dry in a small pan with a little olive oil.
In a pan, put the potatoes with a little extra virgin olive oil and brown them low continually mixing fire up when you begin to make a colored crust.
Add the water, the porrotti stews and salt.
Slowly cooked.
Clean the mussels removing the beard and washing them rubbing each other and changing the water several times.
Put them in a pan with a trickle of water, cover with a lid and open them on the fire.
Drain, discard the shell.
Blend the bread crumbs and fry for a few seconds in hot oil and drain it in a steel colander, place it over a paper towel and salt lightly.
Fill the mussels with fried bread crumbs and place them on a baking sheet.
Wash the celery and cut into small pieces of 2 cm in length, then blanch in salted water.
With a hand blender, blend the cream of potatoes, add the coconut milk and turmeric
Combine the soy lecithin and also continue blending trying to incorporate air to the cream, which will become due lecithin beautiful soft and fluffy.

Dip the mussels in the oven at 210ºC for 2 minutes and sprinkle with chopped parsley.
Divide the cream into 4 bowls.
Arrange on cream 6 pieces of celery for each dish and placing on top of each piece a mussel.
Complete with raw porrotto cut into thin strips.
Serve hot!

Matteo Casadio

Pagnotta di Pasqua

La Pasqua si avvicina, così ho pensato di giocare d’anticipo e vi pubblico la ricetta della Pagnotta di Pasqua. Questa è un’altra ricetta di Gregorio Grippo, chef del ristorante La Buca (Stella Michelin) di Cesenatico.
La pagnotta pasquale è un dolce tipico della tradizione Romagna, più precisamente della zona di Sarsina, nelle colline dell’entroterra cesenate.
Era abitudine iniziare a mangiarla la mattina di Pasqua con l’uovo benedetto e si continuava anche i giorni successivi.
La Pagnotta era un mangiare dei poveri e per questo si prepara con prodotti semplici.
Dopo le chiacchere ecco la ricetta.

Pagnotta di Pasqua di Sarsina
Ingredienti:
1,5 kg farina 00
200 g zucchero
200 g uova
625 ml acqua a 25˚C
200 g burro temperatura ambiente
20 g lievito di birra
aroma arancia
uvetta qb
Impastare e lasciare lievitare a 30˚C per 12 ore
Formare delle pagnotte da 300 g e lasciare lievitare altre 4/5 ore
Cuocere a 190˚C per 30 minuti.

Grazie Grippo, ci vediamo presto!

Gluten Free

logo gluten free

More and more people around the world have celiac disease.

This gluten intolerance is creating  feed problems for sufferers.

In the last years, in all food stores, we find gluten-free products. This is a new market and many companies have begun to produce this kind of products that often cost much more than their real value, even if you have to consider that the production of the products Gluten Free, can not be made in the rooms and with machinery that are used for foods that contain gluten, … this in part justifies the higher price!

We have grown accustomed to buy packed products, often without even reading what they contain.

With a little attention and a little commitment, even celiac disease can eat can have a normal and varied diet and save a little of money preparing their recipes at home, starting from the basic ingredients.

What are the foods that  celiac disease can eat?

This is a list that serves for all to understand what products and foods  contain gluten, and those that do not contain gluten.

PRODUCTS NOT CONTAIN GLUTEN:

  • CORN (corn) *
  • BUCKWHEAT *
  • RICE *
  • QUINOA *
  • CASSAVA *
  • MILLET *
  • AMARANTO *
  • SORGO *
  • TEFF *
  • ZIZANIA *
  • FLOUR DIET (specialized companies)

* Be careful because even if these seeds and grains do not contain gluten, often flour obtained may be contaminated with other ground products . So flour must be from authorized companies. Another nice solution could be to buy a small mill at home and use it to produce by your own the flour.

  • FRESH EGGS
  • Pasteurized eggs without added flavors
  • FRESH FISH AND FROZEN natural *
  • FRESH CLAMS
  • FRESH AND FROZEN SEAFOOD natural *
  • FISH PRESERVED CANNED
  • SMOKED FISH without additives and flavorings
  • FRESH MEAT, FROZEN *
  • HAM
  • LARD OF COLONNATA IGP
  • LARD D’ARNAD DOP
  • LARD
* Obviously not breaded or floured; not prepared recipes that may contain thickeners
  • FRESH MILK
  • UHT MILK not with added flavorings or other substances
  • FRESH CREAM
  • CREAM UHT
  • BUTTER
  • FRESH CHEESE _ SEASONED
  • YOGURT no added thickeners and flavorings
  • GREEK YOGURT no added thickeners and flavorings
  • FRESH VEGETABLES, DRIED, FROZEN
  • VEGETABLES liofilizzate
  • VEGETABLES IN VINEGAR
  • VEGETABLES IN OIL
  • VEGETABLES IN SALT
  • FRESH MUSHROOMS, DRIED AND FROZEN
  • FROZEN MUSHROOMS natural
  • FRESH VEGETABLES, DRIED, CANNED
  • FRESH FRUIT _ FROZEN
  • DRIED FRUIT WITH _ WITHOUT SHELL
  • DEHYDRATED FRUIT
  • FRUIT SYRUP
  • COFFEE
  • TEA
  • TISANE
  • WINE
  • SPIRITS unflavoured
  • SOFT DRINKS AND SPARKLING
  • HONEY
  • ROYAL JELLY
  • SUGAR
  • GLUCOSE
  • FRUCTOSE
  • DEXTROSE
  • COCOA BUTTER
  • VEGETABLE OILS
  • OLIVE OIL
  • WINE VINEGAR unflavoured
  • APPLE VINEGAR
  • Balsamic vinegar DOP AND IGP
  • BREWER’S YEAST FRESH, DRY, LYOPHILIZED
  • AGAR AGAR IN SHEETS
  • SALT
  • SPICES
  • HERBS
  • LICORICE ROOT AND RAW
  •  

PRODUCTS CONTAINING GLUTEN – BANNED THEN:

  • WHEAT (WHEAT)
  • SPELT
  • BARLEY
  • OATS
  • RYE
  • KAMUT (Khorasan)
  • SPELTA
  • TRITICALE
  • WHEAT GERM
  • MALT
  • BULGUR
  • COUSCOUS
  • SEITAN
  • SOY SAUCE
  • Polenta taragna if the buckwheat flour is mixed with wheat flour
  • MILK CEREALS
  • MILK AND BEVERAGES OAT
  • FRUIT DEHYDRATED floured
  • INSTANT COFFEE
  • BEER brewed with malted barley or wheat
  • SOURDOUGH

The advice for people who really suffer from this disease is to equip themselves in the house and prepare your own meals from raw materials allowed.

Many products permitted could be contaminated in processing and distribution, so when we go shopping we have always read the labels !

For further information you can visit the Italian Celiac Association

Eggplant Parmigiana Gluten Free

Mattia Tesei, a friend of mine and former colleague, has recently moved to Australia where he now works as a chef.  Here he presents his Eggplant Parmigiana, a recipe suitable for celiac disease sufferers because it is Gluten Free.

melanzane parmigiana

Serves 6:

2 large eggplants

850 g crushed tomatoes

1 clove garlic

1 fresh basil

250 g Corn Flour

250 g Mozzarella

150 g Parmigiano Reggiano

Salt and Pepper q.s.

To prepare the eggplant parmigiana started from the tomato sauce: in a pan, pour a little olive oil and add the chopped garlic. Fry for a few minutes, then add the crushed tomatoes. Add salt and pepper to taste and cook gently until the sauce to thickened.

When add the basil leaves and turn off the heat. Thinly sliced ​​mozzarella.

Take the eggplant and cut into slices about 1 inch thick for the direction of the width.

Arrange the eggplant in a colander and sprinkle each layer with very little salt. Let leave there for at least 20 minutes, so that they can expel a good part of the bitter liquid that characterizes them. After this time, you pass the eggplant in flour corn.

In a large pan pour abundant seed oil, then fry the eggplant, a few at a time so as not to lower the oil temperature too; turn them on both sides then drain on a paper towel. Dab with other paper towels; then grease a baking dish with oil 15×20 helping with a kitchen brush and sprinkle the bottom with a little ‘sauce.

Lay three slices of eggplant, a little ‘sauce and Parmesan cheese and a layer of sliced ​​mozzarella. Place another layer of eggplant and one of sauce, then again Parmesan, mozzarella slices and start over with a layer of eggplant.

Continue until all ingredients are used, ending with the eggplant. Cover with the remaining sauce and Parmesan cheese. Bake in oven preheated to 200°C for 40 minutes (if ventilated at 180°C for 30-35 minutes). Once cooked, leave the parmigiana in oven off so that resting congeals better. Then sfornatela and serve hot.

We thank Mattia Tesei for this recipe: Eggplant Parmigiana gluten free!

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