Coda alla Vaccinara (Oxtail soup)

August 23, 2005 | Filed Under Beef, Books, Italian Cuisine, Italian Recipes, Soups/Chowders/Gumbos | 3 Comments 

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A couple of successful recipes later, my family and friends who know that I’ve taken an interest in cooking start calling me “Chef Paz.” It’s all in jest but soon the moniker sticks. My family actually begs for my food…. Okay, okay… They don’t beg, but do ask me whether I’m going to cook. That’s a good sign, isn’t it?

“What’s for dinner?” I’d frequently hear. They’re a vocal group and will let me know if they like something or not. Lately, they seem to be happy with the dinners I prepare and I don’t hear any complaints from them. Good. Very good.

So, my cooking adventures continue as I jump at the chance to try another one of the recipes from The Food of Love: Coda alla Vaccinara – oxtail soup.

I LOVE oxtails. Always have. I’m not sure why. Sometimes I wonder if it’s a taste that I developed from the time that I was in my mother’s womb. Really!

I remember a story that my mother mentioned a long time ago. It’s about one of her eating habits when she was pregnant with me in her third trimester:

Just before my mother’s due date, a woman gave birth to quintuplets. To help with the financial burden of an instantaneous large family, people and companies donated gifts ranging from a long-term supply of diapers, to baby food, and clothing. The Government also arranged free spacious housing for the quintuplet family.

In an interview, the press asked the new mother what she had eaten during her pregnancy. She told them that she’d eaten a lot of oxtails because it was the cheapest meat in the supermarket and that was all she and her husband could afford.

The next day, oxtails were sold out in the meat section. My mother was one of those people who ran to the supermarket for the oxtails. Hoping for quintuplets, she ate it for the remainder of her pregnancy.

Poor lady, she got me instead – one child with the energy of five. However, four more children eventually followed after me. So, she did end up having the five children she wanted; it just didn’t happen at once.

I’m unsure if my mom’s story is the reason for my love of oxtails but it certainly comes to mind.

This oxtail recipe is good at anytime. Contrary to what the instructions call for, I now leave out the nutmeg, cinnamon, bitter cocoa powder, and raisins. The first time I made the soup, I included them but didn’t care for the sweet taste that it gave the soup. I had to add water to the soup to dilute the taste.

I didn’t bother looking for ox or pork cheek, for which the recipe calls. One day I will. I think it’ll be an adventure looking for it, as I wonder if they are readily available at the butcher’s. At the moment, I’m a bit intimidated to go asking for them.

I did use bacon instead, and I added chopped celery. I like the crunch that the celery adds to the soup. This oxtail soup makes a satisfying meal. Here are the instructions.

Paz

Coda alla Vacinara (Oxtail soup)

You’ll need an oxtail, about 3-4 pounds, washed and chopped across the joints. Boil for ten minutes and remove any scum. Add 1 carrot, 1 leek, 1 celery stalk, and some parsley or thyme. Simmer for about 3 hours. If you can get ox or pork cheek, put that in, too. Keep the liquid.

 

Next, in a different saucepan, heat some lard or oil and gently fry a chopped onion, chopped carrot, the pork cheek, also chopped (or some bacon if you couldn’t get pork cheek), an a chopped garlic clove. Add some chopped parsley and the oxtail. Pour in half a bottle of dry white wine and allow some to evaporate. Then add half a dozen chopped tomatoes (i.e., about a tin an a half) and a big spoon of tomato paste. Nutmeg and cinnamon could also make an appearance. Simmer for 2 hours, adding a little of the stock from the other pan whenever it gets dry.

You could also add some boiled, sliced celery hearts, raisins, pinenuts, and even some bitter cocoa powder. If so, add at the end and cook for 10 minutes extra.

 

 

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Peaches in Red Wine

August 20, 2005 | Filed Under Books, Desserts/Sweets, Fruits | 1 Comment 

 

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After my success with the tiramisù, I decide to try another dessert recipe from The Food of Love – Peaches in Red Wine. Fresh peaches, red wine, and sugar are all that the recipe calls for.

It was very simple and the only change that I made with the recipe is that I used Dole bottled peaches instead of fresh peaches.

I liked that it’s a light and simple dessert, not to mention nice to look at before eating.

Peaches in Red Wine

Just pour boiling water over the peaches to help you skin them, then slice them into bowls, sprinkle them with sugar, and pour red wine over them. They’re ready to eat after about 1 hour in the fridge.

Now, how easy is that!? If I can make this anyone, can! ;-)

Paz

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Here is the latest paperback cover for The Food of Love

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



Heavenly Delight – Tiramisù Forever

August 19, 2005 | Filed Under Books, Desserts/Sweets, Italian Cuisine, Italian Recipes, The Food of Love | 4 Comments 

 

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I try the tiramisù recipe in the back of The Food of Love first and am so tickled with delight when it comes out exactly, if not better than the one that I order from my neighborhood Italian café. I can’t believe my taste buds – to think that I made it myself! I’m on cloud nine.

Tiramisù

Beat 5 egg yolks with about 2/3 cup sugar until the later has dissolved and the mixture is light and fluffy. (It should leave a trail when it drops from the whisk.) Add about 8 ounces mascarpone and beat until smooth. Whisk the egg whites in a separate glass bowl until peaks form. Fold into the mascarpone mixture.

Pour about 8 ounces of very strong ristretto and 3 tablespoons of brandy/marsala into a wide dish. Soak about 40 lady fingers in this mixture, but don’t let them fall apart. Pack about half of them into the base of a serving dish. Then add a layer of the mascarpone mixture, then a layer of lady fingers, then more mascarpone. Refrigerate for at least two hours. Dust with grated chocolate before serving.

I’m not familiar with some of the ingredients like the mascarpone cheese, Marsala, and ristretto. I get the answers from friends who cook and the food dictionary. From the book, I learn about ristretto, which is described in the beginning of the story as “made with the same amount of ground coffee as an ordinary espresso but half the amount of water.”

Great! Now that I have my answers, I’m ready to go food shopping. Surprisingly, everything is easy to find. The mascarpone, which I’d never heard of before, has always been on the shelf near the ricotta and cream cheese section in the supermarket. It’s in abundance. I know where to look for it in the future.

I find the lady fingers in a neighborhood food store, called Milano, that sells Italian food products and I buy the Marsala from the neighborhood wine store.

I’m ready to make my tiramisù!

Everything goes accordingly until I get to the instructions – “Whisk the egg whites in a separate glass bowl until peaks form. Fold into the mascarpone mixture.”

I have no idea what that means. “Whaddya’ mean ‘fold’?” I lament aloud in consternation.

After a while, I shrug my shoulders and mix the ingredients. I later find out that folding is a gentler way of mixing the ingredients so that the air formed in the egg white peaks aren’t destroyed (something like that)… Ahhh! So, now, I fold when told to fold.

I use regular coffee instead of the ristretto because that’s what I have in the kitchen. Also, I use Marsala instead of brandy.

It is the best-tasting tiramisù I’ve had – made by my own hands (my own hands!). Who would’ve imagined it!?

Paz

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



The Food of Love by Anthony Capella

August 19, 2005 | Filed Under Books, Italian Cuisine, Italian Recipes, The Food of Love | 2 Comments 

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One of my favorites, if not the favorite food novel, is The Food of Love by Anthony Capella. It’s a romantic comedy revolving around food when two young Italians men try to woo an American student, visiting Rome. The story is funny, witty and cleverly written. A part of the story is a takeoff on Cyrano De Bergerac but is still a very different story.

Descriptions of the meals prepared with loving care make me drool and wish that I had the opportunity to taste them. There’s an added bonus of a few simple recipes at the end of the book. With some nervousness, I decide to try a few of them and to my surprise they come out well. It is around this time that my cooking adventures begin.

Paz

 



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