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Spaghetti with Tuna, Lemon, and Creamy Stracciatella Cheese

July 11, 2020 By very EATalian Leave a Comment

Hello friends, 

Long time no see! A lot has happened in the past month. We’re back in the US after a whole year spent in Italy, near my family. I can say our hearts and bellies are happy and full: so many shared moments with people we love; such familiar and unforgettable flavors! Oh, I miss everything and everybody so much already.

We ended up gravitating around Northeastern Italy, only stepping once outside the Italian border (to eat at a restaurant in a little Slovenian village). Even if we initially thought we’d travel more, our year in Italy was very rich (and enriching) , regardless!

We loved being close to the sea and to the Alps! The opera in Verona, a weekend in Milan, our summer vacation in a luxury hotel in Alto Adige, a week at my favorite beach, getting lost in Venice for the hundredth time were just some of the highlights of our time there. The most cherished moments, though, were the simplest of all.

I’m thinking of something as simple as getting a brioche and a cappuccino at a local cafe or riding our bikes through the quiet roads around the house, just before the sun disappeared behind the mountains. I loved our dinners under the porch — lately they were on high demand because Olivia loved the colorful string lights. Seeing old friends, eating gelato & pizza, strolling around markets, foraging for wild herbs, shopping at my favorite shoes stores…the list goes on and on! Lastly, the best thing of all was seeing Olivia growing up close to her nonni, aunts, uncles, and cousins. She had lots of attention and love coming from all over the place…I’m not sure how I can replace that, but it was a real blessing! During our time there, she grew into a chatty, smart, and curious toddler.

Now we’re off to a new start and we’re slowly getting used to our new life here in Alexandria, VA. Readjusting this time is a bit harder because of all the restrictions related to COVID. Thankfully, we still have friends here and we also found a house we’ll soon move into. I can’t wait to settled and get all my kitchen stuff back! In the meantime, I have some recipes that have been in the back burner for a long time. 

Pasta with Tuna and Lemon is definitely a classic in Italian cuisine. This recipe is a keeper and also a lifesaver because it’s easy, quick, and tasty. We resorted to it on multiple occasions during our last weeks in Italy and even here in our temporary apartment. The quality of tuna is really important, so make sure to use the best you can find. I love to add luscious and creamy stracciatella to this dish: it goes so well with the zesty lemon and it balances out the heat from the chili peppers.

Just in case you’re not familiar with it, stracciatella is the soft, delicate and creamy center of burrata — it’s basically what makes burrata so good! This heavenly and pillowy soft cheese is a mixture of shredded fresh mozzarella curd and cream. I know it’s gaining popularity outside of Italy, so I encourage you to look for it at your local specialty store. If you can’t find it, you can easily replace it with her more famous sister, burrata.

This recipe can be enjoyed any time of the year,  but I particularly love it for the summer. It’s so fresh and so tasty!

Spaghetti with Tuna, Lemon and Creamy Stracciatella, Cheese | Very EATalian
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SPAGHETTI WITH TUNA, LEMON, AND CREAMY STRACCIATELLA CHEESE

Total Time 15 minutes
Author Very EATalian

Ingredients

  • 320 g (11.5. oz) spaghetti
  • extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 garlic clove
  • 1 organic lemon juiced and zested
  • crushed red pepper flakes OR a fresh red hot chili pepper (seeded and sliced)
  • 300 g  (10.5 oz) good-quality tuna in extra-virgin olive oil drained
  • 1 Tbsp fresh parsley chopped
  • stracciatella cheese in desired amount, at room temperature

Instructions

  1. Bring a pot of salted water to a boil. Add spaghetti and cook until al dente. While pasta is cooking, prepare the “sauce”.

  2. In a wide sauté pan, over medium heat, add a drizzle of olive oil and a clove of garlic. Let it become fragrant and then add chili pepper sliced (or red pepper flakes), lemon zest and 1/4 cup of cooking water from the pasta pot. Cook briefly and let the liquid evaporate. Then add the tuna and the lemon juice, and cook for just a couple of minutes. Remove from the heat and let the flavors mingle until the pasta is ready.

  3. Drain the pasta and transfer to the pan. Turn on the heat, toss the pasta in the tuna/lemon sauce, until coated, for a minute or two. Remove the clove of garlic.

  4. Serve in bowls along with 1 or 2 tablespoons of stracciatella. Sprinkle with parsley. Before eating, make sure you stir in the stracciatella with your fork so that you obtain a nice creamy sauce. 

Filed Under: Pasta & Gnocchi Tagged With: easy, pasta, quick, summer, tuna

Simple and flavorful Pasta e Ceci

April 21, 2020 By very EATalian 2 Comments

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  • Simple and flavorful Pasta e Ceci (Pasta with Chickpeas) | Very EATalian

I’m having a moment with Pasta e Ceci (Pasta and Chickpeas). It’s a sort of Southern “cousin” of another bean-based pasta dish we make quite often around here:  Pasta e Fagioli soup.

Both of these delicious recipes have their merits: they’re equally humble, nutritious, and filling. My favorite thing about Pasta e Ceci is how all ingredients come together in a harmony of flavors. A fragrant clove of garlic and an aromatic sprig of rosemary set the perfect stage for the beautiful marriage between the bright pureed tomatoes and the hearty chickpeas.

Like many other Italian dishes, you can prepare Pasta e Ceci in many different ways, according to family and regional traditions. I personally like my Pasta e Ceci just like Emiko Davies does: I like it to be less of a soup and more of a pasta, with just enough sauce to call for a spoon. I also like to be generous with tomatoes and puree about 1/3 of the chickpeas I use. The rest of the chickpeas dots the pasta, adding textural interest to the dish.

The best way to go is obviously dried chickpeas. I took a little shortcut and used the canned ones, and the result was still delicious! Make sure you don’t discard the water, though, as it will be an important thickening and flavoring addition to the sauce!

Short pasta works well with this recipe. I scored some mixed-shape pasta at the grocery store and it turned out to be a great source of entertainment for Olivia. She spent a good amount of time sorting out the different shapes. She also got really sad when she realized she ate all her chickpeas and she had no more.

A drizzle of good-quality extra-virgin olive oil and a generous sprinkle of shaved Parmigiano Reggiano cheese will be the perfect final touches to your Pasta e Ceci. If you like a bit of heat (and I DO!), you can add a hint of peperoncino (chili powder).

So there you have it. This simple and flavorful Pasta e Ceci is kid-friendly, cheap, nutritious, filling, and just DELICIOUS. I hope I inspired you to make it, too!

If you make this recipe, please let me know how it turns out for you! You can leave a comment below the recipe or share a photo on IG or FB. Don’t forget to tag me with #veryeatalian! Grazie!

Simple and flavorful Pasta e Ceci (Pasta with Chickpeas) | Very EATalian
5 from 1 vote
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Simple and flavorful Pasta e Ceci

Pasta e Ceci (Pasta with chickpeas) is an incredibly satisfying and nutritious pasta recipe made of cheap pantry ingredients. The pasta is cooked in a delicious sauce made with chickpeas, pureed tomatoes, garlic, and rosemary. You'll love this dish so much, you'll want to make it again!

Servings 4
Author Very EATalian

Ingredients

  • 1 can chickpeas (don't discard the water!)
  • 1 clove garlic smashed
  • 1 sprig rosemary
  • ½ can (7 oz or 200 g) pureed or chopped tomatoes
  • 300 g short pasta (I used mixed shape pasta)
  • extra-virgin olive oil
  • sea salt
  • freshly ground black pepper
  • chili powder (optional)

Instructions

  1. Heat a drizzle of olive oil in a medium saucepan. Sauté the garlic with the rosemary, until fragrant. Add the pureed tomatoes and let cook for about 3 minutes, on low heat.

  2. Add the chickpea liquid from the can and ⅔ of the chickpeas. In a separate small bowl, puree the rest of the chickpeas with a couple of tablespoons of water, to obtain a creamy, thick sauce. Add the pureed chickpeas to the sauce, too.

  3. Add 3-4 cups of water to the saucepan, until it becomes quite watery and then add the pasta and a generous pinch of salt. The pasta doesn't need to be completely submerged by the watery sauce, but it needs to have enough liquid in which to cook. For this reason, you will need to add a couple more cups of water, as the pasta cooks. The cooking liquid will eventually reduce and cook down into a creamy sauce. Cook pasta until al dente, stirring occasionally.

    When the sauce becomes a nice liquid cream that's not too thick, your Pasta e Ceci is ready.

  4. Add salt and pepper to taste, and serve with generous shavings of parmesan cheese and a little drizzle of olive oil. Make sure you serve it with a spoon!

Filed Under: Pasta & Gnocchi, Vegetarian Tagged With: cheap, garbanzo beans, nutritious, pasta, tuscany, vegetarian

Butternut Squash Ravioli (Ravioli di Zucca)

October 22, 2016 By very EATalian 2 Comments

Butternut Squash Ravioli (Ravioli di Zucca) | Very EATalianButternut Squash Ravioli (Ravioli di Zucca) | Very EATalianravioli-di-zucca-veryeatalian-16Butternut Squash Ravioli (Ravioli di Zucca) | Very EATalian

Everything is pumpkin-flavored these days and you probably already had butternut squash cooked in any possible way this season…but have you ever tried Butternut Squash Ravioli (Ravioli di Zucca)? They’re delicate pockets of thinly rolled pasta hiding a delicious filling of sweet and nutty squash, bitter-sweet amaretti and savory Parmigiano Reggiano cheese. Back in Italy, we typically toss them in a lovely aromatic butter sage sauce. They’re pretty much impossible not to love!

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Filed Under: Pasta & Gnocchi Tagged With: comfort food, fall, pasta, pumpkin, ravioli, squash

How to Make Orecchiette

March 24, 2016 By very EATalian Leave a Comment

How to make orecchiette | Very EATalian
How to make Orecchiette | Very EATalian #tutorialHow to make Orecchiette | Very EATalian #tutorial Hello again, friends!

I can’t believe it’s been over a month since my last post. Needless to say my break was probably too long, but much needed. In case you were wondering, this is what happened these past weeks and kept me away from my blogging routine (they’re really good things, for the most part!):

  • My deployed husband (whom I haven’t seen in 4 months) came to visit me! As usual, our time together was awesome and too short.  During his stay in Italy, we were able to accomplish something we have been wanting to do for a long time – i.e. to visit Sicily and meet his Sicilian relatives. We had a great time and I hope to be able to post some photos soon!
  • I upgraded my camera and this is a HUGE piece of news. For months, I spent countless hours sounding out reviews on any possible photography website in order to understand what camera would better fit my needs. I finally set my heart on a Nikon model and got it. I’m happy to announce I’m SUPER satisfied with it. I’m “legit” now! LOL.
  • I did my first portrait session (with my new camera!) — it was an exciting experience altogether and I’m looking forward to my next portrait session. I really can see a future in this.
  • After much anticipation, my husband and I found out our next destination: we’re going to the D.C. area! If there’s one place that could counter-balance the super-sad fact that I’m leaving Italy again, it’s Washington D.C.; lots of beautiful memories there. As soon as we found out about it, we started the house hunt. We’re still a few months out, but we just can’t help it!
  • My computer decided to stop cooperating and I’m in the middle of backing up all my files and getting ready to migrate everything to a new computer. Despite my desire to post new photos & stories, I can’t seem to get through this painful process fast enough.
  • Lastly, I realized that after 1 year of almost-uninterrupted blogging, I needed to put this little creature of mine on hiatus, just so I could come back with fresher ideas and stronger purpose…all the above-mentioned circumstances simply made it happen.

So I’m back at it BUT I’m still in the middle of working out my computer issues. In the meantime, I was miraculously able to work on something I know you’ll love – an orecchiette tutorial!

Orecchiette are cute “little ears” of pasta (“orecchio” means “ear” in Italian). In Puglia (that beautiful southern region that’s easily recognizable because it’s the heel of the boot), making orecchiette is a tradition women pass down from generation to generation and, if you ever visit the old part of Bari, you’ll see the “orecchiette ladies” lining the streets, rolling out dough, and forming tiny perfect cups at the speed of sound. Thousands of these orecchiette are then left to dry on big racks. Once they become dry, they’re ready to be packaged and purchased from passer-by and tourists.

Now, granted my technique isn’t comparable to the masterful hands of these expert ladies, I’m proud to say my FIRST orecchiette turned out quite well! It’s a fun activity to do with the family and I seriously cannot wait to make them again for my American friends when I go back stateside.

To make orecchiette you’ll only need semolina flour, warm water, and just a tiny bit of extra-virgin olive oil. You can check out the full recipe at the end of the post). Now, let’s get to the technique:

  1. Once the dough has rested for about 15-20 minutes, cut a piece and roll it out in a 1 cm-thick log (that’s a little less than 1/2 inch). Keep the remaining dough wrapped in plastic film.
  2. Cut the log in square-shaped pieces (once again, measuring 1 cm or a little less than 1/2 inch).
  3. Take one dough square. Press the tip of a table knife (I used a butter knife) against the corner farthest from you, holding it at an angle.
  4. Press down hard and pull the knife towards you, rolling the dough; keep going until dough wraps around the knife.
  5. Using the other hand, turn dough inside out, pushing your thumb in the center of the little dough disk.

…and tah-daaaah! You just made your first orecchietta.

Wow. It’s more difficult to write it down than to actually make them! This GIF should help you understand better.

How to make Orecchiette | Very EATalian #tutorial

Don’t be intimidated. I guarantee the first ones will look terrible, but as you keep going you’ll notice they’ll look better and better. I promise, you’ll be proud of yourself!

I love the fact that these little domes can really catch any kind of sauce you want to use. Orecchiette usually call for a sauce made with greens like broccoli rabe. I made one with freshly-picked wild greens, garlic, and Asiago cheese….and it was awesome.

Last tip: since you’re at it, make an extra batch, let it dry and freeze for weeknights.

How to make Orecchiette | Very EATalian #tutorial

Orecchiette
 
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Prep time
50 mins
Total time
50 mins
 
Author: Very EATalian
Recipe type: Pasta
Serves: 4-5
Ingredients
  • 300 g (10.6 oz) semolina flour
  • 150 g (5.3 oz) warm water
  • ½ tsp of extra-virgin olive oil
Instructions
  1. Combine all the ingredients until you obtain a soft, yet firm dough.
  2. Knead for a few minutes, until smooth. Form a ball.
  3. Wrap it in plastic film and let it rest for 15 minutes.
  4. Cut a piece and roll it out in a 1 cm-thick log (that's a little less than ½ inch). Keep the remaining dough wrapped in plastic film.
  5. Cut the log in small square-shaped pieces (once again, measuring 1 cm or a little less than ½ inch).
  6. Take one small dough square. Press the tip of a table knife (I used a butter knife) against the corner farthest from you, holding it at an angle.
  7. Press down hard and pull the knife towards you, rolling the dough; keep going until dough wraps around the knife.
  8. Using the other hand, turn dough disk inside out, pushing your thumb in the center of the dough disk.
  9. Repeat the same steps for the rest of the dough.
  10. Spread the orecchiette on top of a drying rack or a lightly floured tray, and let them dry. When they harden up (it doesn't take too long), you can either cook them right away or freeze them inside a plastic bag.
  11. Cook them in salted boiling water until they rise to the surface (cooking time depends on how dry they are - mine took about 5-7 minutes).
  12. Drain orecchiette and sautée with a freshly made sauce.
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Filed Under: Pasta & Gnocchi Tagged With: how-to, orecchiette, pasta, puglia, tutorial

Pasta e Fagioli Soup

January 27, 2016 By very EATalian Leave a Comment

Pasta e Fagioli Soup| Very EATalian #italianrecipes Pasta e Fagioli Soup| Very EATalian
I’ll start off by admitting that Pasta e Fagioli isn’t the sexiest soup around (and I can assure you it was quite hard to photograph)…BUT it definitely makes up for its humble (and messy) appearance with a world of flavor and  goodness. It’s peasant food, made with cheap ingredients — it only needs few veggies and pasta. It was a staple dish on my grandparents’ table and it’s still a dish we cook quite often around here.

We love it because it’s incredibly versatile: you can eat it warm or cold; you can use different pasta shapes (as long as it’s small dry pasta); you can make it more or less liquid. If you’d like to have it cold, just throw in some torn radicchio and lightly dress it with vinegar, for a nice touch of acidity. If you want to be really old school, you can do what my grandfather used to do — instead of vinegar, just pour a dash of red wine in it…better if straight from your glass!

The recipe is courtesy of my mom: it’s definitely simpler and lighter than many other versions that include pancetta, lard or pork rind. The cooking time depends on the type of beans you are using: we typically use fagioli borlotti (cranberry or Roman beans). Many people like to add shaved cheese on top — we only add a bit of good-quality extra-virgin olive oil and a couple of crostini as a final touch.

Mmmm. Che bontà! So good!

Pasta e Fagioli Soup| Very EATalian #italianrecipes

Pasta e Fagioli Soup [Pasta and bean soup]
 
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Author: Very EATalian
Serves: 4
Ingredients
  • 200 g (7 oz) dry cranberry beans, previously soaked in water for at least 24 hours*
  • 1 celery stalk, cut in big chunks
  • 1 carrot, cut in big chunks
  • 1 onion, halved
  • 2.5 lt (10 cups) water
  • 150-200 g (5.2-7 oz) short dry pasta (ditalini or elbow macaroni are perfect!)
  • coarse salt
  • freshly ground black pepper
  • extra-virgin olive oil
  • (optional) crostini*
Instructions
  1. Pour water in a pot and add carrot, celery, onion, and beans. Add some coarse salt (like when you cook pasta). Bring to a boil and cook on medium-low heat for 50 min-1 hour or until beans are cooked through.
  2. Take out some cooked beans and, if you like, some carrots; these will be added back in the soup at a later moment.
  3. With a hand-held blender, blend together all the ingredients contained in the pot. Add pasta in it and cook according to package instructions. Stir often as pasta will tend to stick to the bottom.
  4. Once pasta is cooked, add beans and carrots (cut in smaller pieces) back in the pot. Keep in mind that pasta will thicken the soup. Depending on the density you like to achieve, you can make it less liquid by adding boiling water or you can make it thicker by cooking it a little longer. Add more salt, if necessary.
  5. Serve warm with crostini, some freshly ground black pepper, and a drizzle of extra-virgin olive oil.
Notes
* When you soak your beans, it's a good idea to change out the water a couple of times.
* To make your own crostini (croutons), cut a pieces of bread in slices and then in small squares. Drizzle bread squares with extra-virgin olive oil and pan-roast them until golden.
3.5.3208

Filed Under: Soups, Vegetarian Tagged With: bean, easy, friuli, pasta, peasant, peasant cooking, thick soup, vegetables, vegetarian, veneto

Spaghetti with Calamari

April 16, 2015 By very EATalian Leave a Comment

Spaghetti with Calamari | veryEATalian
My husband and I love going grocery shopping together. Although I’m sure it may sound boring to most, we have fun looking at products (especially cheeses), being drawn by cool-looking and colorful packaging and getting inspiration for new recipes. We’re like kids in a candy store and I seem to be able to add to the experience by doing strange things that either make him laugh out loud or roll his eyes. In fact, American grocery stores have often offered me opportunities to learn, laugh, and reflect. Here’s a list of things that happened to me while shopping for food:

1) Spending at least 10 minutes looking for disposable gloves to pick my vegetables and then realizing people here pick their veggies with their bare hands.
2) Conversely, wondering why the roll of plastic bags stands right next to the chicken section, while  I nonchalantly put a package of chicken breasts straight in the cart.
3) Trying to order prosciutto in hectograms.
4) Entering a cashier lane from the wrong side (it sadly still happens).
5) Being mesmerized by exotic and colorful foods like Doritos, Pop-tarts and Strawberry Marshmallow Fluff….impulsively buying them and, only after the first bite, reading their huge list of artificial ingredients. Yet still chowing down on them while being crushed by guilt.
6) Being puzzled at the idea that people would buy a product that claims to “taste like the real thing”, instead of getting the “real thing”.
7) Missing the European insert-a-coin-to-get-a-cart-and-get-your-coin-back-by-returning-the-cart system when I see shopping carts abandoned in the parking lot and waaaay too close to my car.
8) Lingering in front of the fish department, desperately looking for fish with their heads on.
9) Trying to bag my own groceries (as I would in Italy) and getting weird looks by the person whose job is actually to bag my groceries (oh. I thought he was just standing there!)
10) Whispering to my husband while in line to pay at Trader Joe’s: “is it okay if we use Whole Foods  shopping bags here?” (like that would the cashier’s feelings! Total paranoia, I know.)

Although I’ve been in the States for some time now and I’m no longer a “fish out of water”, I seem to still be able to do awkward things that inevitably amuse or embarrass my husband. Just like when he overheard me asking the fish department guy this exact question:

“Do you have tentacles?” [read with cute voice and a light Italian accent]

I’m not sure if it was for my accent or the generic question (I’m pretty sure he thought I was asking if he had tentacles somewhere in his body), but the guy looked at me strangely and it took him awhile to understand I wanted squid “legs” (or arms??). My husband overheard the whole thing and barely kept his composure as he approached me.

Okay. End of my funny grocery shopping stories. The tentacles ended up with a bunch of squid rings in a delicious pasta with calamari –a fresh, simple and flavorful dish. Eating fresh seafood always puts me in a good mood. Eating squid tentacles, in particular, will always put a smile on my face.

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Spaghetti with Calamari-2
Spaghetti with Calamari | veryEATalian
Spaghetti with Calamari | veryEATalian

SPAGHETTI WITH CALAMARI
Spaghetti con calamari

Servings: 2 | Prep time: 10 min | Cook time: 15 min

INGREDIENTS
190 g (6.7 oz) spaghetti
a drizzle of extra-virgin olive oil
2 cloves of garlic
1 cup of strained tomatoes (no salt added, like Pomì)
1/2 lb clean squid tentacles + tubes, sliced in rings
coarse salt
freshly ground black pepper
a handful of parsley, chopped
red pepper flakes, to taste

INSTRUCTIONS
1. Bring a pot of salted water to a boil and add spaghetti.
2. In the meantime, heat extra-virgin olive oil in a medium-sized skillet over medium-high heat. Add garlic and let it sizzle briefly.
3. In the same skillet, add tomato sauce and cook for 6-7 minutes, until sauce becomes thicker. Add squid tentacles and rings and cook for 2-3 minutes, until opaque. Add salt & pepper to taste and then remove pan from heat.
4. When spaghetti are a little firmer than al dente, drain them. Place the skillet with the sauce back on the stove over medium-high heat, adding drained pasta in it.
5. Add chopped parsley, stir and cook for a couple more minutes. Sprinkle with red pepper flakes, to taste. Remove garlic cloves from pan and serve pasta immediately!

Buon appetito!
-Lisa

Filed Under: Fish & Seafood, Pasta & Gnocchi Tagged With: calamari, entree, garlic, parsley, pasta, seafood, spaghetti, squid, tentacles, tomato, tomato sauce

Tagliolini with Prosciutto di San Daniele

March 22, 2015 By very EATalian Leave a Comment

Tagliolini with Prosciutto di San Daniele | veryEATalian-14 One way to make my husband really, REALLY happy is to prepare this pasta dish for him. He adores prosciutto di San Daniele and I’m pretty sure my family’s love and massive consumption of this amazing cured meat rubbed off on him. Since I can remember, we’ve always kept a whole prosciutto in our basement fridge and, when needed, we simply pulled it out and sliced it up. The standard way  to receive guests has always been to serve a huge platter of freshly sliced prosciutto, with some bread sticks and a glass of Prosecco or Friulano wine. What’s called prosciutto here is actually called “prosciutto crudo” in Italy. It’s a genuine, high-quality and dry-cured meat, simply made of Italian pork and sea salt. Unlike many other cold cuts, you won’t find any other ingredients such as nitrates, water or sugar on the prosciutto label. This wonderful pasta recipe calls for Prosciutto di San Daniele. Although Parma ham is probably more available here in the States, I highly encourage you to go out of your way and find San Daniele instead. There’s also no other prosciutto that combines salty and sweet in the amazing way that San Daniele does. It just melts in your mouth. Make sure you ask for paper-thin, but not shredded slices! Maybe if you’re lucky, the person working the slicer will offer you a free sample as they get the thickness right. It happened to us at Whole Foods and I clumsily dropped half of the slice as my husband handed it to me. I nearly cried.
Tagliolini with Prosciutto di San Daniele | veryEATalian-4
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Tagliolini with Prosciutto di San Daniele | veryEATalian-16
Tagliolini with Prosciutto di San Daniele | veryEATalian-12
TAGLIOLINI WITH PROSCIUTTO SAN DANIELE
Servings: 2 generous portions | Prep time: 10 min | Cook time: 4-5 min

INGREDIENTS
200 g (7 oz) tagliolini (or taglierini) egg pasta
one 1/8 inch-thick slice (about 100 g–a little less than 1/4 lb) of Prosciutto di San Daniele, coarsely minced
2 paper-thin slices Prosciutto di San Daniele to lay on top
20 g (1 1/2 Tbsp) butter
100 ml (1 scant half cup) heavy cream poppy seeds (optional)
chives to garnish

INSTRUCTIONS
1. Bring a pot of salted water to a boil.
2. Heat butter in a pan, add minced prosciutto and let it saute for 1-2 minutes, until it changes color. Add heavy cream, stir and remove from heat.
3. Add tagliolini in boiling water and cook until al dente, for 3-4 minutes. [If the pasta is homemade, cooking time may vary based on how thin you rolled it; if the pasta is store-bought, follow the cooking instructions on the package. The best way is to always test-taste it before draining it.]
4. Drain the tagliolini and pour them in the pan with the sauce. Stir and let it saute for few more minutes, until sauce is partially absorbed.
5. Serve tagliolini on a plate and sprinkle some poppy seeds on top. Arrange a thin slice of prosciutto on top and garnish with chives.

Buon appetito!

-Lisa

Filed Under: Pasta & Gnocchi Tagged With: egg pasta, heavy cream, pasta, prosciutto, tagliolini

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WELCOME!

WELCOME!

I'm Lisa and this is where I like to share Italian recipes and stories about my Italian family. If you'd like to learn more about me, head over to my About page.

[F O L L O W • M E • O N • B L O G L O V I N' ]

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