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Recipes

Torte di Mele (Apple Cake)

January 28, 2015 by Michelle Michelotti-Martinez

Apple tart and sage

apple tart 2

Here we go again, posting more dessert recipes when it is supposed to be “resolution month”! Don’t we ALL say “no more sweets EVER after Christmas, EVER?” Relate? I know, guilty as charged!

I do break code with this recipe because of the simplicity, both in preparation and flavor (and because I honestly can’t resist some sweets in January). I make this torta anytime of the year and feel good about indulging, not heavy on sugar or flour and the texture of the fruit is magnificent.

I know I am prejudice but Italians really are brilliant and I LOVE their choices of desserts, enhancement at the end of a meal NOT complete gluttony. ONE of the many many reasons I am so very proud of my heritage….so tough to be so perfect…LOL

I came up with this yummy dessert after an Italian friend of mine told me about a torte di mele that her mother made back home in Milan. It sounded SO amazing and I knew I could figure a way re-create something close…at least I hoped since I hadn’t actually tasted or seen her version. What did I have to lose? Certainly, my January resolution…..

Whether it was luck or not I’ll never know but what came out of the oven was something close to sugar cookie crust topped with soft, sweet apples…..I then finished it with raw sugar and a little cinnamon. I might have been able to pass it off as breakfast of champions but that might be pushing it. Nonetheless, it was spectacular…..really spectacular.

So, it you didn’t make any resolutions or simply don’t care, make this and then eat it warm with a little vanilla gelato or mascarpone whip cream…you will thank me, I promise.

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Torte di Mele
 
Print
Prep time
20 mins
Cook time
35 mins
Total time
55 mins
 
Author: Michelle Michelotti-Martinez
Recipe type: Dessert
Cuisine: Italian
Serves: 8
Ingredients
  • 3 Golden Delicious Apples (or pears if you want), peeled and sliced thin
  • 1 lemon, juice only
  • 1 cup of flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1 egg
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 1 stick of butter, melted
Instructions
  1. Peel and slice apples, put in a bowl and top with lemon juice. Stir and set aside.
  2. In a kitchen aide mixer, mix together flour, baking powder, egg, and melted butter. If it looks too thick, add some milk to thin out. It should resemble a "liquid" cookie dough but spreadable.
  3. Butter a pie or tart dish. Pour in the batter and smooth all over and up the sides. Arrange apples or pears in a spiral shape and keep layering til finished.
  4. Bake at 350 for 40 minutes or until crust is golden, apples won't change color much.
  5. Remove and sprinkle raw sugar and cinnamon over the top.
  6. Serve with vanilla gelato or mascarpone whip cream!
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Filed Under: Delectable Desserts Tagged With: apples, cake, egg, flour, lemon, sugar

Fresh Ricotta and Caramelized Marsala Shallot Angolotti with Shrimp Butter Sauce

January 14, 2015 by Michelle Michelotti-Martinez

Shrimp3

I will always go back to pasta whenever I can….. just simply for my personal comfort food bliss. My fixation with ravioli borders obsessive because of the ENDLESS possibilities for the fillings (well and the dough for that matter). I love to work from the inside out when it comes to creating these little masterpieces, it’s almost like building a little sculpture, or at least in my mind…..

Growing up, my family made traditional ravioli that were filled with ricotta and parmigiano cheese and topped with a beef ragu. We didn’t have much variation to choose from and while I still LOVE these, I really dig the endless creations today.

My infatuation with ravioli really began when I owned my fresh pasta manufacturing company. Customers were requesting fresh ravioli so I actually purchased a ravioli machine. My fears and hesitations toward making them were conquered by the purchase of this machine, no doubt. To say the least, the learning curve itself was frustrating but when I made delicious fillings from what the farmers had for the week, it was ALL worth it. It was here where the creative juices birthed and put me out of the box regarding possibilities, it is where the fun began. Then each week I headed to the market and sold them to our awesome customers who reported amazing dishes they prepared, this was nothing short of addicting.

So when thinking which ravioli to post, I remembered my journey and decided that I would marry my heritage with a twist on innovation for the filling and then top with a decadent shrimp sauce. I also decided to try my hand at angolotti because if you don’t want to invest in a ravioli stamp or cutter to form the pasta, these can be finished with a knife and a fork and have a really pretty half moon shape, plus I really like the name….I have a tendency to pick wine this same way, let me see the label, is it pretty? Perfect, I’ll take it! How many of you can relate?

Anyway, if you haven’t made ravioli before or are a seasoned pro, these are simply delish and while its winter outside and a little more time on our hands, give these a try…….

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Shrimp Plate

Fresh Ricotta and Caramelized Marsala Shallot Angolotti with Shrimp Butter Sauce
 
Print
Prep time
1 hour
Cook time
15 mins
Total time
1 hour 15 mins
 
Author: Michelle Michelotti-Martinez adapted from Lucinda Scala
Recipe type: Main
Cuisine: Italian
Serves: 6 servings
Ingredients
  • Filling:
  • 2 T butter
  • 3-4 shallots, thinly sliced
  • ¼ cup ricotta, preferably homemade, recipe below
  • Sauce:
  • 2 sticks of butter
  • 1½ lbs shrimp, shelled and devined
  • Olive oil
  • Salt and pepper
  • 1 recipe basic pasta, rolled to second to the thinnest setting on machine, recipe bellows
  • 1 bunch Italian parsley, finely chopped to yield ¼ cup
  • ¼ cup grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
  • Fresh Ricotta:
  • 6 cups organic whole milk
  • 2 cups organic heavy cream
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 3 T organic white wine vinegar
  • Fresh Egg Pasta:
  • 4 cups all purpose flour or caputo semolina flour (found on amazon)
  • 4 -5 large eggs
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • water as needed
Instructions
  1. To Make Fresh Pasta:
  2. Make a mound of the flour in the center of a large wooden cutting board or in a bowl, whichever is more comfortable to you. Make a well in the middle of the flour and add the eggs and salt. Using a fork, beat together the eggs and begin to incorporate the flour starting with the inner rim of the well. As you expand the well, keep pushing the flour up to retain the well shape. Do not worry that this initial phase looks messy. The dough will come together when ½ of the flour is incorporated. If using a bowl, turn out onto a wooden cutting board now and start kneading the dough with both hands, using the palms of your hands primarily. Once you have a dough ball, remove its rom the board and scrape up any left over crusty bits. Lightly flour the board and continue kneading for 3 more minutes. If dry, add 1 T of water at a time and incorporate. The dough should be elastic and a little sticky. Continue to knead for another 3 minutes, remembering to dust your board when necessary. Wrap the dough in plastic and allow to rest for 30 minutes at room temperature. Note: do not skip the kneading or resting portion of this recipe, they are essential for a light pasta.
  3. To Make Filling:
  4. In a saucepan on stove over medium heat, put in the milk, cream, salt, and vinegar. Bring to a medium heat and boil where it starts to separate. Put in a mesh colander over a bowl until liquid is drained.
  5. On stove top, heat medium sauté pan and add 2 T butter and melt. Add shallots and cook down. Add ⅛ cup of marsala wine and cook until caramelized.
  6. Take ricotta and put in a bowl and fold in caramelized shallots. Mixture shouldn't need salt and pepper but season to taste. If it is a little "thin" fold in some freshly grated parmigiano cheese as you don't want a "runny filling".
  7. To Make Angolotti:
  8. Cut dough into 8 sections and cover unused portion with damp cloth to avoid drying out. With a hand pasta machine or kitchen aide attachment set at widest setting, take a piece of pasta and press flat and pass through rollers, dust with flour and repeat on same setting, fold in half and repeat again, change setting to next smallest and run pasta through twice. Dust pasta if needed and repeat process on all until pass through second to last setting. Repeat this for all of the pasta and put the strips on a floured work surface.
  9. To form agnolotti, take a strip of pasta and place 1 tablespoon of filling 1 inch from the edge and 2-3 inches apart down the pasta strip. Brush pasta dough edges and in-between filling lightly with water. Take the pasta and fold op of over filling and pinch closed. Press dough flat between lumps of filling. Using a pastry/pasta cutter, preferably fluted, cut half moons using folded part as flat side of moon. If your cutter is smooth or you are using a knife, go back and press lightly with a fork to make indents. Continue until pasta and filling are finished and put on floured trays.
  10. To Make Shrimp Sauce:
  11. Preheat oven to 400. Rinse shrimp and add to bowl. Put in some olive oil and salt and pepper and toss together. About 5 minutes before boiling ravioli, spread shrimp on a cookie sheet and put in oven for 10-11 minutes.
  12. On stove top in a medium sauce pan, add 2 sticks of butter (can add more if needed and depending on serving amount), melt on medium-low until starts to become a brown butter. Don't do this step too soon or the butter will continue to brown and get burnt. If you do ahead, pour into a bowl and then reheat when ready.
  13. When shrimp are done, add to butter and cover to keep warm while angolotti are cooking.
  14. To Cook Angolotti:
  15. In a wide dutch oven pot, fill about ¾ full with water and bring to a boil. Add salt (salty as the sea) and carefully put in angolotti. Becareful NOT to overcrowd so do in batches if necessary. Cook about 5 - 7 minutes or until tender and remove with a slotted spoon onto a tray or into pasta bowls. If using pasta bowls, heat them slightly in microwave so that pasta isn't going into cool bowl. Repeat until done. Spoon over shrimp sauce and top with fresh parmigiano and fresh parsley. Serve immediately.
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Shrimp3 

Filed Under: Fish and Seafood, Pasta, Pizza, and Polenta Tagged With: angolotti, Butter, caramelized, fresh, marsala, Parmigiano, parsley, pasta, ricotta, Shallots, shrimp

English Plum Pudding with Southern Comfort Bourbon Sauce

January 8, 2015 by Michelle Michelotti-Martinez

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Who knows traditional plum pudding? Unless you have some connection to England either in heritage or destination, it is quite possible this Christmas treat may have passed you up. While it is dense and oooey gooey (and somewhat resembles a fruit cake), I PROMISE if you give it a try with some magical southern comfort bourbon sauce it just might make it into your recipe collection!

For me, this was tradition and as a little girl I wouldn’t confess to liking it but if my mom would have ventured to NOT make it, Christmas wouldn’t have been quite the same. It didn’t come from her heritage but my Dad’s. He grew up on plum pudding and to this day, I really make it not only to keep tradition passed on but also to see the smile on his face and hear the stories of by gone days. After all, this is what it is all about and I really do love it.

When I was young, this dessert was a family affair as it took a couple of days to prepare between macerating the dried fruit and then combining all the ingredients to “meld” together for a day before the “steaming” of the final product. Where we created the family tradition, this is true in England as well, is when my mom combined everything together, we would all take a turn at stirring it together and making a Christmas wish. It was so special and for many years I was sure this “locked in” the assurance that I would receive EVERY present on my list!

So next year or maybe just a snowy winters day, venture out and make this dessert and start a tradition. It’s not hard, just needs some time to rest, a good example for all of us to follow.  Decorate it with the greens of your choice, topping it with the magic of every season.

English Plum Pudding with Southern Comfort Bourbon Sauce
 
Print
Prep time
48 hours
Cook time
5 hours 30 mins
Total time
53 hours 30 mins
 
I have to thank my grandmother and mom for this recipe! Although mine has some "additions" the taste is all the same!
Author: Michelle-Michelotti Martinez adapted from my grandmother
Recipe type: Dessert
Cuisine: English
Serves: 20 servings
Ingredients
  • For Plum Pudding:
  • ½ Cup golden raisins
  • ½ Cup Dark raisins
  • ½ Cup Dried plums
  • ½ Cup Dried currants
  • ½ Cup Dried cherries
  • 2 oz Candied orange or candied lemon
  • 4 Tbsp brandy
  • 1½ Cups Ground suet
  • 1 Cup Sugar
  • 1 Cup dark molasses
  • ½ tsp Salt
  • 1 Cup Flour
  • 2 tsp Baking powder
  • 1 Cup Breadcrumbs
  • ½ tsp Ground cloves
  • ½ tsp Nutmeg
  • ½ tsp Ground cinnamon
  • ½ tsp Allspice
  • 1 tsp Vanilla
  • 1 Raw apple, diced
  • 1 Cup sliced almonds
  • orange, zested
  • lemon, zested
  • 2 eggs (lightly beaten)
  • 1 Cup Milk
  • For Bourbon Sauce:
  • 1 Stick butter
  • 1 Cup Sugar
  • ⅓ cup southern comfort
  • 4 Tbsp Heavy cream
Instructions
  1. Two days before steaming pudding: Take all dried fruit (raisins, plums, currants, cherries, and candied orange or lemon) and put in a bowl. Pour brandy over and mix. Cover with Saran Wrap and let macerate
  2. Day before steaming pudding: Sift four and baking powder In a large mixing bowl, add suet, sifted flour, breadcrumbs, spices, salt, and sugar. Mix thoroughly.
  3. Then add macerated dried fruit, nuts, apple, and grated orange and lemon zest. Mix well.
  4. Lastly, add molasses, eggs, and milk and mix well. Cover with Saran Wrap and put in fridge
  5. Day of steaming Take a tin pudding basin and lightly grease. Pour in mixture and spread evenly, it will be very thick.
  6. On the stove, get a stock pot which holds the tin and fill with water and put in tin. Water should come up the sides but not as high as the lid, about ¾ of the way.
  7. Get water boiling and turn down to light boil and cover with lid. Steam for 5½ hours or until done. Refill water to keep it at ¾ full.
  8. Remove from heat and let rest for 15 minutes
  9. Get a serving plate and take off lid from tin and invert onto plate. Pudding should remove easily
  10. Southern comfort bourbon sauce: In saucepan over medium heat, add sugar and butter until melted and combined. Stir in whip cream and stir. Add southern comfort and stir, cook for a few minutes to cook off alcohol. Add more whip cream, if needed.
  11. Decorate with fresh holly. Slice and serve with southern comfort bourbon sauce.
3.2.2885

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Filed Under: Delectable Desserts Tagged With: Allspice, almonds, apple, baking powder, bourbon sauce, brandy, Breadcrumbs, Butter, candied lemon, Candied orange, christmas, dark molasses, Dried cherries, Dried currants, Dried plums, Eggs, english, flour, Ground cinnamon, Ground cloves, Ground suet, Heavy cream, lemon, milk, Nutmeg, orange, plum, pudding, raisins, salt, southern comfort, sugar, traditional, Vanilla

Sweet Potato Cavatelli with Sausage, Pancetta, Fried Sage, and Sautéed Wild Mushrooms

January 7, 2015 by Michelle Michelotti-Martinez

IMG_5244Making anything from scratch dough simply makes me happy….period. I ADORE getting my hands in the mixture and working it from start to finish, such a satisfaction when serving the dish. I think the only thing that could make me happier would be to grow my own wheat and mill it into flour and raise my own chickens for the eggs. Second best is what I have, a wheat grower who I know, love, and trust and local chickens from a rockin farm. I’m thrilled with both….

It’s winter and time for those extra cozy, comforts of home kinda foods. For me, pasta is ALWAYS at the top of my go to list. I don’t care if it is stuffed pasta, gnocchi, long pasta, short pasta, lasagna or anything in between, these are all my comfort fare and I love to make them as much as eat them, my passion is totally equal.

Obviously, this love affair comes from my Italian heritage but there is something deeper that drives me as well, something deep in my soul that just isn’t complete or content like when I make pasta. Some might say a past life, others just a passion, but to me, I think I was born an “impastatrice”, or a pasta maker.

Some people are born actors or actresses, singers or songwriters and me, I was born a pasta maker.

This recipe was inspired by my love for ricotta cavatelli. Cavatelli are similar to gnocchi but a bit smaller in size. I adore sweet potato gnocchi and so as I thought of a recipe encompassing both sweet potato and ricotta topped with a sauce consisting of sausage, sage, pancetta, and wild mushrooms. My beloved cavatelli came to mind and from here birthed my version of sweet potato cavatelli with sausage, pancetta, fried sage, and sautéed wild mushrooms. Now that’s comfort food on steroids!

To make cavatelli, you don’t need a cavatelli maker, in fact they can be moody if the dough isn’t just perfect in both texture and size so, I whip out my gnocchi board and crank out some handmade cavatelli in half the time. If you want, you can go one step easier and forget the gnocchi board, just roll out some dough into a ½ inch thick rope, indent a line down the middle and cut in 1 inch segments, this is a perfect alteration.

Honestly, you don’t need a cold winters day to treat yourself to cavatelli….just some great Italian music, a delicious Italian wine, and friends to share it with and this will do the trick on any day.

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Sweet Potato Cavatelli with Sausage, Pancetta, Fried Sage, and Sautéed Wild Mushrooms
 
Print
Prep time
3 hours
Cook time
20 mins
Total time
3 hours 20 mins
 
This recipe was inspired by my love for ricotta cavatelli. Cavatelli are similar to gnocchi but a bit smaller in size. This recipe birthed from my love of sweet potatoes and ricotta cheese! Feel free to change up the sauce to fit your culinary desires!
Author: Michelle Michelotti-Martinez
Recipe type: Main
Cuisine: Italian
Serves: 10 servings
Ingredients
  • For Cavatelli:
  • 2-3 sweet potatoes - 1.5 cups puree
  • 4.5 cups flour
  • 1 egg
  • ½ lb fresh ricotta, preferably homemade
  • 1 Tsp salt
  • For Sauce:
  • 2 lbs of pork sausage
  • 6 ounces of pancetta, diced
  • 8 ounces of wild mushrooms, shitake, baby bella, porcini, or whatever you enjoy
  • 15 sage leaves
  • truffle oil for frying
  • 2 T olive oil
  • 2 T butter
  • chicken broth
  • salt and pepper
  • parmigiano-reggiano for serving
  • For Ricotta:
  • 3 cups organic whole milk
  • 1 cup organic heavy cream
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 1½ T organic white wine vinegar
Instructions
  1. For the Cavatelli:
  2. Preheat oven to 350. Pearce sweet potatoes all over and place on a baking sheet. Cook for 30-40 min or until soft. Pull out of oven and peel and pass through a food mill or ricer into a bowl. Cool completely.
  3. Combine cooled sweet potatoes, ricotta, egg, and salt
  4. Place flour on kneading board. Make a well and add the above ingredients. Mix to combine
  5. Keep kneading until the dough comes together and has a smooth consistency. If sticky, add some flour. Don't over knead dough or it will become too tough.
  6. Cut off a small chunck and roll it into a rope about ½″ thick.
  7. Roll rope in some flour before cutting in 1 inch pieces. With a gnocchi board, start at the top and press each piece to make and indentation and then roll down the board. (If you want, you can go one step easier and forget the gnocchi board, just roll out some dough into a ½ inch thick rope, indent a line down the middle and cut in 1 inch segments).
  8. Toss with flour and put on cookie sheets. Apply more flour if they are a bit "sticky". Let rest and dry about 2 hours.
  9. For Ricotta:
  10. In a saucepan over medium heat, add all ingredients and let come to a light boil. Cook for 15 minutes as the liquid and solid separate. Remove from heat and pour into a fine mesh strainer over a bowl and let drain until all liquid is gone.
  11. For Sage Leaves:
  12. In a small sauté pan over medium-high heat, add truffle oil until bottom is covered and heat. Drop in 5-6 sage leaves and fry until stiff. Remove and place on plate lined with a paper bowl. Cook remaining leaves.
  13. For sauce:
  14. In a saucepan over medium heat, add sausage. Break up sausage while cooking and salt and pepper. Once done, remove with slotted spoon to a plate lined with paper towel.
  15. Add butter and oil to pan and let melt. Add pancetta and mushrooms and cook until pancetta is done and mushrooms are soft. Add chicken broth if necessary for more liquid. Add back the sausage and stir to combine. Season if necessary. Add some chicken broth to create more of a sauce consistency. Reduce heat and cover.
  16. To Cook Cavatelli:
  17. In a large stockpot over medium heat, boil water and add salt. Make water as "salty as the sea", this flavors the pasta.
  18. Drop them in the water, careful not to overcrowd (cook in 2 batches, if needed). Cook for 7-8 minutes or until al dente.
  19. Scoop cavatelli out with a mesh spoon into serving bowl and top with sauce. Finish with parmigiano-reggiano cheese and serve immediately.
  20. Note: You can also refrigerate or freeze them. To cook them frozen, add about 5 minutes to your cooking time.
3.2.2885

 

Filed Under: Pasta, Pizza, and Polenta Tagged With: Butter, cavatelli, flour, oil, pancetta, Parmigiano-Reggiano, pasta, ricotta, Sage, Sausage, sweet potato, Truffle Oil, Wild Mushrooms

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