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Peach & Blackberry Pie

Peach & Blackberry Pie

I’m still waiting for some cooler September temperatures to arrive to Rome, but in the meantime I may as well enjoy the summer fruits that are still available at my local market. The peaches yesterday were stunning and I couldn’t help myself, so I bought 

Classic Chocolate Chip Cookies

Classic Chocolate Chip Cookies

Nothing screams comfort food more than a chewy, chunky chocolate chip cookie, obviously enjoyed with an icy cold glass of milk. I have made two versions, one with dark chocolate and walnuts, and the other with white chocolate and Brazil nuts.  I had planned on making 

Spaghetti alle Vongole

Spaghetti alle Vongole

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I love pasta, and one of my favourite pasta dishes that I find hard to refuse if it’s on the menu is Spaghetti alle Vongole, which is a traditional dish from Napoli!  I will often judge a restaurant on the basis of how good their spaghetti alle vongole is.   I usually only make it though when we are at the beach every summer and our friendly fish monger from Terracina hand selects each vongole for me.  Yes, he really does that for me!  I was just thinking though that as this dish is so quick and easy to make, I really should make it more often throughout the year although I suppose I associate it with summer.  The addition of tomato is a personal choice which many purists say shouldn’t be included.  I used only 5 little cherry tomatoes chopped very finely, but if you have some homemade pasta sauce in the house, I suggest you use just one tablespoon of that instead.

Spaghetti alle Vongole (quantity for 2 portions)

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  • 500g vongole (clams)
  • olive oil
  • 1 clove garlic (chopped finely)
  • 2 -3 tablespoons chopped parsley
  • 60ml (generous splash) white wine
  • 1 teaspoon chopped fresh red chilli
  • 1 tablespoon of homemade tomato pasta sauce (optional)
  • 250g spaghetti
  1. The most important thing about cooking clams is to ensure they have ‘purged’ themselves of any sand that may be inside their shell. When we buy our clams, they are sold in a bag of filtered seawater, and I usually leave them inside there until I’m ready to use them.  While I prefer to buy clams the day I intend to cook them, if you do buy them the day before, you can store them in the fridge.  Wrap them in a damp tea-towel, and put them in a bowl for the night.  Save the water they came in though and let them sit in it again one last time as you are preparing ingredients etc. for the recipe.  Throw away any clams that have a broken shell. Wash them under running water before you put them into the pan.
  2. For the spaghetti, bring a large saucepan of lightly salted water to the boil.
  3. Using a large, deep frying pan, add a splash of olive oil (about 3-4 tablespoons), garlic, and chilli pepper.  Cook gently on a medium low heat to flavour the Olive Oil, and avoid burning the garlic.
  4. Add the clams to the frying pan and cover.  Increase flame to high and cook until they open… about 5 minutes, depending on size of the clams. Remove from the heat immediately to avoid overcooking the delicate meat of the clams. Using tongs, remove clams from the frying pan, leaving juices behind.  (Discard any clams that haven’t opened).
  5. Add spaghetti to boiling water and set timer for half of required cooking time.
  6. Bring juices from clams to the boil, add the tablespoon of pasta sauce, half the amount of parsley and a generous splash of white wine.  Combine well.
  7. Add the pasta when the timer goes off, conserving about a cup of the pasta water.  The rest of the cooking time for the pasta will be completed in the frying pan with the juices.
  8. Cook on high to cook the pasta but also to reduce juices to a ‘creamy’ sauce that will lightly coat the spaghetti. (The ‘creaminess’ comes from the starch in the pasta). If it becomes dry, add a small amount of pasta water, a little at a time (like adding stock when you make risotto), until the spaghetti is cooked.
  9. Toss through clams and remaining freshly chopped parsley.
  10. Serve immediately with some thick slices of Italian bread, heated and toasty from the oven. Bread is essential to mop up any remaining juices on your plate, to ‘fare la scarpetta’ as they say in Italy.

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Schiacciata con l’uva

Schiacciata con l’uva

  If you have visited Florence or the Chianti area of Tuscany in Autumn, you may have seen ‘Schiacciata con l’uva’ in the local bakeries – and if you were clever, you would have bought some and eaten it without sharing. The word ‘schiacciata’ usually refers 

Panzanella

Panzanella

We are still at the beach and I’ve noticed that every day we have a lot of bread left over.  I hate throwing it away, and so I decided to make a very easy, ‘poor man’s dish’ that I discovered years ago when I started 

Jam Doughnuts

Jam Doughnuts

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When I think of Jam Doughnuts, I think of sitting around the kitchen table straight after school with my sister and brothers waiting for these to come out of the oven.  My mother didn’t make them, she would buy them from the local bakery and then heat them up for us.  Making these brought back those happy memories.  Inhaling the aromas with my eyes closed took me back to our kitchen in ‘The Crest’, Frankston.  I then tasted one, and when I opened my eyes I almost hoped to see my mother standing there…. well,  I can dream…

I hope you try to make these.  You can’t rush this recipe, the yeast requires time to do what it does best, but if you follow the recipe you shouldn’t have any trouble making them.  The only problem I had was while I was cooking them.  My oil became a little too hot, so a couple cooked too quickly on the outside, they didn’t puff up as they should, and they were a little raw inside. I lowered the heat, and waited a little before I continued to finish them. 

Once they had finished their obligatory photo shoot, these jam doughnuts ended up being devoured by the kids at the beach…. after I’d removed one for myself of course!

Jam Doughnuts

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  • 490g  plain flour
  • 55g caster sugar
  • 3 teaspoons dried yeast
  • Pinch of salt
  • 250ml milk
  • 100g butter, melted
  • 3 egg yolks
  • oil, to deep-fry
  • Raspberry or Strawberry jam
  • sugar (to dust)
  1. In a large bowl, add flour, sugar, yeast and salt and mix well.
  2. Melt butter, heat milk until warm  (make sure it isn’t too hot) and lightly beat egg yolks. Make a well in flour mixture and mix in milk, butter & egg yolks.
  3. Stir until combined.  Dough will be sticky.  Add some flour to your hands, and turn dough out onto a well-floured surface.  Knead until smooth.
  4. Place dough into a greased bowl, and cover for 1 1/2 hours, or until the dough has doubled in size.
  5. Knead dough again on a lightly floured surface for a couple of minutes and dough is again smooth. Roll out dough until 1cm thick, and rest for 2 minutes.

  6. Use a 7cm round cutter to cut out discs, (kneading left over dough, rolling out and repeating). You should achieve 12 – 16. Set aside for 30 minutes to prove on baking paper.

  7. Prepare oil for frying, a plate covered in paper towel and a bowl or plate with sugar.  Spoon jam of choice into a piping bag fitted with a small 5mm nozzle.
  8. Deep-fry each disc for 1-2 minutes each side or until golden and puffed. Place on the plate lined with paper towel, then quickly toss into the sugar. Using the piping bag,  push the nozzle into the side of the doughnuts and pipe in jam.

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Ricotta & Blueberry Pancakes

Ricotta & Blueberry Pancakes

Lazy summers at the beach include late morning decadent breakfasts to fuel growing children during a day filled with never-ending swims and adventures.  I just have to mention the word ‘pancakes’ and my children (especially Joseph) jump for joy and will nag until I actually 

Churros

Churros

If you’ve ever made choux pastry for profiteroles or eclairs, then you certainly won’t have any problem making Churros.  Popular in Spain, (they are often referred to as ‘Spanish doughnuts’) although they can also traditionally be found in Portugal, France, Peru, Venezuela & Colombia.   We have arrived 

Zucchini Tart

Zucchini Tart

 

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When I made the Tomato Tart recently, I made enough pastry for two tarts, so I lined my long rectangular tart tin with pastry,  wrapped it in plastic cling film and put it in the freezer.  I bought some beautiful ‘Zucchine Romane’ and decided to use the pastry to make another savoury tart. You could call this recipe a Quiche and I love that you can eat this hot, warm or cold directly from the fridge. It works as a meal, a light lunch accompanied with a leafy green salad,  or even a snack when children start nagging that they are hungry. (Exactly what happened this afternoon when Annabella came back from the beach saying she was  ‘starving’ ).

Zucchini Tart

(The recipe for the pastry is the same shortcrust pastry I used for the Tomato Tart).

  • 400g plain flour
  • 200g chilled unsalted butter, chopped into cubes
  • 2 eggs
  1. Whiz flour, butter and a pinch of salt in a processor until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs.
  2. Add eggs and 2 tablespoons iced water. Process until mix comes together in a ball. Divide in 2 portions, then enclose in plastic wrap and chill for 1 hour.
  3. Grease & flour a 26cm tart tin.  On a floured surface, roll out pastry until thin and place it into the tin, pressing it in lightly.  Allow it to overhang a little.  Prick all over with a fork.
  4.  Preheat oven to 200°C.  Line tart tin with baking paper, then fill with pastry weights or dried beans. Bake for 10 – 15 minutes. Remove weights and paper, then bake for 2-3 minutes until golden and dry.
  5. Prepare the filling while pastry is in oven.

Zucchini Tart Filling

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‘Zucchina Romanesca’
  • 4 large eggs
  • 125ml cream
  • 125ml milk
  • 50g fresh ricotta di pecora
  • 50g finely grated pecorino cheese
  • 1/2 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
  • 5 large basil leaves, torn into small pieces
  • salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 3 medium sized zucchini (Zucchina Romanesca*)
  • olive oil
  • 3 – 4  zucchini flowers
  1. Whisk together the eggs, cream, milk, ricotta, pecorino cheese, nutmeg & basil leaves. Season with salt and pepper.
  2. Wash zucchini, cut off  bottom ends,  remove flowers and put them aside.  Slice zucchini finely. Lightly pan fry in a small amount of olive oil (a splash) for 10 minutes. Allow to cool.
  3. Cut zucchini flower down one side of the petals, remove the stamen and open the flower, so the flower lies flat.
  4. Arrange zucchini slices along base of pre-prepared pastry tart case. Pour egg mixture carefully on top.  Arrange zucchini flowers on top and bake at 180°C for about 40min or until top is golden and middle of tart has set.

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* Zucchina Romanesca is a variety of zucchini from Lazio. It has a more compact pulp than a traditional zucchini which means it isn’t watery when cooked and you don’t need to remove the centre part. They are sweet with a decisive, characteristic flavour.  If you can buy them with their beautiful flowers attached, it is a true sign that they are indeed fresh.

 

 

Il Passetto di Borgo

Il Passetto di Borgo

If you visit Rome, and you walk around Castel St. Angelo and visit St. Peter’s Square via the area known as ‘borgo’, you might notice a long wall and apart from assuming it is thousands of years old, you may not realise what it is you are actually looking