some feedback

Hello Pietro,

 

It is refreshing to see that someone has put the time into documenting not only ‘’Preserving the Italian Way’’ but significantly contributing to Preserving the Italian Heritage that we all share as Italian- Australians.

To anyone that is educated and understands the Italian way – They would understand that your book is a huge credit to preserving the Italian Heritage and inviting to all others.

 

I sincerely found myself reading my thoughts when reading your book, and likewise “fear that another generation irreplaceable links with our culture will be lost”.

 

I can assure you that I too am a genuine traditionalist when it comes to the Italian Culture and our heritage and always strive to instill a sense of traditional custom with my close Italian-Australian friends and hopefully one day my children. 

 

My Name is A.C and am 27 years old – My father was born in Sinopoli, and Mother in San Giorgio La Molara - Provincia Di Benevento.  Unfortunately when I was young my parents split and I came to Adelaide from Sydney to live with my Nonni.  I strongly believe it was their love for me and love for the old country that they instilled a strong sense of Italian Culture – living with them for 5 years probably helped also. 

 

I too travelled to Italy and found that modern Italy was not entirely as perceived, however did certainly find it in the country side and also with my friends in Ischia – (another reason that I found a familiarity with you).  Sometimes I think we Italian-Australians are more Italian than the people living there and that we simply got stuck in a time warp for which by default I am eternally grateful and proud of.

 

I really enjoy cooking and also have my own garden growing the normal things, make the wine (assisted by my Nonno), pig, sauce, olives once a year, make hand made pastas, biscuts (savory/Sweet), and all other foods, have built a furno for my father inlaw – without instructions or prior experience – should have built it at home as I think I use it more than him!!   (I built it exactly how you detail it - except the outlet for the  chimney and door dimension of one and a half brick is different.  As you will see by my email I am in commercial construction, with speaking to family and some older friends I managed to build this furno pretty much how you had described it.  Love to send you a photo as it truly is a resemblance of your details (fig 12 that is) + the flue is a bricked chimney not a flue – but as your book says there are many variations and one will tell you that their way is the best J - only joking.

 

I am happy to share one of my recipes with you and will give you a list to choose from. most of my recipes come from my Nonni (Mothers Parents) from San Giorgio La Molara and or Ischia as I have an Zii from their also,  My recipes don’t necessarily reflect Preserving:

 

  1. Torrone – Amonds, Liquer, egg whites, sugar, honey, etc…
  2. Taralli – With Fennel Seeds and or chilli. – or without.
  3. Melanzane  Sott Olio
  4. Conserva Di Pomodori – Just Made 473 bottles on the weekend!!  And your right no self respsecting paesno would make less than 100 bottles J.
  5. Roasted Capsicums
  6. Meatballs.
  7. Rabbit
  8. Perugini – Biscotti (Sweet)
  9. Brasciola – Sangiorgese
  10. Ciccadelli / Fusili Hand Made Pasta – San Giorgese Fresh Pasta Recipees.
  11. Salsicce
  12. Capocollo
  13. Pancetta – You seem to have a lot of variances on this.
  14. Lasagne
  15. Pasta Aschiuta
  16. Scapece (Marinated Fish – Tommies, leather Jackets, gar, etc… Mint, garlic, Lemon Juice,
  17. Polenta. – and making the powder if required.

 

If you are searching for a particular recipe please advise as my list is not limited to these items.  These are just my favourites

 

 

 isnt this great !!!!!! PD

"I am overwhelmed ..."

Oh my goodness how can I preface an email with Hi or hello etc when I have been so overwhelmed by your book!  I just have to jump into the conversation.  I recieved your book in my mail box today.  Words don't even start to convey how brilliant it is.  My father had a magazine - the Diggers Seeds magazine - and I noticed your book, looked it up on the internet, followed a few links and read a little more, I thought I had fallen in love and bought it immediately. 
 
Your book arrived today and I realised that actually my web searches lead me to lust and on reading your recipes I am now in love.  This is how books should be written!  I can't wait to make for my husband your Explosive Mixture, I am sure he will be transported to another world.
 
I have been searching for capsicum sauce recently as my father and I have started making Salami.  Our Salami has never quite been what I want it to be, the taste I want is the one I ate 15 years ago around a table eating home made Calabrasi Salami at my friend's house, their Nocino I had forgotten about till I saw your Liquer section....  My enquiries, searches on this mythical sauce never amounted to anything.  I now can make the Salami I remember.  My father (thankfully) will now have an edible recipe for the Slippery Jacks he gathers near Bathurst.  Your bread section a complete and wonderful surprise as we are about to assemble our woodfire oven, what fun we will have.  I must stop there or I could go on all night.
 
On a serious note thank you.  I have many many recipe books I believe to be of very high standard.  Your's is the only one completely from the heart, and the only one that shares everything.  When you open your book and start reading you hear the laughter, the jibes the clinking of glasses and the moment of silence when one tastes an increadible dish and words ellude them.
 
Tomorrow I start cooking!
 

The latest recipies for edition 4.

I have recently got back from Italy and while I was ther I picked up smoe fantastic new recipies .

These will appear in edition 4 , but for all you  that have aready bought a book , these are the notes that are going to the editio for edition 4

 

Add after pg 97

 

 Olives by Tony Fedele.

  It is wonderful what twists life brings. After I published this book I received an email from a reader who turned out to be the son of a fellow prisoner of war of my father’s, when he was interned in Warburton Victoria. They both lived in a tent cutting wood for the local hospital.

 My dad used to suffer from severe migraines and the traditional remedy, before aspirin and other pain relief, was to cut a potato into slices and tie them around your forehead. It didn’t work at all, but I suppose you could use the potatoes again in a soup??

 Tony’s father, Pasquale Fidele, would play his guitar, badly, while dad had his migraines. I am surprised that Pasquale made it through the war and was not garrotted by dad.

 Anyway, Tony’s mother and father were separated for 10 years also by the war as were my mum and dad, my mum and his mum came from villages in Calabria that were separated by 10 km ,  arrived in Australia a month apart in 1948, and Tony and I were born 1 month apart in 1949!!

 

 Green Olives, Salt, Garlic, Chilli flakes, Oregano and EVOO.

Select larger green olives (Verdale, or Kalamata) . Soak them in fresh water for 3 days and then crush them with an empty stubby or beer bottle. I use these bottles because the bottom is concave and stops the olives firing off in all directions.  This is important because

1.       You want all the olives you can collect and

2.       You don’t want a mess all over the floor or the cat going ballistic, chasing flying olives.

 

You then remove all the pips (this is a great job for the partner). Place all the olives in a non corrosive container and sprinkle liberally with salt. Agitate to ensure that the olives are mixed well and then place a weight on top. I find that 4-6 bricks are ideal.

 Then leave for 14 days, agitating each day. Remove the olives , dry and either freeze, place in vacuum bags or place in jars with garlic, oregano and chilli flakes and cover with EVOO. If you freeze them, defrost before use and mix with EVOO, garlic oregano and chilli flakes.

Another recipe from Signora Anita is to leave the olives under the weight for up to 6 months and remove them when you want to use them, dry and mix with condiments. (I find these a little salty, but each region has its own variation)

 

 

 

 

 

Pg 181 ,, after “without a licence “ add

The alcohol these recipes can be obtained from Sydney Chef warehouse

 029211455. However note that the alcohol is 60% and so the volume of water added needs to be halved.

 

Pg 183.. Fragolino  Strawberry liquor.

1 kg of strawberries, 1 litre of 90proof alcohol 1 kg sugar and ½ litre of water.

 

 Place the strawberries in the alcohol in a tightly sealed container. Allow to stand 10days. Make a syrup of 1 kg of sugar in 500 ml of water. Bring to simmering and then allow to cool. Mix with the strawberries/ alcohol and allow to stand another 20 days. Strain and drink after a month.

 

 Cremoncello

As I have gone around collecting recipes, I often am told of something that sounds strange, but then turns out to be really quite pleasant.

 

 My cousin Teresina gave me this recipie

 

300 gm of thinly peeled lemon skins, 2lt skimmed milk, 800 gm sugar 1 vanilla pod and 1 lt of 90 proof alcohol

 Remove the skins from the lemons and add to the milk, sugar, vanilla pod and boil for 20 min a low simmer. Strain and mix with the alcohol and leave for 1 month before drinking.

 

Pg 122.

 

 This year we travelled back to my parents village to catch up with my cousins. What food, what weather what welcomeness... fantastic, anyway once we left Varapodio we travelled a short distance to Gioa Tauro.. a seaside port city. I were walking along the lungomare with Lynn when we saw about 20 people all running and converging on one spot on the beach. Of course being a Doctor I immediately thought that someone had had a cardiac arrest and so I sprinted forward, shouting,,”out of the way , I am a doctor.. let me through” To my surprise instead of some poor fellow lying prostrate on the sand convulsing in his last moments of life, I found a women selling the very first white bate for the season . la Neonata. Well after trying to explain my bazaar behaviour I began talking to the fisherwoman about the Rosamarina . or Whitebait Calabrian Caviar . And guess what .. She had the best recipe .. and here it is .

Calabrian Caviar from Goia Tauro.

 1.5 kg of fresh Neonata. 250 gm of salt, 100gm of vitalized dry hot chilli.

 Wash the neonata in salt or sea water. Mix with the salt and place in a container with w weight on top. Each day, for 7 days, mix the salt/fish mix. After 7 days. Rinse with vinegar and lay out to dry outside on a napkin. Sprinkle the chilli on top and mix thoroughly with your hands, loosening up all the fish. (Make sure you wear gloves or else when you go far a pipi later on you will have a lingering, warm sensation).

Mix with EVOO and place in jars. Cover in oil and leave for 1 month before eating on crusty, toasted bread with a crisp Pinot Griggio.

 

After pg 113

 

Licioccole Marinate .. Salted small pilchards.

 

For this recipe you need large white-bate, or very small pilchards (the same thing) Salt and Vinegar Chilli flakes and EVOO.

 

 Was the white-bate in salt water ( again traditionally sea water ). Remove the heads and entrails.

Make a solution of 6 parts white wine vinegar and 1 part water. And salt to taste ( as per pasta). Marinate in the fish for 48hrs then remove and allow to drain overnight on a towel .

Mix with finely chopped garlic , chilli to taste, dry oregano and some EVOO .

Put some EVOO in clean jars and the fill with the pilchard mix. Cover in oil and allow to stand for 1 month. When serving, server with fresh EVOO and finely chopped garlic

 

 Great to serve with a seafood antipasto.

 

 

 

After 124.

 

 Tonno Salato  Salt cured Tuna

Before fridges, it must have been very difficult to keep fish for a whole year . Can you imagine the husband coming home with a 50-60 kg tuna on his shoulders, and there being no cooling to store it .

So... they used salt it.

 This recipe produces a tasty but very salty tuna meat. It was eaten in very thin slices with bread and other food as an antipasto or in cooking because it is very salty.. the same as salted sardines.

 Cut the tuna in 4cm slices. And place in a non corrosive vat. Add 40- 60 gm ( 1- 1 ½  fists full) of salt between layers of fish and keep repeating the procedure until all the fish is under salt. Then place a wooden cap or a plate and weight down with approx 10k.

Leave and it will reduce in volume to approximately 50% of the original volume. Leave the fish in the vat until you are ready to eat it.

If you are going to eat slices, remove the tuna a wash with vinegar. This will reduce the salt content. Serve thinly with a trickle of EVOO.

 

After 170

 

 Nduia Calabrese.  ( no translation)  recipe #2  from the butcher in Varapodio

 

 You need 25% meat. ( the guanciale or pork cheeks , and pancetta,)  65 % fat ( preferably the nicer firm fat) 10% skins.

 Firstly boil the skins until they are soft, chop.

 To prepare the chilli, chop up dry chilli, remove the seeds and mix with a small amount of water. Simmer gently until the consistency of a paste.

 Mix all the ingredients and for every 5 kg of meat/ fat/ skins add 1 kg of chilli paste and 5x 28 gms of salt. Mine all finely, or even 2x and place in lambs bungs.  Dry for 4-6 weeks before it is ready to eat as a spread on crusty bread . Beware!! THIS IS HOT .  If you don’t want is so hot you can add less chilli but then ... its like having half sex .. not quite the real thing.

 

At end of Pg 173

Boiled pigs head is called many things, but at the end it is still boiled pigs head

 Here is a variation. This recipe was given to me by Marco, a Butcher in San Giovanni Valdarno . He also is the butcher that produces the Tarese

 

Capofreddo.

1 Pigs head, 2 kg of cleaned skins, 5 tongues, Salt (25 gm per Kg), pepper (2.5 kg per Kg), 2 head of garlic, the skins of 4 oranges and 3 lemons, very finely cut, Tuscan spices ( 2 gm per kg) and 1 bunch of parley.

The extra tongues produce a firmer consistency and is actually very lean .  In Italy one can buy the Tuscan salami spices already made up but the recipe is equal parts of Cinnamon, Cloves and Nutmeg.. They are very finely ground and used in a lot of Tuscan dishes. This mix can also be used if making a stracotto San Valdarnese.

 

 Boil the head, skins and tongues in water for 3 hrs, or until the meat falls off the bone. Place the meat in a bowl and add the finely chopped garlic, rinds parsley as well as the salt pepper and spice. Mix thoroughly and then place in a linen sack and allow to hang. The capofreddo will loose a gelatinous glug and as this happens the meat comes together. Place in the fridge and use after 1 day.

 

U Sudzu  / Gelatina .  Porks head in Aspic.

 This recipe comes from Catanzaro where they DO actually make the best sudzu and was supplied by Signora Giovanna.

 

1 pigs head, 4 pig’s feet, 1 kg of lean meat, coarsely cut, salt, vinegar, water

 

 Place the pig’s head, trotters and meat in a large pot and cover with water. Bring to boiling.

When the meat comes to the boil, it will form a thick frothy scum. Remove this and discharge.

After approximately 2 hrs, the meat will fall off the bones. Drain the fluid and put aside.

 Remove as many of the bone as you can off the meat and place the meat into jars.

To the fluid that you drain from the heads etc, add 1 part fresh white vinegar to 2 parts liquid and enough salt to taste( to the point of “slightly salty pasta”).

 Add this to the meat in the jars and cover. Make sure that you also allow a little of the clear liquid fat to settle on top of the meat in the jars.

At this stage, if you are going to eat the Sudzu  soon, just place in the fridge. However you can keep it for months by sealing the jars and sterilizing the contents. This is done by boiling the jars in water for 20 min. You can then store for as long as you need.

When I asked whether you add pepper or chilli, Signora Giovanna said  “ No. Because the young children may not like the pepper!!”  I can’t imagine the average 6 or 7 year old eating pigs head in aspic but who knows.

 

 

Pg 172 after Tuscan sausages.

 

 Salami Toscani da Mario di San Giovanni Valdarno , Mario’s Tuscan Sausages .

Meat from Prosciutto, shoulder and pancetta. Fine back fat  26gm salt per kg. 2gm of freshly ground black pepper and 3 gms of whole black pepper.

For Salamis you always use the best meat, from the shoulder and Prosciutto. Also add about 5% pancetta.  Mince the meat finely.

Mix approx 13% fine back fat cut into small cubes approx 1 cm square.  Mix the fat cubes with the meat as described previously, but you can see that he fat and the meat remain separate. Place the mix in the bungs and hand as described.

This produces a deep red Salami with cubes of fat, but is actually a lean salami.

After pancetta Tuscan style  pg 161

Tarese di Sangiovanni Valdarno. Belly of pork the San Giovanni style

 

As has happened so often in recent times, older traditional methods of food preparation that produced a wide range of aromatic, flavoursome and regionally typical products have given way to standardized poor quality bland soulless products that appear on our supermarket shelf. They need to be cheap to produce and appeal to the widest range of customers.

The Slow food movement has been passionate about identifying, documenting and promoting traditional quality primary products. These products are produced regionally with locally sourced products in a traditional method. I suppose this book is about trying to document and demystify those methods. On its journey the Slow food movement identifies certain products that are almost extinct and takes a special interest in preserving them. It does this through “presidia”. One such Presedium is the Tarese di San Giovanni, another is the Bottarga of Mullet Orbitello. (Pg124)

 

La Tarese Di Dan Giovanni Valdarno. Belly of pork from San Giovannii Valdarno ( Tuscany)

 

This is made traditionally from pigs that are in excess of 200 Kg and each Tarese or belly of pork weighs up to 20kg.  However the recipe can also be applied to smaller bellies and the flavour is still overwhelmingly, aromatically fantastic. 

 

Remove the belly of pork including the fillet as one piece. Leave the skin on. You will include some ribs that need to be boned out carefully.  Make a mixture of rosemary, sage, garlic, freshly ground black pepper and Tuscan spices ( see capofreddo).  Chop finely and rub into the cut meat.   Place on a board and cover totally with salt. Place the board on a slight incline to allow any brine formed to drain.  The time that you leave the meat under salt will depend on the size of the meat. If you pig is the standard 120Kg , then 5-6 days is enough . If you actually get a pig of 250kg  then you need to allow 10 days .

After this time , wash the salt off with wine . Regrind a mixture of garlic, salt, pepper and spices massage the surface. Then cover the whole of the cut surface with the spice / slat mix and hang for 2-6 months depending on the weight of the pancetta and whether you have included the fillet or not. .

 

 On pg 163 . before “Variations on the theme”

 

Prosciutto without the bone .

 

 A much more secure way, but maybe less traditional, of making prosciutto is to remove the bone ( and also the artery and vein attached to the bone) . This means that there is less of a chance of spoilage dur to the blood in the vein and also is an advantage because when you want to cut the prosciutto , there is no bone to cut through .

 Trim the meat to the exposed round knob on the end of the leg bone as above under prosciutto. Trim the skin slightly. Place the leg on the bench and you will notice that the bone is closer to one edge than the other. Place the leg so that the bone is further from you and then cut the skin just above the bone from the ankle to the end of the bone. Cut down and around the bone, making sure that you have removed the vein and artery, and then remove the bone and vessels together. You will now have a leg that is sliced open. Cover the meat surfaces and the end of the leg at the exposed ends with a mixture of rock salt and table salt.

Cover liberally. You can add spices to the salt mix at this stage if you want;

 Variations are

  • Freshly ground black pepper ( Abbruzzi).
  • Freshly ground black pepper with some Chilli flakes ( Calabria)
  • Freshly ground black pepper mixed with fresh chopped garlic, Rosemary and sage. ( Tuscany)
  • 15gm White pepper, 12gm ground nutmeg, 17 gm ground allspice, 8gm ground cloves. Mix with salt  ( Tuscany)

 

Leave under salt for 7-8 days for a 10kg prosciutto on a slightly inclined bench to allow drainage. Have the leg draining down towards the narrow end. Because the leg has been opened it will salt quicker than a whole leg.  Hold the prosciutto up by the ankle and shake the excess salt off.

 Cover the exposed surfaces with the particular mix of spices that you are using eg. pepper/ chilli/ spices etc ..

 Hang to dry at approx 16 deg Celsius with a humidity of approx 70-80%. You can fold the cut meat back to recreate the shape of the leg without the bone , but if you do this you will need to place a clamp on the leg to ensure that the surfaces are tightly approximated to each other.

 Allow to hang for 8-12 months. You will notice that a white mould will form, mixed with the spices.  This is ok, just cut the surface off before slicing to serve.

 

 

After salami with fenel pg 172

 

 Finocciona di Marco from San Giovanni Valdarno

The fennel salami from San Giovanni Valdarno.

 

This is made from 2nd selection meat , ie the belly, the trimmings from the prosciutto , the neck etc that is a little more fatty than the meta for Salami. You need a total of 40% fat for this particular style of finocciona.

 So Meat , Fat , Salt 28gm per kg , 2.5 gm of Tuscan spices per Kg , pepper 2.5 ground and 3 gm whole per kg and Fennel, 10gm per kg . If you use flower of fennel then only add 2/3 the amount). Garlic ,1 knob per 10kg of paste.

Mince the meat and fat finely. Mix with the additives and place into ox bungs. . Allow to dry for 2 weeks or more. In Tuscany this can be eaten as a soft fresh meat rather than allow it to dry out like a typical sopprezza. This is also called a “sbicciolone” or ‘crumbly” because it crumbles as you cut it, but with fresh crusty bread it is absolutely sense blasting.

Damon August 10th 2008

This is an email I recieved .. how wonderfull.
 
PETE YOUR A LEGEND!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thank you so much Pete for your book we have lost alot of our culture out here in Oz unfortunately my family does die at a young age wich makes it impossible for our elders to pass on their knowledge, today we tried our salami for the first time only 3 1/2 weeks after hanging them and the results PERFECT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! mate your a legend and your willingness to share your knowledge benefits us all thank you very much if ever I can help you with anything in anyway please contact me
Best Regards
Damon and Theresa

It's Olive time!

Well, here we are and it's late April.

If your Olives are green still you can pickle them.

Green Olives

The best for olives under brine are the Manzanello, Verdale , Frantoio and the green Spanish Queen . The large Kalamata are great also .

The Manzanello , Verdale and Frantoio are great for pickling in Brine whole. The Kalamata have to be sliced 2-3 times to accelerate the pickling and the Spanish Queen are best for pickling in Caustic Soda .

The fotos are of our Frantoio and Verdale olives, I did them crushed (see "olive sciacciate") and in brine (see "olive in salamoia.")

I also made some kalamata (our first) as per the "Olives in garlic and chilli under oil" .

Imgp2652_13 

Note that I put a slice of lemon on top.

This does 2 things, it acidifies the brine to keep the olives hard and also it stops the olives floating to the top so that they don't go brown and soft if they come into contact with air. Also I put a 1/2 cm layer of oil on top.

Black Olives.

The best for this method are again the Manzanaello, Verdale and the larger Frantoio. The Spanish Queen are too watery for this process.

These are dead easy to make. Just wash the olives and cover in salt (see my Mothers recipe for black olives)

Then place a weight on them of approx 5-10 kg. Each day agitate for approx 6-7 days. They will produce a dark brine that is frothy. This is fine. All olives ferment as part of the pickling process and convert the sugars to Lactic acid.

After this drain and place on a table to dry for 1 day. Then cover with a splash of EVOO and place in vacuum bags. Some people freeze the olives, others cover them in oil (I find that this makes the lives too "heavy")

some recent events .

   Imgp2636_3Lynn picking grapes

We had a great year this year .. we have 5 varieties of grapes , Savignon Blanc, Pinot Grigio (not Gris), Temperanillo , Merlot and Shiraz.

This year the season was early and then came the cold snap so our Shiraz did not seem to be maturing . It stopped at 22 brix and ph 3.2

So we decided to make an Amarone style wine . This is made in Northern Italy with red grapes that have not reached their full maturation. The grapes are picked and then the flavours and sugar concentrated by drying the grapes by 20% ie incerasing the brix to about 29.

This will produce a very full bodied wine with an alchohol of 15-15.5%. (in theory)

we will see . We have never done this so we will see what comes of it

Piero dryng the grapes to produce our "amarone" style wine

Imgp2631

The grapes are placed on racks in our sun room to dry.

We left them there for 2 weeks and the brix climbed to 29.

Crushing grapes .

Imgp2640

My in house wine make checking the quality of the grapes

Pressing the grapes                                       

Imgp2645_3

This old press belonged to my late farther.

He was so proud of his wine , even though by the end of the season it was a tossup whether you drank it (mixed with coke) or put it on the salad!!!

The wonder juice . Look at that depth of colour!! You can almost taste it

Imgp2647

The intence colour come from fermenting on the skins for 3 weeks .

Lynn Collecting our pumkins from the garden .

Imgp2643

Lynn is a trained OT.. You can tell that she lifts properly with her knees . Well done!!

We have now planted Rape, Broad Beans , Broccoli and Peas.

A full week in march

What a week end..

We have picked the Merlot and the Shiraz. It was a very early vintgae but should be fantastic ..

In fact I hope to make a type of "amarone style" of wine. Shiraz is not so fantastic on the peninsular because the season is not long enough. In  the north of Italy where they have a similar problem , they pick the grapes at approx. 23 brix and then dry the grapes till they reach approx 27 brix . This does two things , firstly it concentrated the fruit and tanins and well and increase the alcohol to approx 15.5 %.  I will keep in all informed how it comes out .

As well as that I tilled the veggie garden in preparation for winter lupins.

Then my supplier of goats milk rang to say that she had 16 lts of milk ! So Lynn and I made some goat's cheese and Ricotta. The ricotta  was fantastic for breakfast on toast and Mosto cotto.

Fianlly we  crushed some green olives that we were given and made the first batch of Olive Sciacciate. 

So that was my w/e .. What have you been up to ?

Just a little news on the book . It is now available in England Thru Teresa and  there is a pellet of 1000 heading for the UK as I speak ..And I am having the book translated into Italian . So if any of you readers are in the UK and want a copy , email teresa@preservingtheitalianway.com and order a copy thorugh her. 

Chat soon

Pietro

All very exciting . 

its time!!!!

Well hello to everyone ( ? all 3 ) out there in the land of melenzane, tomatoes zucchini and chillis

I have had a little rest but now it is time again for the salsa . We have begun making 80 jars from our garden . Fantastic!! also we have made our first batches of zucchini under oil. They are really wonderfull made from zuccini straight from the garden , crunchy , sweet and oozing with EVOO

This weekend is "Explosive mixture  weekend " My frind Mimmo is joining us at the farm and we will fire up the oven and roast some red peppers and make a big batch of the mixture for bruscetti.

The other night we went to the Woodstock Pizza in carlton .. great home hade cooking and signora Anita gave me a further variation on making the green olives .   I was so excited I rang my friend Ciccio in Italy and told him the recipie. "Thats exactly how my mother made them"!!!  I couldn't believe it , we have been exchanging recipies for almost 20 yrs and he never came up with this recipie ... He had forgotten it!!

This is it

Olive sciacciate della signora Anita

pick the olives green and firm

Place in a container with fresh water for 3 days.  Then crush every olive with a small stubby bottle.. Because of the hollow under the botthe , they will not fly off like scud missiles and send you cat wild. Remove all the stones ( this is  job for the misissa)

Place them in a non corrosive container. Cover with salt and mix well. place a plate on top and then a weight.(4-6 bricks is ideal)

leave for 3 months. After this they can be used, by washing briefly with fresh water and then mixing in some garlic, dry Oregano, maybe some chilli flakes and EVOO.

They are then ready to freeze, place in a jar under EVOO or place in the vacuum bags and seal .

If you leave them under the salt they will last a year and you just add the oil etc as you need them ..

AND THEY ARE FANTASTIC.

I promice to add extra recipies more frequently

By the way , I have now sold 6000 copies of the book !!!!!  Thank you

A meal made in heaven

This week end was one of those majic times when the days were sunny , the olive trees are in full bloom , the fruit on the trees is ripening and Lynn and I had just planted our last 30 tomatoe plants ( we now have 90 planted) .

The basil and Fasolu "faggioli) that I had planted are growing and we were actually a little tired . Sooo..

We decided to just eat what we had in the fridge and pantry. So we made a salad with home made tuna,  home made mozzarella and our olive oil,  a fresh garlic and oil dip, a plate of home made pasta with the mushrooms that I had bottled from our propery and freshly cut pancetta with a touch of marjorin from the herb garden .

A bottle of this year's Pinot Grigio.. and finally.... Fresh ricotta (that Lynn and I made) and honey that the neighbour had given us . All this while watching the most beautiful sunset over our little private valley.. Perfect.

Time to vacuum pack the small sausages

Oh and the other thing is that by now the smaller sausages that you made 4 weeks ago should be quite firm and dry. Cut one open . It should be firm , the meat bound together and the colour even . If they are , and you have any left after "tasting".. cover them with wax, put them under oil or place them in a Vacuum bag .

If when you cut them open they have a hard outer crust and are hollow inside... DISASTER.. They have dried too quickly and you did not keep the humidity up around the 70 - 80%  .. Better luck next year .. It may be that the salamis are the same.

Remember , in Italy at the time the salamis are made, the weather is cold, wet and constant , and the cellars often have dirt floors and humidity climbing up the walls.  So when we try and make traditional preserves here , we need to imitate the same conditions.

The larger salamis should be getting firm , but they will not be ready for anouther month or two. 

Bocca al Lupo

Pietro's Blog

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