Sunday, December 14, 2008

I LOVE COLD WEATHER!!!!

I started this post before my last one, so bear with the time lapses!

The last time I blogged on this particular blog it was August and hot and sticky and miserable. Well, guess what? No more! Yesterday it snowed! Seriously....October....snow! I'm not thrilled with SNOW, but I would much rather put on sweaters and jeans and hoodies and bundle up under a blanket than have to have a fan blowing on me just so I could breath.

So...now it's time for cold weather food and this weekend I made two of my favorites. Wedding soup and vegetable lasagna.

The wedding soup is something that Grandma Civ and my mother were famous for. Every Christmas Grandma made a big pot of wedding soup. I found out that when I tried to make it her way, it took days! DAYS! Since I'm a working-outside-the-home mom and I've just taken on more responsibility there (at my place of employment), I just don't have time to take days to make a pot of soup. I never did like taking that long. I'm all for convenience.
So I developed my own way of making wedding soup easier. But, first, let me tell you how Grandma made it, First she began with fresh escarole. These large leaves must be cleaned and it takes forever. The easiest way is to stick them in a huge pot of water and dip them over and over until they no longer feel gritty. Then you boil them....in a different pot of water. When they are sufficiently cooked, (tender) you drain them and squeeze them dry. Then you roll them into a ball and stick them into the freezer. (I'm already tired). One time my girlfriend and I decided to share this task between the two of us. It took three brown paper grocery bags of escarole to make an eight inch ball. That's how much it cooks down.

The soup: I make the soup pretty much the same as Grandma; although I was told you should use an old bird. I did this once, but trying to get the meat off of the bird was a pain because it was so old and tough. I'll give you this recipe later. The thing to remember is to make a large pot of soup.


The meatballs: those tiny little veal balls. No thanks. I buy the already premade frozen meatballs from the grocery store. I actually found them at Save-A-Lot this week!


Then there's the pasta debate. Should we or shouldn't we put pasta in it. I do. I like it. My Mom is scandalized by the my pasta in the soup. Grandma never put in the pasta.


Also my Mom liked these cheese and egg croutons that she also made homemade. I never liked them, so I don't make them. Once you put them in the soup, they soak up all of the broth and blow up and get bigger and bigger and.....food should NOT grow while you are eating it!


I remember one time I was talking to a friend who said she had a really easy way to make wedding soup. She mailed it to me. This was before e-mail was the way to go. Here's her easy way. Two cans Progresso Chickerina Soup, One can chicken broth, one pound frozen chopped spinach and a can of chicken. Put them together and Voi La! Wedding Soup!



My recipe isn't quite that easy, but it only took me an hour or so on a Saturday afternoon. It did not take DAYS!


Let's start with the broth or soup. I used a large 8-12 quart stock pot.

Broth
4 chicken breasts (bonesless skinless)
chicken boullion (to taste)
parsley (to taste)
2/3 cup chopped celery
onion flakes (to taste)
garlic (to taste) (chopped)
salt and black pepper (to taste)
1/3 cup chopped or shredded carrots

Place all ingredients in a large stock pot and bring to boil. When it comes to a boil, turn down the heat and let simmer. When chicken is cooked through, remove it from the pot and let it cool. When chicken is cooled, cut it into bite size pieces or just tear it apart with your fingers. Return to pot. One quick stir and then if you are not finishing soup that day, put in storage containers in your frig or freezer (it depends on how long you will be before finishing soup).


THE REST OF THE SOUP:

The rest of the soup is prepared after the broth is done. So if you are doing this in more than one day, you need to thaw and re-heat your broth until it is bubbling hot.
While it is bubbling add the following ingredients (this is for a large pot of soup 8-12 quart stock pot): Two "bricks" of frozen chopped spinach 1/2 bag of DiRusso's mini-meatballs (found in the frozen meat section of your grocery store)
After the soup comes back to a boil then if you like you can add: 1 cup of acini de pipi pasta (or pastine or pasta balls or orzo pasta) When the pasta is tender your soup is done!
I just finished a large pot to give out for Christmas gifts. I know it's not the same as Grandma's Civ, but lets face it, I just don't have the time or energy for it. Let me know if you try it and if you like it!

















Friday, December 5, 2008

It's Been Awhile.....so....umm....Merry Christmas?

The last time I posted anything, it was in the 90's. Today, it's snowing. And that's how long it's been since I've posted anything on this blog.

I have recently taken on more responsibility at work, which includes more hours. My time is limited, so I'm just not getting to my blogs like I use to OR like I would like to.

But, I have GOT to write about the holidays. After all, for me, they have always spoke of "FAMILY".

The baking, the cooking, the shopping, the decorations.....all of it brings back so many great memories for me.

Right now, my foyer looks like it puked Christmas. Ken brought down all of the decorations and deposited them in our foyer last weekend. The only thing I have up is our large nativity set. The large tree is still in two parts and apparently still decorated (Thanks, bunches, Olivia!)
I fed nearly 400 at our Community Wide Thanksgiving Dinner where I work and oversee the event. It went well, despite my inner panicking. So I was exhausted and didn't get anything else up. Oh well, life goes on!

I really want to post some holiday recipes. I really try to only eat these foods during the holidays, because I want them to remain special and not become boring. Thus far, this has worked for me.
I will begin with Thanksgiving.

When I was growing up our Thanksgiving table looked slightly different than most Americans. Although we had the usual turkey, dressing, mashed potatoes (bla, bla, bla), we also had the usual Sunday meal regulars: rigatoni, meatballs, tossed salad.....(yum!). I wonder why our family has weight issues?

The recipe I'm going to post is NOT an old family favorite, but it IS a family favorite. Actually, we've been making it for approiximately thirty years and it has been handed down to the next generation. It is now Olivia's job to make the cranberry salad.

Back in 1979, I was in a theater troupe that toured the U.S. for 1 year. We did a Thanksgiving tour that year to Virginia and New York (those are state I remember, we may be gone to P.A., also). We spent Thanksgiving day on an old plantation in Virginia. The house was slightly reminiscent of Tara (Gone With The Wind). I recall sitting on the front porch of the house, which had large white pillars and playing with caterpillars. It was perfect fall weather, very balmy. By the time we got to New York the end of the tour (four days later) it was snowing.

The dinner at the plantation was massive. There were about 15 of us in the group plus about 15 or more other people. Tables snaked through the downstairs of the house and we sat and ate "family" style.

The cranberry salad was the biggest hit. I brought the recipe home and my family loved it and it has been prepared every Thanksgiving since then.

Cranberry Salad
1 can whole cranberries 1 can crushed pineapple (drained) 1 bag (16 oz.) frozen strawberries with juice (thawed) walnuts (chopped) (as many as you like)
Mix all ingredients, folding the walnuts in at the end.
TA DA!

That's it. Is that easy or what?! We love this. I take it to my mother-in-law's every year. She requests it. So try it. You'll like it!
Coming soon, Christmas stories and recipes, including wedding soup.

Saturday, August 30, 2008

The Anthony Ciavarella Open....Beer Wenches.....Spiedis and Other Phenomenon

Last weekend was the weekend that our family looks forward to every summer. We only see each other Christmas, weddings and funerals. But the 3rd weekend in August, we all try to get together at my house for a picnic. It is so much fun. My cousins from Endicott come out and they spend the weekend visiting as much as possible and shopping even more. We eat at different restaurants. Lately Smoky Bones and Bellaria are the favorites. We keep trying to find some small "mom and pop" places, but Sunday is usually when we get out and those places are closed on Sundays.

Our family has a golf open every year on this weekend. It's called the Anthony Ciavarella Golf Open, named after my cousins Paul and Kim's son who passed away at the age of 6 in 2004 from leukemia.

The eight that came from Endicott this year were Marsha and daughter Leeann, (did I spell that right? It doesn't look like it.), Marsha's son Joey and his wife Becca, Paula and her daughter Amber, Luann and adopted sister and cousin Nadine. (She's not legally adopted...it's very illegal....it's actually a crime...that's how much we wanted her in our family).

I'm not sure when the "beer wench" tradition began. But one year, Luann and Leeann, went to the golf open dressed in German Wench costumes. They rode around on a golf cart serving beer, pop, and bottled water to the golfers. Of course, the next year the golfers were looking for the "beer wenches" and they have been labeled that since. Every year, they try to dress up as something more ridiculous than the year before, but "beer wenches" is definitely the best.

The rest (not including Joe, who is golfing) go shopping and then we all meet for lunch. For some reason I ALWAYS have something on Sunday morning, so I usually just do the lunch thing. This year after lunch, Paula and I went to my Mom and Dad's and "raped" their photo albums. Pictures will be posted in future blogs.

On Saturday evening we met at my house and invited the Ciavarella boys and their families and also Annette and Chris (who's in Florida). This year Annette didn't make it and Chris hasn't been able to, yet, but someday we'll keep inviting him until he's able to get up here.

The food is GREAT! This year the Endicott crew brought meat for spiedis, not knowing that I was going to do the same and we ended up with like 25 pounds of spiedis (or more). They brought Lamb (yum) and chicken (the Lamb deserves the capitalization) and I did chicken and beef. We had the roasted pepper and tomato salad, tossed salad, pasta salad, creamy cheesy potatoes (thanks to Gary and Patsy; Patsy was unable to make it), Aunt Pauline (who is in her early 80's) did fried zucchini, Annie (Tom's wife...Tom's band was playing, so he was not there) made this incredible dessert with cookies and whipped topping and pudding, there were chips and fresh salsa made from our garden and guacamole, Luann brought her olive spread. There was bread from Endicott and ciabatta bread from Hogan's bakery and of course, pepper cookies. My brother brought a couple different kinds of pie. Oh my gosh, we ate until we burst(ed) (is that a word? because it's a feeling!)

After we got done eating everyone went into my husbands garden and there was much raping and pillaging of produce. We were thrilled. I will try to get a picture of Ken's Amish tomatoes (sounds sexy in a very demented way). They are pretty magnificent and taste spectacular. (okay quit laughing and get your minds OUT of the gutter)

You could find most of the recipes in previous posts. But I will tell you, if you like olives (I love them), you will love Luann's olive spread. She told me quickly how to make it, so I will give you THAT recipe.


LUANN'S OLIVE SPREAD
Okay, here's how she told me. You can use canned black olives (she didn't say how many and I doubt that it matters...so let's just say....to taste) and green olives in a jar. Some olive oil (of course I would suggest extra virgin, because I like the taste) and garlic and put it into your food processor or blender and grind it up. There were no measurements, but I'm thinking if just put enough olive oil to make the mix spreadable.

This stuff is great on crackers and a good crusty bread. I took a sandwich to work with this spread, sandwich pepperoni, Swiss cheese and hot peppers on ciabatta bread and it was really great.

So enjoy the pictures. There's old and new. And try not to overeat...at least not all of the time.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

One more Zucchini Recipe and then came the Tomatoes

Well, our zucchini plants have stopped producing, but the tomatoes are now ripening ever so lovely.
My cousin Marsha e-mailed me with a couple of ideas today. One of the ideas was for stuffed zucchini. Hello? Read the blog?
But the other two were recipes I had not posted. The one is zucchini fritters, which are amazing, but I have been spoiled by a friend of mine, Tony (75 -or so- yr. old man that frequents my work place). Tony loves to show up at The Way Station (where I work) with either a cardboard box or a brown paper bag filled with prepared food. He comes prepared with plastic forks and spoons and Styrofoam plates and napkins. His potato salad is to die for and he makes alot of things that my grandmother would make when we were kids.
One time when we were discussing recipes, specifically wedding soup, he said his mother would put "scooch" or "skuche" in it. These are phonetic spellings, I haven't a clue what he was saying. Finally I caught on to egg barley pasta.
Anyway, Tony makes the best zucchini fritters or zucchini patties that I have ever tasted. He uses tons of garlic and no matter how hard I've tried to reproduce them, they never come out as good as his.
Marsha also sent me a recipe I remember Grandma Civ making. I didn't realize Mimi also made this. I'm going to call it: Zucchini and Eggs.


Zucchini & Eggs


Two medium small zucchini (cleaned and cut into small chunks...not diced, though)
Your favorite spaghetti sauce (about 1-2 cups)
4 eggs (beaten)
1/2 cup Parmesan cheese
olive oil
onions
garlic (of course)
any other Italian seasonings to your taste (including salt and pepper)


In a medium fry pan (fairly deep) fry your zucchini in the olive oil with onions and garlic and seasonings. While zucchini is still crisp, add spaghetti sauce (my grandmother just used chunked up fresh tomatoes from her garden). While zucchini and sauce cook, beat eggs and cheese together. When everything comes to a good bubble, add beaten eggs and cheese mixture. Scramble with zucchini and sauce. When eggs are cooked (you don't want them still wet, make sure they are firm), you're ready. Marsha said they would dip french bread or any other crusty bread into this. I gotta make this!


Okay we got tomatoes! They are beautiful this year and incredibly flavorful. My favorite are what my husband calls Amish Tomatoes. Although they are slow to ripen, they taste great. (Ken said they were too slow and I said, "Yep, still don't have electricity"). These tomatoes are not pretty. They are big and sort of flat with bunches of dimples and bumps, but boy are they good!

A few months ago I told you how to make L'aqua Salle and Roasted Peppers and Tomatoes and you could go back and get those recipes.

We have been living on tomatoes for the past couple of weeks.
Yesterday I went to our favorite Italian Store, Rulli Brothers. If you are Italian, the smell alone will bring back memories of your childhood. All your favorites! I wanted fresh mozzarella cheese.
I never knew there was a difference, but you only need to taste it. It's so much richer. The important thing to remember is it need eaten right away, because it goes bad pretty quickly.



Fresh Mozzarella and Tomatoes with Crostini


1/2 pound fresh mozzarella cheese chunked into 1/2 - 1 inch pieces.
Very ripe cherry tomatoes (sliced in half) or the same size chunks of full size tomatoes
fresh garlic to taste
salt, pepper, fresh basil, fresh parsley to taste.
A drizzle of extra virgin olive oil
a drizzle of balsamic vinegar
very thin slices of red onion (just enough to your taste)


Mix all of this together and set aside. Let the flavors blend at room temperature. (Not for hours, just about 15 minutes)


Crostini

1/2 - 1 loaf of crusty bread (french, ciabatta, Italian, roasted garlic Italian, etc.)
Olive oil
garlic salt
black pepper
grated Parmesan cheese


Slice your bread about 1/4 - 1/2 inch think. If the bread slices are too large, cut them in half. Brush the extra virgin olive oil onto both sides of the bread - liberally! Then take your seasonings and sprinkle them over both sides of the bread. Place on a pizza pan or stone (I use one of those pizza pans with air holes, it works great). Your oven should be pre-heated to 400. Place in the oven and keep a close watch. You want it golden brown and crispy. As soon as it's down, sprinkle both sides with Parmesan.

Place the crostini on your plate and scoop your tomatoes and mozzarella over it. It's wonderful! Enjoy!


Green Beans and Tomatoes

1-2 lb. fresh green beans
4-6 large ripe tomatoes
fresh garlic to taste
salt
pepper
fresh mint
fresh parsley
a drizzle of olive oil (or more)


I love fresh green beans! It's taken me years to learn how to cook them to my liking. I hate them soft and mushy. Canned? Ewww! Whose idea was that anyway? I can stand them frozen, but I LOVE them fresh and steamed until they are just tender crisp.
When we were growing up, my mother made this next dish with wax beans. Again....Ewww! I have since, changed the recipe to green beans. I use my Pampered Chef Microwave Cooker to steam my beans. I rinse them. Then I break off the hard nubby end, leaving the pointy end and I break the bean in half so that it will fit into the cooker. I don't know how many pounds will fit in there, but I just fill it with beans. Then I add about 1 inch of water. Tighten the lid and microwave it on high for 6 minutes. That seems to work for me. You may have a better way for you, but I would NOT over cook them.
While the beans are steaming, I prepare the tomatoes.
Rinse the tomatoes and quarter them. Add your seasonings and olive oil and then with a potato masher mash it all together. Let sit about 15 minutes for flavors to blend.
When beans are done cooking. Drain them and add them to tomato mixture. Fold them together and let them sit. You can put them into the frig if you do not want it hot. Just be aware that olive oil does set (like jello) when cold.
This is another salad that needs a loaf of crusty bread with it.

Every summer we have one meal with just corn on the cob and this salad with bread. No meat. It's pretty good.


Hope you enjoy!

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Okay! Okay! Zucchini.....zeppelins....whatever!

They're big! They're green! They're everywhere! It's like WWII zeppelins, except these are edible. I got a lot of great "feed" back on the zucchini Parmesan. I must admit it was good. But....there is so much MORE!

Have you ever had stuffed zucchini? The way MiMi did it was very yummy and I've served it to many a vegetarian who loved it.

I have stuffed zucchini with chicken and sausage and ground beef, but this is so good with a hunk of Italian bread or a side of spaghetti.

I remember one time in the 70's, my girlfriend and I decide to go to Endicott for a weekend. She was "seeing" some guy from Ithaca, so we made arrangements for the two of them to go out Saturday and I would stay at my grandmother's, looking so sad and pathetic that Marsha's son (who was about seven) hugged me and offered to take me to McDonald's. Cute.....but not the same as an evening with a hot guy at The Vineyard. Is that still opened? They had great eggplant Parmesan.

But I digress (is that the word?).....Anyway....MiMi made stuffed zucchini. After Gina got back from her date, she and I stayed up late that night watching my very favorite movie, "To Kill A Mockingbird", and eating cold leftover stuffed zucchini. Even cold, it was great!

Stuffed Zucchini

2 medium large zucchinis
2 cups seasoned breadcrumbs
1 1/4 cups grated Parmesan or Romano cheese
Your own homemade or a large jar of Prego Spaghetti sauce
mozzarella (optional)
Enough eggs to moisten the stuffing (have a dozen handy just in case)
garlic or garlic powder - to taste
black pepper - to taste
salt - to taste
1/2 teaspoon baking powder

Rinse your zucchinis well. Cut off the stem end and then cut them length wise in half. Cut out the seeds and meat from the center of the zucchini, leaving enough meat so that the zucchini will hold it's form. Separate the seeds and the zucchini meat. Throw away the seeds and chop up the zucchini meat left over into small chunks and set aside.

In a large bowl add bread crumbs, cheese, seasonings (to taste), zucchini chunks and baking powder. Blend well. Begin to add your eggs. Start with three, mix. Continue to add one egg at a time, mixing afterwards until stuffing is the same consistency as meatballs or meatloaf (able to hold in your hand and mold).

You could either spray your pans or put just a little water in the bottom of them. They should be long enough for zucchinis and deep enough for the sauce. Place your hollowed out zucchini halves in two large pans hollow side up. Stuff them with stuffing, allowing a small mound on top. Place in a 350 oven on the center rack and allow them to bake until they are golden brown. Cover them. Uncover them when toothpick inserted into the center of the stuffing comes out dry and let them bake another five to ten minutes until they brown. Take them out of the oven and pour the sauce over them. As much as you like without completely covering them. Cover your pan with foil or lid and bake until sauce is hot and bubbly, basting them with the sauce periodically. Uncover and if you like, add mozzarella to taste on top and bake until the mozzarella is a little golden.

This serves a whole bunch of people and can be eaten as a side dish or as a main course with a side of spaghetti. The leftovers are even good.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Zucchini Parmesan Revisions & Fun

My last post was about zucchini parmesan. I have some revisions. I made it Sunday and Tuesday for a Vision Team meeting and discovered that if you are using a regular size 9 x 13 pan, you will probably only be able to fit two layers. A deeper pan may fit three. I also did something different that I never did before. I added a layer of ricotta cheese in between the two layers. I mixed a 16 oz. container with one egg, parmesan cheese, garlic salt, and black pepper and spreaded (is that a word) over the first layer of zucchini before I added the sauce and mozzarella and parmesan. It made this dish even more rich and yummy. Chel, I hope you could figure out how to do it lactose free. I'm thinking about it. I had vegetable lasagne once with tofu instead of cheese and it wasn't bad, I actually liked it.

Also, for those of you who are just dying to hear or see how I grew up, here is a video on u-tube that talks about American Italians in the 50's and 60's that is frighteningly familiar. Click here: YouTube - Our Contributions: The Italians in America My cousin Marsha sent this to me when I first started this blog, but the audio was bad. My friend Sondra sent it to me yesterday and with the audio it was so much better. I swear that those big hairy arms carving the Thanksgiving turkey are my Dad's and that my grandmother went around the country cutting all the little girls' hair with the same bowl. They are So much like my family's home movies that I kept looking for myself. Even the bushes in front of the house look like the same ones in front of my grandmother's neighbor's house in Endicott. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

The zucchini's are growing and I plan on adding more recipes in the next few days. Stuffed zucchini, zucchini soup, grilled zucchini, zucchini stew.....holy zucchini Batman!

Thursday, July 10, 2008

When In Doubt....Give them Away!

I now have seven zucchinis sitting on my kitchen table waiting to either be useful here or waiting for a new home. Unfortunately we let a couple of them get large. I will see if anyone wants them.
But what about recipes? Almost everything I know needs baked and it's just too hot to turn on the oven. I am not of that lucky breed of people that has air conditioning.

Oh well, I will begin with my all time favorite. Zucchini Parmesan. When we were growing up my Grandma Civ made eggplant parmesan. I find that I like zucchini better. Sometimes eggplant tends to get bitter. Zucchini is almost sweet.

I have made this a couple of ways. One is high in fat, the other not so much.

Zucchini Parmesan

The FAT way:
I begin by deepfrying my zucchini. I take three to four medium sized zucchini and slice them about 1/4 to 1/8 inch. Then I dip them in egg, and dredge them through seasoned breadcrumbs. I drop them in a pan of hot oil.

**Here's how I check to see if my oil is hot. I break off a small piece of bread and drop it in the oil. When the bread begins to bubble on the sides, the oil is ready.**

Make sure there is enough oil so that the zucchini doesn't stick. When it is just golden, take it out of the oil and place it on paper bags (to soak up the grease).

The NOT-SO-FAT way:
I do the egg drop and breadcrumb dredge. Instead of frying in oil, I place the zucchini on a stone or cookie sheet and bake it in the oven. When they are golden I take them out of the oven and they are ready to layer for the parmesan part.

THE PARM PART:
1 Large jar of Tomato sauce
Grated parmesan cheese
three cups of shredded mozzarella
the star: The Zucchini

Pre-heat the oven to 350 degrees. Use a 9 x 13 pan (or a similar size). Begin with a thin layer of sauce on the bottom of the pan. Just enough to coat the bottom so that nothing sticks. Put a layer of your fried zucchini (1/3 of your zucchini), close together. Cover it with sauce, sprinkle of parm and 1/3 of mozzarella. Repeat until you have three layers. You may want to place your pan on top of a cookie sheet for bubbling over messes. Cover with tin foil, but not too tight. You don't want the cheese to stick to the foil. Check after 20 minutes. After that check every 15 minutes, until it's hot and bubbly. Take the foil off and let it bake another five minutes until the cheese is golden.

This stuff is great! Everyone who eats it can't believe it's a vegetable. It looks and tastes like lasagne without all the carbs! Yum! Yum!

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Introducing....The Flying Zucchinis!

In about a week or so, our garden will be overwhelmed with zucchinis. I find it hard to keep up with them. My husband and I have a yearly feud concerning them. He feels if you pick it....you eat it....NOW! With zucchinis, if they get too big they become dry and bitter tasting. So while I'm picking them and letting them sit, he's wanting to let them stay on the vine and soon we have WWII, with these giant zeppelins rising out of our backyard. It's crazy! Anyway, soon I will be posting recipes with zucchini. I have some great ones.

Hey do you guys remember the TV show "The Muppets"? Remember the "Flying Zucchinis"? They were a trapeze act and usually ended up in a heap on the ground.

LOVED THE MUPPETS!

Monday, May 26, 2008

Hello Summer.....Hello Spiedis!

Today is Memorial Day. Although it's about remembering those who have served our country, which would include more than a few of my uncles and some of my cousins and.....oh yeah....my brother, it is celebrated as the first day of summer fun. People all over are dodging the storms and tornadoes to light up the grill and throw on the hot dogs and hamburgers.
I think as a child, summer is "freedom"! Freedom from school and homework and the cold that keeps you indoors. At least that's how it was when I was growing up. Nowadays kids spend far too much time in the air conditioning exercising their thumbs on some video games instead of running outside to play.
Also, the food is amazing. My husband, who has been on seven day weeks for the past month or so had a long weekend. He spent most of the time working on putting our garden in. The tomatoes and peppers and squash and cucumbers and this year lettuce. The fresh vegetable are wonderful.
My all time favorite is something that takes me back to Endicott, where every summer we went around the 4th of July for a family reunion. There, my aunts and cousins would pull out the metal skewers and begin the long task of skewering lamb, pork, beef, and chicken that had been marinating for days. The smell, while it is grilling is enough to drive a person crazy, but that first bite is the best and then after that it just gets better.
Spiedis!
In Endicott there are actually places called "char pits" where you could get a spiedi sub. Last time we were there I went in and asked if they had lamb spiedis and this young girl looked at me like I was some kind of idiot. "No!" she said with an attitude. Apparently, chicken and pork are the way to go, but I still prefer beef and lamb.
We have family movies that show my grandfather sitting with his straw hat on behind a homemade charcoal grill constructed out of cement blocks. The long skewers cradled by the blocks, the smoke rising and wafting through the neighborhood. In Endicott, most people were probably making them. Here in Ohio, people just wondered what that great smell was.
Although our family name is Salamida, we are not directly related to the famous Salamidas that make Salamida's Spiedi Sauce. I heard that they were fifth or sixth (or so) cousins. I have bought this stuff on line just so I could give it away for Christmas.
When it isn't available, (I haven't seen it in these parts, but I did buy some in Florida about 11 years ago), I use Italian salad dressing. Any dressing. And then I add sliced garlic and other seasonings. Mint is very good, although I didn't have any this time, and actually, it's best with lamb. But other Italian seasonings will do. Be creative. Parsley, oregano, basil, rosemary.....they're all good.
The key to good spiedis is the longer they marinate the better they are. I bought my meat on Friday, cut it into 1 inch (or so) cubes and put it and my marinade into Ziploc bags in the frig. So it's been in there for four days. I've never had it go bad, I think the marinade keeps it from turning.
We use to use metal skewers. The last time I used mine, it was to help my neighbor jimmy the lock of his car door because he locked his keys inside. It worked well, but was never the same. These days it's just as easy to use wooden skewers. And you want to spray them with a non-stick spray before you begin to put the meat on them. This will work wonders. When we were kids getting the meat off of the skewers was so hard that sometimes it would slip and fly across the table. Spraying the skewer will help prevent putting someones eye out with a piece of beef.

Spiedis

1-2 pounds of meat - cut into about 1 inch cubes
(beef, chicken, pork, venison, lamb....etc. whatever you prefer)
1/2 to 1 - 16 oz. jar of spiedi sauce or Italian dressing
As much sliced garlic as you like.
Italian seasonings
Wooden skewers sprayed with non-stick spray

Throw all ingredients into a Ziploc bag and let marinate for 24 hrs - 3 days (in the frig). You may also do them way ahead of time and freeze them. Then thaw them the day before. They will still be good and if you are doing it for a crowd, it will save you some time.
Stick about 4-7 pieces on a skewer. Place on medium heat on the grill and WATCH CLOSELY! Cook them to your "likes" (rare, medium, well done).
An easy way to take them off of the skewer is to take a piece of bread and palm the meat with the bread (wrapping it around the meat while it's still on the skewer) and pull it off. You got yourself an automatic sandwich!
These are great with salad and rice and grilled vegetables. Today we're grilling marinated portabella mushrooms with our spiedis. I cleaned them and marinated them as long as the meat, but in a separate bag. You grill them just like a hamburger. They taste like steak without all of the fat.

Try them and let me know what you think!

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Don't Put All Your Eggs In One Basket.....Put Them In A Pan And Fry Them Instead!

I always find it amazing how our tastes somehow change through the years. Growing up, I liked eggs. They were just...you know...okay.
But Now? I love them. I want to eat them every morning and for lunch and dinner. I really think it's my age.
I've never like creamy salad dressings. Now I can't get enough of them and vinegar based dressings (which is all I use to eat), just don't do it for me anymore.
Also, I have always been a carb person. Give me your pasta, your bread, your huddled masses of rice yearning to be eaten.
Now? I love meat. And I say this with a bit of a growl to my voice. Like a neanderthal brandishing a club and grunting in a butcher shop.
Call it my age, the change of life, menopause....whatever. I just don't like the same things I did five years ago.
Anyway...back to the eggs. They were actually one of the first things I learned to cook. And I cooked them with anything. You name it, it could be thrown into a pan of fried eggs. Balogni...salami...onions...peppers...hot peppers...ham....barbecue sauce. Fry 'em up and throw them between two pieces of bread and you got yourself a great meal.
My very favorite is fried peppers and eggs. I find it incredible that this is now served in restaurants. It makes a great sandwich. I especially like it on rye or a crusty ciabatta bread.
The other thing is something I began to make years ago after seeing it prepared in a scene in the movie Moonstruck. Recently I saw a blog with this featured and their little twist made it even more delectable. I call it "Eggs in a Nest".
My last is a family classic. Pepperoni and eggs. This also makes a great sandwich.
So let's eat eggs!

Peppers And Eggs For One

Olive Oil (about one tablespoon)
1 hot banana pepper (or 1/4 green bell or red bell pepper or a combination of both)
2 large eggs (beaten with a fork)

First clean your pepper. If it's hot, make sure you get rid of all the seeds, unless you like your food extra spicy (which I do). Also, you may want to take the vein out of the middle of the pepper. This also adds extra heat. Cut the pepper into quarter inch cubes. Toss them into a small frying pan of heated oil. Let them fry until they are just beginning to get translucent. Add your beaten egg (with salt and pepper to taste). I also sometimes add garlic powder for flavor. Move the peppers around the egg as you move the egg in the pan to make sure it doesn't stick. You want your peppers throughout. When your peppers and eggs are golden....you're done.
I like to toast my bread and add some butter. Then put it on the bread. Some people like mayo on their sandwich. I like the flavor of the olive oil. Mayo will ruin that. It's up to you.

Eggs In A Nest

2 Tbls olive oil
one slice thick crusty bread
one large egg

In the movie Moonstruck, Cher and Olympia Dukakis are eating this topped with a fried or roasted red pepper slice. I tried it. It's great!

I like to start with a crusty bread. Again, my favorites are ciabatta or rye bread, although Italian bread works well. Slice the bread fairly thick. About 3/4 inch. For the next part I use a drinking glass that has approximately a two inch round opening. I turn the glass upside down onto the soft part of the slice of bread and turn it back and forth until I could pull a 2 inch circle out of my bread. (Sort of like a cookie cutter).
In a pan, heat oil. Fry one side of the bread until it's just slightly golden. Flip it over. Gently break your egg over the opening in the bread and drop your yoke into the opening.
I don't like gooey yoke, so I usually break my yoke and let it spread around the bread more. When the egg and bread are very golden on the bottom, I flip the bread again to cook the top side. If you want wet yoke, you may want to just cook this slowly with a lid on it (without flipping it). This way you get that little "skin" over the yoke, but you can still dip your bread. Just check under the lid fairly frequently to make sure you are not cooking your yoke until it hardens.
Again, a piece of red pepper adds a zing to this. My family loves this and I make two each sometimes for supper in my big electric fry pan. I also take the round piece of bread that I cut out and fry it also. It's really good.

Pepperoni and Eggs (for the masses)

About ten years ago we had a family of seven living with us. The father of the family would only eat certain foods. Certain boring foods. Here we go: hamburgers, meatloaf, spaghetti (with pepperoni sauce), pizza, sandwiches made with sandwich pepperoni, and corn on the cob. He also liked eggs. One night I suggested that we make pepperoni and eggs. I thought Mike would die. Absolutely not. I asked him "Do you like eggs?"
"Yes."
"Do you like pepperoni?"
"Yes."
"Then you'll like this." His wife, Chris, to be on the safe side, made some plain eggs. To my astonishment, Mike tried the pepperoni and eggs and liked them.

Ingredients:
One stick pepperoni (chopped into small chunks)
One dozen eggs (beaten with a little milk)
salt, pepper, and garlic powder to taste

In a very large pan fry the pepperoni over medium high heat. You will not need oil or butter because as the pepperoni fries, it excretes it's own oils. (Some people like to add a little chopped onion to the pepperoni oil for more flavor).
Let the meat fry until it darkens. Make sure you move it around the pan so that it doesn't burn. Now by darkens, I don't mean blackens. You don't want it burned. When meat darkens in color, add eggs a little at a time, stirring with a spatula consistently so that they don't burn. When eggs are no longer runny and have a golden tint to them, you are ready. Again, this makes a great sandwich.
Sometimes I will combine the hot peppers and pepperoni and make the eggs with both. Not very often, it's very spicy and can produce killer heartburn.
But, ah me, it's worth it!

Friday, April 11, 2008

Contento Cuisine...The Next Generation

This is a "family" blog and all of the stories have been about food that my mother or grandmothers or cousins made, but this next one is from the next generation. It's my daughter's Alfredo sauce.

And let me tell you, I use the word "recipe" loosely. Actually, it's not a recipe at all. She said, "I don't use measurements."

Makes a mother proud.

I must admit, her Alfredo sauce is yummy. And fattening. It's easy, also, if you're a person who is secure enough NOT to follow a recipe. Some of us are....some of us are not.

When we were growing up, I don't ever recall eating anything with Alfredo sauce. Our pasta was always smothered in a red sauce or garlic and oil. We didn't frequent a whole lot of restaurants, and if we did, more than likely I ordered spaghetti with, you guessed it, a red sauce. Alfredo is so thick and rich, that I can't eat much of it, it's just a bit much for me.

But, let me tell you, when one of my kids offers to make supper, I don't care if it's bologna on rye, I'm letting them do it.

This is what Olivia usually makes.

Olivia's Alfredo Sauce

Okay, I'm going to give this to you just like she gave it to me:
First you melt some butter in a pan
Then you put half-n-half in it.
Then add Parmesan cheese.
(She said something here about adding more butter)
If it gets too thick add more half-n-half
Then I put garlic powder in it.

There, you have it folks. Now you could do that, right?

Here's some measurements I got off of CD Kitchen. This is a website I found.

Ingredients:
1/2 cup butter or margarine
2/3 cup heavy cream (Olivia uses half-n-half)
1 1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
1/4 teaspoon salt
dash of pepper
noodles or fettuccine, cooked

This will help with measurements.

Olivia usually adds some imitation crab meat and pours it over hot pasta. The best, but the heaviest is cavatellis. Boy, was that good. But I could only eat a little bowl, it was so rich!

I think it would be good with broccoli and cauliflower. But Olivia has yet to make it with any vegetables.
Enjoy, but don't eat too much!


Saturday, April 5, 2008

I'm back.....With Pepper Cookies

It's been awhile and I know some of you are thinking....."What are pepper cookies?"
I've been waiting to get this recipes from my relatives. By the time they finally e-mailed the recipe, my daughter went on line and found a recipe and they were pretty similar.

Pepper cookies. My daughter and I kept eating the dough and talking about the memories these cookies brought back. I know most people have memories of their grandmothers baking sweet cookies. Their round sweet faces aglow from the heat of the oven and handing the children the yummy delectables loaded with things like chocolate chips and raisins and nuts.

These cookies are a bit different. You see, both of my grandmothers didn't have sweet cookies in their houses because they watched their weight closely. Mimi, in Endicott, every night would eat her weight in watermelon. Grandma Civ never had alot of money. The thing I remember the most from her was her zucchini and tomatoes. Her cavatellis and pizza. But niether of them were into sweets.

There were the pepper cookies, however, that sat on Mimi's table and greeted us each time we arrived from Ohio to her kitchen in New York. They were always in a bowl with no lid on them and we would sit at the table and munch them. For me they were addicting. They are NOT a sweet treat. They are more of a.....savory snack.

Instead of being loaded with chocolate chipes, raisins, and nuts, these are loaded with ground black pepper and fennel.

Before you turn your nose up at them, let me tell you, I don't care for fresh fennel, but these have fennel seeds. They are crunchy and crumble easily. But I love them. They are more for eating with beer or ice tea than a cup of coffee or milk.

The recipe my cousin Marsha sent me is something to behold. I was amazed that I was able to understand it. It seemed rather vague to me. It calls for, among other things, 2 1/2 pounds of flour. Not cups.....no...that would be easy. POUNDS! Thank God for the internet. Olivia went on line and came back announcing that 4 cups of flour equals 1 pound. We took it from there. Okay....ten cups of flour.

But then the recipe called for 2 cups of oil....10% of which should be olive oil. Huh.....what the heck. I made so many mistakes trying to figure this out, I just kept adding more and more oil. And since the dough was dry, I even added more.

Anyway, Thank you Marsha for your recipes. Don't stop sending them. It just proves I need to spend more time in Endicott and bake with all of you. So here's Marsha's recipe for Black pepper cookies. Use a good coarse black pepper for the bite.

PEPPERS COOKIES!
2 1/2lb flour
1 1/2 cup hot oil(10% olive oil)
3 tsp fennel seeds (Luann grinds these up fine because nobody likes them whole)
2 cups warm wine(Rhine)
2 tbls black pepper(according to taste)
1/2 tsp salt
2 tbls baking powder(heaping)
warm oil ,when hot enough Mimi would "fry" fennel seeds in the oil
measure flour ,make a well in the middle of the table
add oil a little at a time to the flour ,mixing it with a knife until all flour added
mix well by hand
make another well on table and add wine
work and knead flour mixture
Mimi used to make a large "ball "of the mix and put it under a bowl
make a snake out of a small amt of dough(thin roll)then circle and criss cross and pinch ends
bake ungreased cookie sheet at 350? maybe I don't have it written down and can't find anybody to ask
I think they take about 10 min.or until they start to brown

****It took us about 25 minutes on 350. Maybe the temperature should be 375? Experiment, but keep your eye on them. They should be just golden brown on the bottom and the tips of points.****

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Sundays at Ma's

I have in my oven right now a meal that to me will always be in my memory as Sunday dinner. Growing up, we would always have a wonderful dinner after church on Sundays. We began preparing it on Saturday mornings. When I speak with my non-Italian friends, their families did the same thing, but Sunday dinner for them was pot roast or ham or something with mashed potatoes and green beans (my mother-in-laws specialty).
But anyone who is Italian knows that Sunday dinner is always pasta.
We would begin preparing the sauce (tomato) on Saturday mornings. I think I was around twelve when this became my responsibility. My mother would cook the meat (meatballs, beef roast, pork roast....whatever was her fancy or maybe on sale) and then on Sunday morning, before we went to church, we would combine the meat and the sauce and put it on the back burner of the stove on low. We would eat around 1:00 or 2:00 in the afternoon. Usually my grandmother would make the rounds between our home and her other two local sons, Joe and Frank (Lou was in New York). One week at our house and another at someone else's house.
She would sometimes make homemade cavatells or gnocchis and bring them over and that would be the pasta for the day. My father like percitelli (my least favorite pasta....too messy) He also liked rigatoni (another one I didn't prefer). I was strictly a spaghetti enthusiast.
It didn't matter what the pasta...I always ended up speckled with tomato sauce before the end of the meal. Percitelli (I have no idea how to spell it) was fat tubular spaghetti. The sauce would lodge itself into the tubes and then when you tried to twirl or slurp it....the red stuff would spray everywhere. Sort of like blowing it through a straw.
I was well into my thirties before I finally mastered the art of twirling my spaghetti on a spoon. As a small child, I'm sure I just slurped and covered myself with red. I even broke out into a rash at which (to my horror and sorrow), my mother thought I was allergic to tomato sauce and for some time I was not permitted to eat it. It was a nightmare. I was forced to eat a boxed meal of beef stroganoff, the closest thing we could find to spaghetti because the beef was actually in the form of meatballs. I ate it, watching everyone else twirling spaghetti and laughing and mocking me in my dilemma!
I don't recall when we finally realized I wasn't allergic, it was just the acid from the tomatoes. This probably happened when I began to eat without covering my face with sauce. At this point in my spaghetti history I began twirling my fork into my bowl, wrapping mountains of spaghetti onto it and then shoving it into my mouth. I was usually done eating in about four bites. (Of course, asking for seconds). Hmmm. Why am I fat?
What I am making at this time is my father's favorite meat and that is brociole. I literally will crave this stuff. I'm not sure why I only make it once or at the most twice a year. It's really not hard to make. At least, my version is so much less complicated than my mother's version.
Braciole begins a very thin piece of steak, about 1/8 of an inch thick. It is long and narrow. You fill it and roll it to form a jelly roll looking thing and cook it, then cook it more in the sauce.
I am topping cavatells with braciole today. I will be giving you the recipes for our spaghetti sauce I grew up making and bracioles.
There is a whole story behind the complicity of my mother's bracioles. After rolling the bracioles, my mother would take a toothpick and tie the end of a long piece of string to it. She would stick the toothpick into the braciole towards one end, near the seam, and then wrap the string around the braciole. Roll, roll, roll. The string would cover the entire roll and then end at the other end, tied to a second toothpick that was stuck into the braciole towards the very other end of the roll. This was to ensure that the meat would not unroll while frying or in the sauce.
Here is how we differ:
1. I do not use string. (too messy)
2. I bake mine, I do not fry mine (the braciole....not the string)
The reason I don't like the string thing is because unrolling that little rolled meaty thing is like having a tug-a-war with a piece of meat. But instead of it being a "mud tug" over a puddle of mud, it's a "tomato tug" over a pool of spaghetti sauce. Either way, you get the same results. You are sprayed, speckled, covered with sauce.
Here's why, first you must find the toothpick that the wrapper ended with. You pull this out and then begin unrolling the meat. I challenge any of you to see if you could do this without sauce splattering and spraying all over you... the meat plopping back onto your plate into the yummy sauce and it splishing and splashing like a fish out of water. Seriously, it's such a messy process and I always felt guilty about the state of my clothing afterwards. How DO people do this without making a spectacle of themselves!!!!
My mother had a very interesting reason for doing it this way. When she was growing up...back in the day....my great grandmother would take one braciole and wrap it in an extra long string. It was a game for the kids. They would begin unrolling their meat and end up standing on their chairs because the strings were so long. But the one who found the longest string won. My mother says it was great fun! I don't know what they won. But I think it should have been an apron.
Now, about frying the meat. I don't like anything fried, not because I'm health conscious, but because I don't like the mess it makes. Grease splattered everywhere.
I know what you're thinking. I sound a bit obsessive compulsive about being clean. It's not that. It's just that I hate to clean and want as little slop as possible so that I don't have to scrub it up. So there...it's just that I'm lazy. (No Ma, I have not turned into you yet. At least not in that way.)
So, with all of that out of the way....here is how I make bracioles and spaghetti sauce.
Spaghetti Sauce
4 - 28 oz cans of crushed tomatoes
4 small or two large cans of tomato paste
2 TBLs olive oil
2-4 cloves of garlic (minced)
1 medium onion (chopped)
The following herbs to taste:
oregano
basil
parsley
salt
pepper
or you could just use Italian seasonings
***balsamic vinegar (my own addition, I'll explain why later)***
In a large pot, on medium high heat saute garlic and onion in oil until transparent. Add tomatoes and paste and seasonings. Make sure you stir this all together to combine it nicely and thicken the tomatoes with the paste. When sauce begins to bubble, turn it to low and cook for two or three hours.
**A not so important note, but a little piece of interesting information....When I was beginning to learn this process, we would begin, as I said earlier, on Saturday mornings. The sauce would cook on low all day, stirring periodically, to make sure it didn't stick on the bottom of the pot. When I say "all day"...I mean until around 10:00 PM at night! Then on Sunday mornings we would cook it some more for about 2-4 more hours. Usually by the time Saturday night came, the sauce would actually be a paste and on Sundays we would have to add water to it. One time when I was preparing it for some friends, another Italian friend of mine added sugar to my sauce. (The scoundrel!!!! Touching MY sauce!!!!!). But I must admit, she was right. It was pure acid. I really don't like it cooked this long anymore and the longest I'll cook it on the stove top is two or three hours. I now add a sprinkle of balsamic vinegar (believe it or not) to reduce the acid taste. It sweetens it nicely. Do you do anything to reduce any acid flavor? Some people I've heard add cucumbers or carrots or a potato.....sounds strange to me, but if it works....I say go for it!
These days if I want to cook my sauce a long time I put it in the oven on low or I cook it in my crockpot on low.
Braciole
4 pieces of round steak
You could buy these already flattened for braciole, but they will cost more. When you are done flattening them, they should be approximately 12 inches long, 4-6 inches wide and 1/8 inch thick.
About 1 cup (or more....be courageous and experiment) of Parmesan or Romano cheese (grated fine).
The following to taste:
salt
pepper
parsley
black pepper
garlic
***You may want to use toothpicks to keep the meat from unrolling, but it may not be necessary***
If you did not buy your meat readily prepared for braciole, take your piece of meat and place it in between some plastic wrap and pound the begeebers out of it until it's the correct thickness and easy to roll up. This is a fun activity for the family that's really ticked off at each other! Hurt the meat....not the family.
After the "pounding party", release the meat from it's plastic prison and lay it in front of you. Sprinkle 1/4 of your cheese, covering the steak. Next 1/4 of all of your herbs (to taste). I love my bracioles spicy so I take at least one or two and pour the black pepper on it. (Today I didn't have toothpicks and all I could find to hold mine together were some kebab skewers. I broke them in half and pierced my rolls with them. The spicy ones are the rolls with the pointy ended skewers...shoot....or is it the unpointy ends....dang! I can't remember!!!)
After repeating the process with all four pieces of meat and skewering meat with toothpicks, place into a deep baking pan (pot pan) and bake on 350 degrees until the meat is no longer showing any pink. (or red) When the meat is cooked through (drain any grease), add your sauce (recipe above)...just enough to cover it and bake on low for several hours until the meat is tender. I love it when the meat falls apart. Although some people don't like it that tender, so just bake it until it is hot and bubbly.
My favorite way to eat this is topping cavatellis (it's cavatelli, cavatell...excuse the missspellling.)
So enjoy! Remember, I really want to know how you keep your spaghetti sauce from being too acidy.








Saturday, February 16, 2008

It's That Time of Year Again! LENT!

Lent! That time of year when you make the ultimate sacrifice. Most people give up some sort of food for Lent. How cruel, that Valentine's Day falls during Lent and women, and even men, everywhere are denying themselves that rich, creamy treat. I have friends who have given up "meats and sweets". When I was younger we had to give up meat. I think it was just on Fridays. (I can't remember, considering that the Catholic Church made us give up meat on Fridays all year long when I was very young.)

Anyway, Fridays were pizza night. Now, my brother and I remember my Mom's pizza quite differently than she says she made it. We remember pizza covered in parmesan....not mozzarella. My mother says she used mozzarella.

Sorry about that. I got off on a rabbit trail there with the pizza. I actually want to post a couple of pasta recipes that I grew up enjoying on Fridays. I especially remember my Grandmi, (Mimi to her great grandchildren in New York), making this dish in her basement and all of us sitting around the long connected tables eating it happily.

My grandmother's basement was one of my favorite places when filled with all of my relatives. It was noisey and cramped, but our focus wasn't the "ambience" it was the people and the food.

The room was surrounded with photos of my grandparents' favorite people. Their siblings, parents, grandparents, children and grandchildren, neices and nephews and JFK. That's right. We were Catholic and his picture made it into the basement with all of the others after his death. My grandfather, Pete, loved the guy.

I loved looking at all of the old photos, still in the old frames with the bubble-like glass. My great grandparents and their children, my grandmother and her siblings, with my aunts and uncles was my favorite. My great grandmother had seven children who grew up and gave birth to a bunch grandchildren and great grandchildren. This favorite old photo of Grandma and Grandpa and all of our aunts and uncles ranging in age from baby on Grandma's knee (Aunt Katie) to my grandmother who was I believe a teenager (or young adult) included an added picture of Rose, the little girl who died at age five. It is a beautiful antiquity that I loved looking at.

There was also a bulletin board covered with a collage of black and white photos of the family. I would stand in front of that bulletin board for hours and look at those pictures, soaking in our family history.

Also, in the basement was a the favored blackboard, that generations of Contentos and Salamidas (and their extended family and friends) wrote on. Adults and children alike, had at one time or another chalk covered fingers. We drew pictures and spelled words and kept score during the hundreds of card games played at those tables when we weren't eating at them.

The two recipes I'm going to talk about today were both eaten on Fridays during the Lent season because they didn't include meat. The one recipe, my brother, Mickey (to me) and Michael (to his wife), loved so much that when he was older he made his own version of macaroni with tuna sauce. When we were kids, it was usually made with spaghetti or "hats". Mickey made it with rigatoni, and I actually prefer it this way.

Most of the recipes I share with you will have been altered some. Time restraints and busy lifestyles have casued many of us to come up with quicker and easier ways to create the wonderful foods our parents and grandparents put hours into preparing. Also, we are now "old" and can't really remember how to make them and written recipes are scarce and sometimes scoffed over.

So I will share with you the easy way to create this dish that I perceived my brother made late at night when he lived with me and my parents. (My grandparents will be rolling in their graves and I may get some hate e-mail or phone calls from relatives).



3 Ingredient Rigatoni and Sauce with Tuna
1 lb cooked rigatoni (al dente)
1-2 cans albacore tuna (drained very well)
1 regular sized jar of prepared spaghetti sauce (God, forgive me)
(My brother used Ragu....I like Prego)
A sprinkling of parmesan or romano cheese

***Things in italics in this recipe are my own additions***

If you wish to make your sauce from scratch, go ahead, I'm sure it will be better than out of a jar. I just remember my brother throwing the three things together and I was amazed that I liked it. I myself begin by sauting garlic and onions and sliced fresh mushrooms together until onions are translucent. Then I add the albacore and sauce. I always add a little sprinkling of balsalmic vinegar to my sauce (whether I make it from scratch or not) to add some sweetness to it. Heat your sauce in a medium saucepan on medium heat, stirring occasionally to keep it from burning or sticking. When sauce is hot and bubbly, pour over hot rigatoni and sprinkle with cheese and/or hot pepper seeds.



This next recipe is something my mother, Angie or Angelina Rose Salamida Ciavarella (nice Irish name), made when my father was working nights. She would wait until my brother and I were in bed and then she would make just enough for herself (how selfish!). Now that I am married and have children, I wait until the whole family is out of the house and make it for myself. I do this about once or twice a year. My mother would also make garlic bread, something I don't ever recall eating until I was older. I like to make this as a side dish to steak, chicken, or baked fish. I do make it for the family when I make it as a side dish, because my husband wants meat with it. But I think it is just as good by itself with a salad on the side.



Spaghetti with Garlic and Oil
1 lb spaghetti, linguine, or angel hair (cooked al dente)
2/3 cup olive oil
2-3 closes garlic chopped or sliced.
a sprinkle of parmesan or romano cheese
a sprinkle of hot pepper seeds or black pepper or both

Pour olive oil (I prefer extra virgin, it has the most flavor) into a small fry pan or pot. Heat over a medium heat. Add garlic before oil gets too hot. Use a wooden spoon to move garlic around oil (or swirl it gently.....gently). When garlic just turns golden, pour oil over hot pasta. My mother always scooped the garlic out of the oil and tossed it. (Not me!) It's up to your tastes. I brush my teeth after I eat to spare everyone around me from the smell. (Not that my mother doesn't). Toss pasta with forks or tongs to make sure it all gets coated. I like my pasta covered in cheese and red pepper seeds, but again, this is up to your tastes.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Why Contento....why not Ciavarella or Salamida Cuisine?

Okay, in case this comes up....Contento seemed to me to be the best name. A few reasons really: I'm pretty sure that Contento is the same as content. I think that I would like to feel "contented" after eating. Thus....Contento Cuisine.
Salamida and Ciavarella had their drawbacks. For instance, when I was in junior high, my girlfriend's father thought the name "Salamida" sounded like "We...sellabreada...notsellameata." This is funny when said with a really bad Italian accident, but looks stupid on the written page. As for Ciavarella...let's face it...I was called Cinderella for much of my childhood.
Who are the Contentos?
Contento was my mother's mother's maiden name. My Grandmi was Elwyn Contento Salamida. Angela (or was Angelina) Contento was my great grandmother. She was a blast! She didn't speak much English and was the typical Italian grandma. Her gray hair was pulled back in a bun, the pointy facial features, her stockings rolled down just above the knee. She sat in the livingroom at her house in Endicott watching TV. It was a large pink and white stucko house (did I spell that right?). Grandma loved to watch Lawrence Welk, football, boxing, and wrestling. She was convinced the wrestling was real and you did not want to tell her otherwise. I heard from my older cousins that the language that came from her little Italian mouth while watching boxing was not only hair-raising, but amusing.
My cousin Luann and I use to sit on the floor on either side of Grandma Contento when we were younger. We would smile, look at each other, and at the same time roll her stockings down to her ankles. I don't remember what she said to us, but it didn't sound like birds tweeting. The two of us ran away....giggling. (nasty brats!)
Like any other Italian grandmother, she laid out a table to die for. Pastas and salads galore.
This next salad was something that we all loved. My mother and father both said that I should include it in my blog. I told them I had no idea how to spell it. Between the three of us, we came up with this spelling: L'aqua Salle.
This is a salad that has truly survived the generations of Contentos and Salamidas. Today, my children will go out into our garden and pick tomatoes and make this juicy, garlicy salad. Just as the roasted pepper and tomato salad, you must have a good hunk of crusty bread to dunk into the bowl while eating it. When I was younger, I believe we ate from and dunked our bread into a common salad bowl as a family. It was fun, but not quite sanitary. These days, being more aware of germs, we pour it into individual bowls and have at it!
Although we call it a salad, L'aqau Salle is almost like a cold soup. I hope you enjoy!

L'aqua Salle
6-8 medium to large very ripe (not rotten) tomatoes
2/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
1/3 cup cool water
2-4 cloves of garlic-sliced or minced
basil, parsley, salt, and pepper to taste.
Rinse your tomatoes. Then cut (quartered or cubed, whatever size you like)them into a bowl. Cut out the core, but leave the seeds and juice with the tomatoes. Take your potato masher and smash your tomatoes to get all that juice out. Add the rest of the ingredients and toss. I like to let it sit awhile and soak in all the flavors of the herbs and garlic. Serve at room temperature.

**Tips learned through Carla's Cooking School of Hard Knocks**
(in other words, I screwed up and found out the hard way)
If you are making any salad with olive oil in the dressing, you really don't want to refrigerate it. The olive oil tends to solidify and turns into a sort of gross, slimey gel. If you are making a salad that you anticipate will produce leftovers that need refrigerated and it calls for oil, use canola oil or an oil other than olive oil. I have found that canolia oil refrigerates nicely.

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Welcome to My World

Every Saturday my husband and I, if we have the time, sit and watch PBS for about two hours in the morning. We start with the home renovating shows. After these are over we move to the cooking shows. We do not have cable and I have to rely on this time to watch cooking shows.

They always inspire me. I've been thinking alot about the food that I ate growing up. Being a full blooded Italian in America in the latter part of the last century was not really a novelty, but now, many of those Italian Americans have blended their rich inheritance with the richness of others.

I grew up in Ohio. My fondest childhood memories were with my family. My cousins, my aunts and uncles, sitting around the table in the basement surrounded by the Italian foods that fortunately (and sometimes unfortunately....my weight issues) made me who I am today.

My mother was from New York. A town called Endicott. I loved going there every summer around the Fourth of July for our family reunion.

This blog will be dedicated to the food and culture that I grew up in. The Ciavarellas in Ohio and the Salamidas and Contentos in Endicott.

I will post stories about my childhood and also recipes of the foods that we savored over the many years.

So, I hope you enjoy.

THE SALADS
These two salads I will share with you are two that I get the most comments about. One is an antipasto salad that I just made up. The other is a roasted pepper and tomato salad that made Grandma Civ (Ciavarella) famous. At least she was famous to us.
Grandma, Mary to her friends and Aunt Mary to her many neices and nephews and great neices and nephews, lived to be 94. She died in early July, 2004 just about two weeks shy of her 95th birthday. She was about 4'10" and until she was in her 60's was a bit roley-poley In her 60's she lost alot of weight and kept it off the rest of her life (You GO Gram!). She never spoke English very clear and had a wonderful accent. She pronounced the word "vinegar"......"winegar". I'm not sure why.....she wasn't Russian....but it was cute. She had more energy than anyone could imagine and I remember her running up and down her basement stairs dozens of times a day.
I remember at least one Memorial Day when all of us cousins in Ohio gathered with our fathers at Grandma's house to dig (by hand) her garden. It sat behind her garage and was quite large. This group was two grown men, four or five boys and me. I'm not sure if Uncle Frank and Chris and Annette (the youngest son of Grandma's and his children) were there. I just remember Uncle Joe's boys. These boys struck terror into my heart. As the only girl (when Annette wasn't around) in Ohio, I got run over, screamed at, spat on, and generally abused by them. Although I must admit, I was a little princess who grew up to be a drama queen. These days I look forward to being with them. They make me laugh and hug me and kiss me and I love them to death!
Anyway....to the salads.

Antipasto
1/2 head of cauliflour and 1 whole head of brocolli flowerettes.
(These should be steamed until they are just tender crisp)
1 red onion sliced thin
1 can or jar of artichoke hearts
1 can black olives
1 roasted red pepper sliced thin
1 small jar green olives
1 cup cherry or grape tomatoes
2 thin slices provolone cheese
4 thin slices salami or pepperoni
2-4 thin slices ham or cappicola
1 cup pepperocini peppers
Cut all the lunchmeat and cheese into strips. Make sure the cauliflour and brocolli are broken into bite size pieces. Mix above ingredients in a container and toss with your favorite Italian dressings. I use Good Seasons that comes in the envelope and mix with vinegar, water and oil. If you like alot of garlic, you could add minced garlic to it, but it's not necessary. Put an airtight lid on the container and let sit for a few hours or overnight, marinating.
The Salad
Add the above marinated mix to any variety of salad greens. I love it with romaine lettuce, although sometimes I buy the bagged Italian Mix or spinach greens. Sprinkle the combination with shredded parmesan cheese.
I'm a believer in being creative with food. Almost any cheese will work with this salad in the marinated mix. The other night I used muenster and everyone loved it. Be creative and have fun with it!

Roasted Pepper and Tomato Salad
This salad is especially good with a hunk of crusty bread such as Italian, Ciabatta or French! It's juicey and has lots of garlic in it!
Roasting peppers is much simpler than the end result looks. In this recipe I start with six bell peppers. Any color will do, but the red ones are the sweetest. Rinse them under water. I always cut them in half and pull the seeds out. Grandma usually roasted them whole and did the seed cleaning after the roasting. We place the peppers on our grill and blacken them, turning them as they blacken. You want to just blacken the outside of the pepper, not burn it through. When I was growing up, we did this part on a gas stove. After the peppers are blackened, you may want to place them in a brown bag, closing the bag to steam the blackened char off. We never did this and had black flecks on our teeth after eating the salad. It was very attractive, in a back woods Italian sort of way. Take the peppers out of the bag and scrape the black off (obviously). Then slice the peppers into strips.

The rest of the ingredients
4 medium to large ripe tomatoes (quartered)
1/2 cup of extra virgin olive oil
1/4 cup water
garlic, basil, parsley, salt and pepper to taste (It's up to you, Baby!)
In a nice size bowl put the tomatoes and smash them with a potato masher to get all of the juice out. Add the rest of the ingredients, including the peppers, and mix. Serve at room temperature.
CHOW BABY!
(I know that's not how you spell it!)