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Franci

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Posts posted by Franci

  1. Adam, purging is necessary! particularly if the snails were not farm raised, otherwise they could have eaten something toxic to humans: mushrooms for ex. One more thing: after the snails have been boiled for the first time, you can take

    out the snails, clean from the intestine (the very far ending), rinse the shells, dry them and put back the snails. This is particularly advisable if you are going to stuff the snails afterwards.

    If you read Italian, read this guy website, I found it very interesting:

    lumache

  2. On Saturday, in Astoria, in an Italian Deli, they were selling LIVE snails, babbaluci in sicilian, Helix pisana, I tried to buy them, but my husband was shaking his head.......

    Anyway, there is a kind of recipe. Sorry, no quantities.

    Keep the snails to purge in a basket (with holes in the bottom), if you want you can feed them with herbs for a couple of days. Then usually they are sprinkled with fine breadcrumbs or bran for a week.

    Put the snails in water and set on the stove, when the water is lukewarm, check if they are coming out (if not, discard them). Then rinse them with plenty of water and salt. Now you can boil them for about 1 hour, starting with lukewarm water. Meanwhile prepare a sauce with a soffritto of garlic and peperoncino, add crushed peeled tomatoes and laurel, halfway through the cooking add the drained snails and finish cooking.

  3. Franci - Is this the snail?

    Adam, that is one! I had my father looking at it. It is the "garden" snail that I would find in the courtyard. There is another snail similar, much smaller, that you would find in June or July on the dried herbs in the fields (in puglia everything dries up in the summer...): cuzzedde.

    Then, the lumache con la panna, helix aperta, closed up, because hybernated, that would come out with the rain, at this point you can find preatty big ones.

    For the recipes, another time, going to union square market.

    ciao

  4. I am from a small town, Crispiano, between Taranto and Martina Franca.

    , I don't know the scientific name of the common snails we eat, I am trying to locate a picture (they are fairly small in white and brownish circles).

    Instead the "lumache con la panna", I am sure, are the helix aperta.

    Hathor, do you want a precise recipe? Tomorrow my father is coming to visit from Italy (now I live in NYC), I will ask him the exact procedure and other info I can gather on the subject.

    bye

  5. Too identifiable with the French maybe?

    I think only a foreign will think so...this would never cross the mind of an Italian.

    Maybe it's just considered home food or cibo da trattoria and once in a while, like in the last decade, with the rediscovery of “cucina povera”, some fancy restaurant would put on their menu.

    In my area, we don't buy snails in the stores...rather go and look for them ourself, or someone would sell them in front of they home door, or someone would sell on the side of the state streets (as for mushrooms, wild asparagus, etc.)

  6. I can only speak for Puglia. It's very common food.

    We eat basically two kinds of snails: the one I like better is what we call "lumache con la panna", or patedde (patelle) con la panna: snails with cream. I am referring to Helix aperta. The panna refers to the skin they form when they hybernate, in the summer because it's too hot, or in the winter. So, people will just dig under the soil, about 10-15 cm, to find them. They don't need a preliminary treatment, they are bleanched just to clean from outside dirt, the opening get broken and they are rinsed with water and salt. Usually they are cooked in a spicy stew or simply grilled and dressed with oregano, salt, garlic and oil. In this case, they are put on the grill in one of those perforated pot used for chestnuts.

    If they were not hyberneted, but still patedde they will need a treatment but shorter then other snails. In a pot with very fine breadcrumbs for 2 days.

    In the Murgia, at least the one I am from, they are called patedde (also the sea one, the murici), instead in Salento they are called munaciddhe (little nuns).

    There is also a festival della monaceddha in Cannule (Lecce) during August.

    We also use the common snail (cuzzedde or cozzedde) white and brown, after the rain, people will go and seek for them in the fields, but they required a longer treatment of a week. They usually are bleanched before beeing cooked still on the grill or in the sauce.

    I like the patelle con la panna, in a spicy ragu' with laurel leaves, but I know of people marinating them and eating raw.

  7. Hi Tina, here is the link for Titan Foods:

    http://www.titanfood.com/main.htm

    That wuold be the Astoria Blvd subway stop. If you walk north, there is another plaza with a small supermarket, a butcher and Artopolis a nice bakery (23-18 31 St.). At the bakery they sell many small cookies, also Moustokouloura, look like tarallini but made with vin cotto. I wasn't particularly excited because the use corn oil in their cookies, me as a good pugliese, only extra-virgin.

    If you go to Titan Foods, try also the mizithra, it's closer to our ricotta then the american one. Also Anthotiros cheese is similar to our primo sale...sorry I am a big "chiacchierona", but I am so excited about my discoveries.

    Alberto, pettole are traditionally made for Immacolata and for Vigilia (per la cena di magro)

  8. Hi Tina,

    Kalustyans is in Manhattan, 123 Lexington.

    http://www.kalustyans.com/catalog.asp?menu...category_id=151

    the pekmez is made with grape, but they also carry what they call "Essence Of Fig Puree" (from Calabria), that is cotto di fichi. Quite expensive, a small bottle is 20$, but, consider that, to make a full bottle of cotto di fichi, you would need many pounds of figs and, to my experience, here figs don't taste very good.

    I check the recipe I saved, it's not very different from the one suggested before.

    I am usually the one who like to do everything from stracht, but, in this case, I suggest you to buy. You could try both the pekmez and the cotto di fichi from Calabria and decide which one you like.

    Also in Astoria, at Titan supermarket for ex., you can find vin cotto, I didn't check if they carry the fig ones, because, as I said, I prefer the one made from must.

    I just bought a jar of vin cotto, I use for sassanelli or mostaccioli, it's not really the right season...but I like them.

  9. Alberto, cartellate are dipped in vin cotto. Honey is only an alternative.

    Also pettole are dipped in vin cotto or honey.

    I personally prefer vincotto than cotto di fichi, because it's' less sweet. I have a recipe for cotto di fichi

    that I have not tested, do you want it anyway? In Puglia you can buy it easly, it's time consuming, so we usually buy, unless you have a lot of figs that you don't know what to do with them.

    I tried to make vin cotto (from grape juice) one time there, but I personally don't advice to do so if you think of using just a little grape bought in a store.

    I don't know where you live, but in the US it's easy to find in some store. At Kalystians, for example, buy the turkish Pekmez, it's vin cotto and much cheeper. I found a brand from Lizzanello, to me, seems a product for the abroad market.

  10. I am sorry I took so long!!!

    I think my pastry instructor, looking a me and my friends, would have start yelling, maybe our method is a little unorthodox, but my friends who are from Lisbon liked it.

    The recipe come from culinarias.net.

    The traslation is mine, sorry for mistakes

    Puff pastry

    6 yolks

    2.5 dl water

    0.5 kg sugar

    1 cinnamon stick

    Lemon zest

    ½ liter milk

    flour

    Roll the puff pastry into a rectangle, then it should rolled up into a log, then cut into rounds of about 2.5 cm in diameter and 1.5 cm thick. Butter the molds, and drop in each mold a round, with the cut facing down (of course). With wet hands try to spread the pastry evenly on the bottom and on the sides. At the top it should be thicker, in order to have nice layers, instead the bottom and sides should be very thin, so that the shell can cook quickly without having the cream to boil.

    In a bowl dissolve 60 g flour in a little bit of cold milk. Bring to boil the rest of the milk with the cinnamon and the lemon zest. Add in a stream the slurry and beating to avoid lumps. Take out of the stove before it reaches a boil.

    Prepare syrup with the sugar and 2.5 dl of water; take out of the stove when it reaches 110 Celsius. Incorporate the milk mixture and mix well. Let it cool. Add the yolks, one at a time, pass the cream through a fine chinoise.

    With a funnel pour in the shells, they should be only ¾ full. Bake in a preheated oven 200 C for about 15 minutes. Sprinkle with 10X and cinnamon.

  11. Thanks for the pictures! One of the things I miss more from Italy are the markets, the noise and the colour around them. Not to mention the fish...

    About the gourd, I read the link. A sicilian lady from Palermo told me that for the zuccata she uses a winter variety called zucchina centenaria, she said use the gourd from the picture in the summer, only if it's not too tender.

    About the usage of the word "cocuzza" or "cucuzza", now it's in the italian dictionary, and it means only zucchine.

  12. My parents live in Puglia. Myfather just told me about this winery he really liked. It's located in Carosino (Taranto) and it's called: Aloia.

    And, regarding Lecce, although I haven't tried yet the restaurant, as soon as I'll have the chance, I will go to Picton. I become a big fan of the chef: Tonio Piceci.

    http://www.toniopiceci.it/

    I am reading his "Salentinbocca" right now: beautiful.

    In Lecce, I would stop also at pasticceria Citiso, very famous when I was growing up. I don't know if now it's at the same level, but, for sure, a guy, who worked at Citiso, opened a pastry shop in Nardo' (a local confirmed me it's very good).

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