Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Focaccia


Make this today!! Focaccia is easy, fast, unbelievably yummy, and will make you feel like you are in Italy.

Yes, Dr. Sue is deep into Italian cooking. My recent experience was in the Lunigiana region where the cooking is rustic and honest. In terms of your kitchen this translates into very good ingredients with a minimum of preparation.

Focaccia is so easy you really must make this right away - preferably today or over the weekend. For goodness sakes, they charge $5.00 for a small round of focaccia at my farmers market and yours will be much better.


I have been looking at Focaccia recipes. This is my adaptation for rosemary focaccia but it will work just as well with other toppings such as pesto, tomato, herbs, or cheese:

Dr. Sue's Easy Focaccia
Active time mixing ingredients: about 5 minutes.
Waiting time for dough to rise: about 2 1/2 hours.
Cooking time: about 10 minutes

Ingredients:
1 cup hot water (bath temperature)
1 packet active dry yeast
2 cups bread flour
1 teaspoon sugar or honey
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup good olive oil plus more for drizzling
fresh rosemary leaves (buy a rosemary plant if you do not already have one)
course sea salt for sprinking on top

Method:
Pour hot water into a bowl. Dissolve the sugar in the water. Feel the temperature - it should be like a comfortably hot bath. Sprinkle the yeast from the packet on top of the water and let sit for about 10 minutes until the yeast forms a thick foam.

Stir in one cup of the bread flour into the yeast mixture. Stir the mixture vigorously 100 strokes or more with a wooden spoon. This is the key step. You will see the mixture transform from lumpy to smooth and shiny - a miracle in the bowl! I learned this step a long time ago from the Tassajara Bread Book and it still works beautifully.

Let the mixture rise for about one hour. Then stir in the salt, 2 tablespoons of the olive oil, and the remaining cup of flour. Knead the mixture for a few minutes the best you can by folding it over itself in the bowl. It will be very sticky. Wet or oil your hands so the dough does not stick to you. It does not have to be perfect - just well mixed. Pour the remaining 2 tablespoons of oil over the entire ball of dough so it does not stick to the sticky bowl. Cover the bowl and let rise for one more hour or 1/2 hour if you don't have enough time.

Punch the dough down. Generously oil a baking sheet. Put the dough on the oiled sheet and push it out into a rectangle. Let the dough rise for 15 minutes to 1/2 hour. Heat the oven to 475.

When the dough has risen some, poke depressions in the top with your fingers. Generously sprinkle olive oil, fresh rosemary, and coarse salt on top. Bake until the bottom is brown and the top lightly browned - about 10-12 minutes. Do not overbake. You can easily double this recipe for a larger batch. Once the initial rising is complete, the bowl rising and the baking pan rising can be shortened if need be. This recipe is very forgiving especially when you use generous amounts of good olive oil. Cut into squares to serve.












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Monday, August 22, 2011

Testaroli Della Lunigiana

Trip to Italy this summer was fabulous. Our house was in the north west corner of Tuscany. Much to our delight we discovered that we were in the Lunigiana region. One of the specialties of this region is testaroli which I read about in the Michelin guide, a pasta dish served with pesto and peccorino. Naturally, Dr. Sue wanted to try it. Aulla was our shopping town. In the window of a little grocery store with the door guarded by a beaded curtain I saw a sign for "Testaroli." Using my best Italian "(testaroli?") the store owner nodded her head yes and reached into a shelf behind her. She brought out a package that looked like a flat brown boboli that had been run over by a truck, turned to rubber, and shrink wrapped. Expecting something that looked like pasta as I know it, I was most surprised. Somehow I managed to ask her how to prepare it and she proceeded to give me a cooking lesson in Italian. As a fellow cook I followed her exactly. Knife - cutting gesture - cut the giant pancake into squares. Hand gestures of a large rapidly boiling pot of water. Drop in for due minutes. Pesto? She had a large tub of beautiful green pesto and she ladled some into a container. Peccorino? NO! NO! PARMEGGIANO!!! I agreed and she grated a hunk of Parmesan for me. She asked how many people I was serving. I told her 4. She indicated that one testaroli was not sufficient and that I needed 2. I opted for 1 since this was an experiment. We went home and I followed her directions and put together the ingredients. The testaroli was amazing. The rubbery chunks of the brown crepe floated to the top of the pot in about 3 minutes. Drain, added the pesto, olive oil per her instructions, and the Parmesan. See above for the results. I was so thrilled that we returned to her store. I showed her this photo on my I-phone of the finished dish. She got out her glasses, studied the photo, and gave me the equivalent of an Italian cheer. I bought 2 more Testarolo packets to take back home. I prepared testaroli last night for our daughter's birthday celebration. Everyone loved them. Two testarolo packets served 7 adults and 2 toddlers. I made a combination of home-made pesto and Trader Joes from the refridgerated case and pulsed an chunk of Italian Parmesan in the Cuisinart. The proportions - pretend you are Italian and have fun with these wonderful ingredients. Now am trying to find out how to mail order more or send emissaries to Aulla to purchase. If anyone knows how to buy testaroli when you live in the U.S. please let me know. Yayy for travel. Yayy for Italy. Yayy for testaroli.

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