Positano, Campania, Italy. Photo by Kevin Rechts.
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There are 5.8 million people crammed into this small region of Italy, which is just over 5,000 square miles. You can hardly blame them, though, because Campania is 5,000 square miles of culture, food, architecture, music and sites of great historical significance. Pompeii is in Campania; so is Naples and the island of Capri. This is where I would go if I was to ever visit Italy, which less face it probably ain't gonna happen since $1k for a single plane ticket seems pretty beyond what I could ever afford, let's forget about the other five I would need to buy.
So at least I'm visiting it in the Travel by Stove way, which is almost as good. Not really, but, you know. The food from this part of Italy is pretty classic Italian as we Americans know it--in fact, this is the region where spaghetti was born, and, yes, pizza. Pizza comes from the city of Naples and is the main dish I decided to make this week, because I felt like after all those fish curries and lamb curries and chicken curries I've been doing lately I kind of needed to throw my kids a bone.
And here are the recipes:
Pizza Margherita alla Napoletana
(from Cooking with Nonna)
For the dough:
- 3 2/3 cup all purpose flour
- 5 tsp active dry yeast
- 1/3 cup olive oil
- 1/2 cup warm water
- Pinch salt
- Pinch pepper
- 1 medium-sized fresh mozzarella ball, sliced thin
- 1 cup marinara sauce
- Fresh basil leaves
- Extra-virgin olive oil
- Oregano
On the side:
Cauliflower, Olive and Caper Salad
(from e-rcps.com)
- 1 tbsp coarse salt
- 2 lbs cauliflower
- 3/4 cup pitted, oil-cured black olives (I used Kalamata)
- 1/3 cup capers, rinsed and dried
- 3/4 cup pitted green olives
- 1/2 cup vinegar-packed red peppers packed, rinsed and julienned
- 8 anchovies, drained and chopped
- freshly ground black pepper to taste
- 2 tbsp lemon juice
- 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
Ricotta Cheesecake
(also from Cooking with Nonna)
For the crust:
- 1 egg
- 1/4 cup milk
- 1/4 cup butter
- 1 /4 cup granulated sugar
- 1 tsp baking powder
- flour as needed
- 2 lbs ricotta cheese
- 6 eggs
- 1 cup sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1/2 tbsp lemon zest
- 1/2 tbsp orange zest
- 2 tbsp fresh orange juice
First dissolve the yeast in warm water and let stand until frothy. Meanwhile, Put the flour in a bowl and make a Vesuvius style hole in the center of it. When the yeast us ready, pour that into the well, then add the rest of the dough ingredients. Knead until you get a nice, smooth, elastic ball. Cover with plastic wrap and let rise for two hours.
Now preheat your oven to 350 degrees and roll the dough out to a 12 to 14 inch circle.
Boil some water with a tablespoon of salt. Add the cauliflower and reduce heat to medium. Simmer to 15 minutes, then remove and drain. Your cauliflower should be tender-crisp.
First make the crust. With your electric mixer, blend the egg with the milk, butter, sugar and baking powder.
Now flatten the dough with your hand and then use a rolling pin to make a circle about 15 inches in diameter and 1/4 inch thick.
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees, then butter a springform pan and sprinkle with flour. Now transfer the dough to the pan, letting the extra hang over the edge.
Mine isn't really hanging over the edge. |
Now go back to your mixer and add all the filling ingredients. Pour into the pan and cut off the excess dough around the rim, leaving about a half inch above the filling. Bake for 1 1/2 hours.
The pizza was much better than the cheesecake, but it could have used some more time in the oven. My crust wasn't golden enough, and therefore not really crispy enough either. I also thought it was a bit bland--the crust, that is. More salt would have been a good plan. I did love the simplicity of the recipe, and with good marinara sauce this is definitely a keeper. Makes a great switch from your run of the mill pepperoni that we always eat at my house.
I really liked the cauliflower salad but I was the only one. With those anchovies and olives and pickled peppers it tasted really not very much like the things that most Americans eat, so my kids were not impressed. I think Martin ate a little but being an olive hater was also not impressed. More for me. :)
I'm going to have to remake that pizza I think. Can anyone recommend a great prepared marinara? The one I used was good, but this pizza is really all about the sauce and it needs a mind-blowing one. I know, I should make it from scratch but because of that job thingie I have, blog night has become the sole evening where I do actual, real cooking anymore. Stupid job.
Next week: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and FATA, Pakistan
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