Home Italy The Regions Displaying items by tag: farinata
Displaying items by tag: farinata
Saturday, 06 March 2010 14:59

Farinata with herbs and onions

 MAKE 4 SERVINGS

- 1 cup (4 oz/125 g) chickpea (garbanzo bean) flour
- Sea salt and coarsely ground pepper
- 1/3 cup (3 fl oz/80 ml) olive oil, plus 1 tablespoon for greasing the pan
- 1/2 yellow onion, very thinly sliced crosswise
- 1 tablespoon chopped fresh sage or rosemary

In Liguria, cooks make a crepelike flatbread from a simple batter of chickpea flour, water, and olive oil that echoes the socco made just across the border in Nice. Called farinata and traditionally a street food, it is eaten plain or topped with vegetables, herbs, or other ingredients. Look for chickpea flour in Italian stores or in Indian markets, where it is Iabeled gram flour or besan.

In a bowl, whisk together the chickpea flour, 192 cups (12 fl oz/375 ml) water, 2 teaspoons salt, and the 1/3 cup olive oil until smooth. The batter should be fairly thin. Cover and let stand at room temperature for at least 4 hours, or refrigerate for up to overnight.
Bring 2 cups (16 fl oz/500 ml) water to a boil. Place the onion slices in a fine-mesh sieve in the sink. Pour the boiling water over the onions, then rinse the onions with cold water to remove their bitter sharpness.
Position a rack in the upper third of the oven and preheat to 400°F (200°C). Once the oven is preheated, piace a 9-inch (23-cm) cast iron pan in the oven to heat about 5 minutes before baking the farinata.
While the pan is heating, add half of the sage to the batter and stir to mix. Squeeze any excess water from the onions. Carefully remove the pan from the oven and the remaining 1 tablespoon olive oil, swirling to coat the bottom evenly.
Pour the batter into the prepared pan and scatter the onions and the remaining sage evenly over the top. Bake unti! the farinata is cooked through and the edges are crisp and browned, about 2 minutes.
Carefully slide the farinata out of the pan onto a serving plate. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, cut into wedges, and serve at once..

Buon appetito!

 

 

Published in Starters
Wednesday, 03 March 2010 17:10

The Liguria Region - Capital: Genoa (Genova)

 

Liguria

The Coastal Garden

Boomerang-shaped Liguria is a long strip of Italian Riviera, with Genoa at its center and the coastal towns of the Cinque Terre and Portofino along its coast. Just a few
miles inland, the Alps and the Apennines rise steeply, and the land between the mountains and the sea is like a great kitchen garden, where the salty breeze and temperate climate are ideai for growing asparagus, artichokes, eggplants (aubergines), greens, and especially herbs, including the region's famous basil. The birthplace of Columbus, Genoa has been a center of seafaring and exploration for centuries. But unlike in Venice, where the spice trade seasoned the cuisine, the Genoese preferred to sell the spices they imported to others, relying on local herbs for seasoning, a preference that remains to this day. In the past, Ligurian sailors returning from long sea voyages yearned for fresh vegetables and greens, and local produce is stili centrai to the cuisine, as evidenced by the region's celebrated vegetable-laden minestrone. Because the Ligurian Sea is not as rich a source of seafood as other, warmer Italian seas, fish and shellfish are not the dietary mainstays one might expect in a coastal region. But cooks here make the most of mussels, clams, eels, and sudi small fish as mackerel, anchovies, sardines, and mullet, as well as salt cod, a legacy of the region's seafaring heritage.



Pesto pestle

Culinary Signature: Pesto

Pesto—young basil leaves, garlic, olive oil, pine nuts, and Sardinian pecorino cheese pounded to a paste in a mortar—is Liguria's great contribution to world cuisine. It is classically tossed with trenette (a Ligurian pasta similar to linguine), sometimes with the addition of green beans and potatoes that have been cooked along with the pasta. It is also the crowning condiment for the region's renowned minestrone.

Regional Specialties

Olives local small black olives are cured for eating and also milled to make the region's light, delicate olive oil

Focaccia flat, yeasted bread, often baked with local sage, rosemary, and olives

Minestrone classic vegetable soup, made with pasta and garnished with basil pesto

Ravioli this familiar stuffed pasta was invented in Liguria for long sea voyages

Cima alla genovese veal breast stuffed with a ground meat filling, poached, and sliced

Burrida and ciuppin Liguria's seafood stews, the latter of which was re-created in America by Genoese immigrants as cioppino

Farinata chickpea (garbanzo bean) flour flatbread, often cooked in a wood-fired oven with herbs; eaten as a snack or antipasti

Photo: Traditionally made by hand with a mortar and pestle, vibrant green basil pesto is the epitome of summer.

Published in Liguria

Recipes Archive

EASY HOTELSBooking


You are here:Italy»The Regions»Displaying items by tag: farinata - -