Archive | Sicily

a Sicilian tradition :: bruschetta

becca-garber-bruschetta-recipe-1

You know the feeling of biting into a perfect piece of bruschetta: the crunch of the toasted bread, the sweetness of the tomatoes, the spiciness of the garlic, the delicious flavor of herbs filling your mouth.  I’ve attempted bruschetta and been disappointed with the result, so I was glad when Maria included a bruschetta tutorial with her pasta alla norma cooking class this week.  Making perfect bruschetta might not be so hard for me now!

Here are a few pictures of the process and then the recipe is at the end of the post.

becca-garber-bruschetta-chopping-tomatoes

First, deseed and dice your tomatoes.  Then mix them with the olive oil and herbs in a large bowl.  Let sit while you prepare the bread.

becca-garber-bruschetta-recipe-tomatoes-herbs

Try to find a loaf of bread that looks something like this.  Slice it into 1-cm pieces and place on a tray to toast in the oven.

becca-garber-bruschetta-recipe-bread

Take a break for a picture with your cute little boy…

becca-garber-bruschetta-recipe-mother

… and to check out your daughter, who is playing with one of the many children that were running around the house throughout our cooking class.  Fun for them and fun for us!

becca-garber-kids-toys

When the bread is finished toasting, top with the tomato mixture.

Sit down at the table and enjoy with your friends!  Buon appetito!

becca-garber-bruschetta-recipe-italian-meal

Bruschetta Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 kilo tomato (2 lbs)
  • 1 loaf of bread
  • 3 small garlic cloves (2 large)
  • 2 tsp oregano
  • 2 tsp dried basil (or 2 fresh basil stems)
  • 2 tsp kosher salt
  • about 1/2 cup olive oil

Directions:

  • De-seed tomatoes and dice into small pieces.  Mince garlic and place into tomatoes.  Add oregano, basil, salt, and oil. Cover and let sit.
  • Put oven rack on lowest position and set to Broil. Slice bread into 1cm thickness. Place in oven and toast until warm.
  • Top bread slices with tomato mixture.
11 :: in eat this, friends, Sicily

a Sicilian tradition :: Pasta alla Norma recipe

becca-garber-sicilian-pasta-tomatoes

On Monday a few of my friends and I gathered for a cooking class with Maria, a wonderful Italian woman who often watches our children.  She is known for being a fabulous cook and we’ve all enjoyed her bruschetta and pasta alla norma in the past.  She had agreed to teach us both recipes so we can recreate them after we leave Sicily.

I’m going to share her pasta alla norma recipe today and her bruschetta recipe tomorrow.  Pasta alla norma is a classic Sicilian dish that is made with fried eggplant, tomatoes, and salted ricotta cheese.  I’m not a huge fan of eggplant — even though it is ubiquitous in Sicily — but I will eat pasta alla norma by the kilo, it seems. It tastes like Sicily to me.

Here are some pictures of the process and then the recipe is at the end.  Enjoy!

becca-garber-sicilian-pasta-tomatoes-2

First, take a kilo of tomatoes and pour boiling water over them.  Let it stand while you prepare the eggplant by cutting strips off four sides.  Eggplant becomes very soft when cooked so the remaining skin helps it to keep some shape.

becca-garber-sicilian-pasta-chopped-eggplant

Chop the eggplant into 1-inch pieces and put in a bowl of cold salted water.  Sprinkle salt on top.  The salt helps draw out the bitterness of the eggplant.

Meanwhile, take your tomatoes, deseed them, and then dice them.

becca-garber-sicilian-pasta-eggplant-saltwater

Next you’ll need olive oil.  Our olive oil comes in 5-liter jugs around here!

becca-garber-sicilian-pasta-olive-oil

Simmer the tomatoes with 3/4 cup olive oil and 6 cloves of garlic for about an hour.

becca-garber-sicilian-pasta-garlic

Take a break to admire all our cute kids playing around the house…

becca-garber-legoes

And a sleeping baby, bless him.  It lasted 5 minutes before he was back in Mama’s arms.

becca-garber-sicilian-pasta-sleeping-baby

In a cup of hot vegetable oil, fry the chopped eggplant in batches.  Be sure to squeeze out the salt water before adding the eggplant to the oil.

becca-garber-sicilian-pasta-frying-eggplant

Your eggplant should look like this when it’s done frying.  Yum!

becca-garber-sicilian-pasta-fried-eggplant

Take another break to admire cute kids admiring a cute baby.

becca-garber-children-admiring-baby

Cook your pasta and then toss it with the sauce and the fried eggplant. Top with grated ricotta cheese.

becca-garber-sicilian-pasta-ricotta-salata

And eat!  Best when served by a sweet Italian nonna.  Buon appetito!

becca-garber-sicilian-pasta-italian-woman

 

Pasta alla Norma Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1/2 kilo pasta (1 lb)
  • 1 kilo tomato (2 lbs)
  • 3 eggplants
  • 6 whole cloves garlic
  • 1 cup vegetable oil
  • 1/2 Tbsp salt
  • Cold water with small handful of kosher salt
  • 3/4 c. olive oil
  • Ricotta Salata
  • 1 Tbsp Sugar (for sauce if tomatoes aren’t sweet enough)
  • 1Tbsp dried basil or handful of fresh basil

Directions

For Eggplant:

  • Peel eggplant leaving 1in. strips of skin around. (4 strips of skin, 4 strips of flesh) and dice
    into 1in. pieces and place in prepared salt water. Sprinkle 2 palm fulls of salt onto top of
    eggplant
  • Heat vegetable oil in large skillet. Squeeze water from eggplant really well. Fry eggplant
    (in small batches) 5 minutes, turn pieces over, continue to fry until golden brown.
  • Drain into colander set in large bowl.

For sauce:

  • Place tomatoes in large bowl. Bring pot of water to a boil and pour over tomatoes.
  • Let sit for 10 minutes, drain, then peel, seed (by squeezing tomato), and pit tomatoes.
  • Dice very small and place in large skillet pour 1/2 Tbsp salt in tomatoes and bring to simmer.
  • Pour in 3/4 c olive oil. Add 6 whole cloves of garlic. Simmer for 30 minutes.
  • Taste sauce, add sugar if needed. Stir, continue to simmer. Let simmer 1 hr.
  • Add 1 Tbsp dried basil or handful of fresh basil

Add tomato sauce and eggplant to cooked pasta. Top with shredded ricotta salata cheese.

15 :: in eat this, friends, Sicily

double strollers and Sicilian market mornings

Please congratulate me.  I took both kids out in the stroller for the first time today!

becca-garber-double-stroller

In order to do this, I first had to turn my stroller into a double stroller, which it has never been before in its life.  We got the City Select strollerwhen Lena was a baby because it can be a single or a double stroller.  We also thought we’d have two kids sooner or later.

Sure enough, we had two kids sooner.  Today is also Wednesday — market day in my town — and we’re out of fresh fruit and vegetables in this house.  Time for our first walk… and time for a double stroller!  I watched a YouTube video to figure out how to attach everything in the right places, and pretty soon after about 20 minutes of straps and buckles and an infant wailing and “where’s my phone?”, we were ready to go!

Recently Updated127

We walked down the cobblestone streets into the main piazza.  A man with a truck full of fish had just pulled up and started yelling, “Pesce!  Pesce!”  After some discussion, I bought three swordfish fillets for dinner tonight.  The smiling fishmonger swore up and down that they were fresh from this morning and had never been frozen.  Hope he’s telling the truth!

You can see the faded beauty of this old town square as other customers after me line up to buy squid, octopus, and swordfish for their own dinners:

becca-garber-sicily-fish-truck

We walked on, stopping only once for a potty break (oh my), greeting acquaintances as we went.  I received several enthusiastic wishes of “auguri!” (“congratulations!”) about the birth of my son.

Eventually we reached my favorite fruit and vegetable truck (which is where I go on Wednesdays if walking all the way up to the market is too much for me or for Lena).  Besides, I love the cheerful man at this truck, who knows us now and always throws a few extra strawberries or artichokes into the bag for me.

becca-garber-sicily-market-truck

After I made my purchases, it was time to head home.  As I walked I calculated that I was pushing approximately 90 lbs.  Here’s how I figure:

15 lbs of produce + 25 lb Lena + 10 lb Gil + 28 lb stroller + 10 lb car seat = 88 lbs

And then I got to the final stretch up to our house and had to push all of that uphill!  Talk about getting back into shape!

becca-garber-sicily-stroller

And here’s our market bounty this week.  Zucchini, strawberries, 4lbs of oranges and mandarins, 4 lbs of pears and apples, fennel, carrots, pineapple, broccoli, artichokes, and kiwi.  It’ll last us about 5 days and then we’ll be very ready for market day again next week!

becca-garber-sicily-market-bounty

All of this cost me about $25.  Do you think that’s a better price than what you can get in the States?  Sometimes I really don’t know whether I’m getting a deal or whether the prices are pretty much the same… except my produce comes out of the back of a truck!  What do you think?

18 :: in Italy, motherhood, Sicily

{closed!} a very tasty little giveaway

  becca-garber-italian-giveaway1

Well, yum, isn’t someone going to be lucky!

These are some of my very favorite Italian foods; we always have a good stash of each of them in our house here in Sicily.  I hand-picked them so you can experience them too!  There’s some delicious pasta, a beautiful bottle of olive oil, a jar of real Nutella*, and a special Sicilian addition: crema di pistachio.  Sicily is famous for its pistachios, particularly those from the town of Bronte on the slopes of Mt Etna, about an hour from our home.  This sweet concoction is a wonderful way to experience them on a slice of bread… or just straight out of the jar!

This giveaway is open to everyone, including my friends here in Sicily.  (You all are some of my most faithful readers!)  I’ll ship the package of goodies to the winner next week.

The giveaway will last one week and close on Wednesday, February 6th, at midnight EST.  A winner will be selected through the random number generator, www.random.org.

You have 2 chances to enter:

  • leave a comment!  Tell me what your favorite Italian food is, if you’d like.
  • sign up to receive my blog updates via email either in the sidebar under “Subscribe // Connect” or in the box below.  I’ll know that you signed up, so you don’t have to leave another comment telling me that you did so.

And that’s it!  Good luck!!!

*You didn’t know you weren’t eating real Nutella in the States?  It’s true… sorry!  But enter this giveaway and you could get a jar of the good stuff. :)

beccag-garber-italian-giveaway2

——–

Well, I counted up all the entries (comments on this post + subscribers to my email updates).  The results are in and the winner is #174, Miss Lucy P.!  Lucy, I’ll email you to get your address and send you the package.  Congratulations!!!  I hope you enjoy it all… especially the Nutella. :-)

becca-garber-giveaway-results

101 :: in giveaway, Italy, Sicily

searching for bugs

Elliott has a four-day weekend starting today (hip hip hooray!), and so we decided to kick it off with a hike down into the valley below our house.  Lena is lately obsessed with bugs, which you might remember from a recent post about our walk to the orange groves.  Here’s a little video that I took of her searching for bugs while Elliott and I relax on the picnic blanket with our books. 
And yes, it’s chilly here!  Clear and cold, a perfect day for blogging by the fire with some hot chocolate after a beautiful hike.  Of course I also have a huge pre-baby to-do list, so it won’t be all relaxing around here this weekend!
What are your plans for the weekend? 
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
3 :: in hiking, Lena, Sicily, video

Powered by WordPress. Designed by WooThemes