How To Cut An Artichoke

January 9, 2012

How to Cut an Artichoke, the Roman way.

Early in the morning at Campo de Fiori, aside from arranging the fresh produce, the vendors are busy trimming the seasonal favourite of Italians: the artichoke. While both small and large artichokes are available whole, the trimmed artichokes, ready to cook, are also on offer.

This is how they do it in Rome: trim the outer tough leaves and thorns, pull out the fibrous choke and then rub vigorously with half a lemon so that they don’t brown. In Venice, however, instead of rubbling the artichoke with lemon, they plunge the trimmed artichokes in cold water.

Here’s the video, unedited, capturing the dexterity of the vendor and the commotion at the morning market.

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Campo de’ Fiori, Rome

January 8, 2012

Campo de Fiori
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On an early Friday morning I woke up at the crack of dawn, had a cup of espresso and a ricotta and cherry pastry from the forno downstairs, and walked to the market I’d heard so much about, 20 metres away.

Campo de Fiori, literally meaning Field of Flowers (which it was, centuries ago), is a bustling square that houses one of the most glorious fresh food markets of Rome. It is positioned right in between River Tiber and Largo Argentina, the square where Caesar was assassinated.

During the day, Campo de Fiori hosts an open-air food market from Monday through Saturday, starting early in the morning and wrapping up by early afternoon. Here you can find seasonal fruits and vegetables, and up until a few years ago there were butchers and fishmongers too. The spice stalls here will leave you spoilt for choice: it  literally looked like there was a concoction created for every Italian dish!  At night, the square transforms into quite the nightspot, when the restaurants lining the square open up.

 When I reached Campo de Fiori food market, the morning buzz was setting in with the vendors arranging their fresh produce and wares. The Italians were their cheery self greeting “Buongiorno!” when they noticed a tourisity me snapping away.  One boisterous vendor even put forth an offer, typical of Italians: “One photo, One kiss!” Another was kind enough to let me record a video of just how they trim artichokes in Rome, a task that I find a wee bit daunting.

There was so much colour at the market: orange from the squashes, purple from the artichokes and treviso, red from the tomatoes and peppers, shades of green from the insalata mista, The lush produce at the market almost made me forget it was winter. And for an artichoke lover, there is no better time to visit.

If you do go there, don’t forget to bite into the Pizza Bianco at the Forno Campo de Fiori for me. I still dream of it at night.

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Happy 2012!

January 6, 2012

Happy New Year, dear readers!

Thank you for sticking around here for yet another year. Thanks for emailing, commenting and even lurking (Hello Lurkers! Say hi!?). Wish you a delicious year ahead filled with joy, inspiration and magic.

I’m late in wishing you, but I’ve good reason. I’ve been traveling quite a bit over the holidays and I finally got home late last night. On our 14 day trip, my husband and I ate our way through Italy, travelling up from Rome to Milan. We did our own little gelato trail in Rome and Florence. Ate the famous panforte in Siena. Bought gorgeous handmade porcelain in Venice. And cooked in the most beautiful house in Verona. Whenever I knew of a bustling market in the city, I’d wake up early to go photograph the gorgeous produce. I learned so many things on this trip: Popping into the back of bakeries, and making friends with pizzaiolo at the forno I’d go to almost everyday in Rome. Getting a vendor at Campo di Fiori to show me just the right way to cut an artichoke.Tasting olive oils from the seasons’s harvest in Florence, and much more. I even surprised myself by developing a penchant for coffee.

For Christmas eve, we were at the Pantheon for the midnight mass and for New Year’s eve we were at Piazza San Marco, where possibly the entire city of Venice had converged. There, we caught some live performances and fireworks over the waters.

Keeping the New Year food goal list from the past two years alive, I’ve updated all the things I managed to do from the goals last year. This year’s list isn’t too long, because I’ve 6 months of training at Le Cordon Bleu to look forward to with something new to learn every single day.

  1. Cook and bake a lot in my newly acquired cast iron skillet.
  2. Make my version of Mont Blanc.
  3. Make an artichoke and pine nut tart.
  4. Make the Abruzzo-style pizza base from the recipe I got from a lady in Venice.
  5. Harvest olives in Italy in the fall, and then see them through the crushing process to get my own bottle of olive oil.
  6. Bake a pumpkin and ricotta flan.
  7. Make chausson aux pommes.
  8. Perfect 3 salad recipes and make them often.
  9. Do something new with garlic.

What are your top food goals?

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I’m lucky to be living 20 metres from one of the most colourful food markets in Rome, Campo di Fiori. Today, I woke up early (or perhaps it was all the caffeine I’m enjoying lately) to photograph the gorgeous produce. I ended up photographing artichokes the most. Mostly because that’s what I’m obsessed with on this trip. I’m on a mission to try out artichokes in different forms and artichoke for every meal. Artichokes on a pizza. Deep fried artichoke. Artichoke fritters. Roman style boiled artichoke.

If you have any recommendations for artichoke eating in Rome or actually, any sort of eating, I’m all ears.

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Chocolate Stuffed Chocolate Cookies

I go through cookie phases. I don’t make them for months at a stretch, but when I do, I can’t seem to stop.

With cookies showing up all over the blogosphere this season, I got sucked into the madness as well. First, it was the walnut-rosemary that sat in a cookie tin on my desk. And now, these chocolate stuffed cookies.

It’s a simple cookie dough that you roll out and then stuff with really good chocolate. Stuff them well. Stuff them so that the cookie dough barely encloses it. And then bake them. A good 9-10 minutes later you’ll have warm, cookies oozing with melted chocolate.

Have them warm, pinching them a bit so that the chocolate squirts out. It’s fun.

What’s your current favorite cookie recipe?

Chocolate Stuffed Cookies

Makes 20 cookies

Ingredients:
75g butter
75g sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 egg yolk
120g flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 tbsp cocoa powder
1 tbsp milk (or just enough to moisten the dough a bit)
Chocolate callets or chopped chocolate for stuffing the cookies

Equipment: Silicone mat (USA | UK)

  1. Preheat the oven to 170C/350F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicone mat.
  2. In a bowl, beat the butter and sugar together until pale and creamy. Add the vanilla extract followed by the egg yolk and continue to beat until light ad fluffy.
  3. Sift together the flour, baking powder and cocoa before folding into the butter mixture.
  4. The dough will be dry and crumbly – it’s supposed to be this way. Add a tablespoon or so of water if you think it’s absolutely necessary.. else wrap the dough in cling film and let it rest in the refrigerator for 30 minutes.
  5. Next, roll out the dough and then cut out circles of diameter 1.5 inches. Place the chocolate (as much as you can fit) and gather together the sides to enclose the chocolate.
  6. Place on the cookie sheet and bake for 9-11 minutes.
  7. Remove on a cooling rack… eat up. Great dunked in cold milk as well.

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Caramelised Garlic Tart

December 14, 2011

You know what I wish I was familiar with sooner? Caramelised garlic. Gently blanched. Slowly cooked. Sticky with balsamic vinegar and olive oil. Fragrant with rosemary and thyme. Almost candy-like garlic. A dear friend recently sent me a few cookbooks as a wedding gift, one among which was a book that’s been on my wishlist [...]

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My Favourite Egg Sandwich

December 8, 2011

I’ve never liked eating an egg more than I’ve liked it in this egg sandwich. This sandwich is absolutely simple to make, and the return that you get on the time and ingredients invested is manifold. I’ve been eating an egg sandwich this way since I discovered it a little while ago, and I recently [...]

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Rosemary, Walnut and Brown Sugar Cookies

December 3, 2011

It’s weird that just when I get pots of fresh herbs, I stop using them in my cooking. Suddenly, I  don’t need them all that much. And when I don’t have them, I keep getting smacked in the face, recipe after recipe that calls for ‘a sprig of thyme’ (which doesn’t warrant buying an entire [...]

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Book Giveaway: Ferran

December 1, 2011

Ferran:  The Inside Story of El Bulli and the Man Who Reinvented Food. Ferran by Coleman Andrews is a biography of the man who pretty much changed how food is perceived – the man at the helm of the world’s best restaurant, El Bulli (2006 through 2009). This book was first released in October 2010, [...]

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