Tiramisu - the recipe and story

 

Ingredients

  • 5 egg yolk
  • 5 table spoons sugar
  • 500 gr Mascarpone
  • 1-2 table spoons Cointreau
  • 1-2 packs of vanilla sugar (vanillin)
  • a bit of lemon skin
  • espresso coffee (one pot or about 2 cups)
  • 1 pack (2 x 12) Savoiardi (aka ladyfingers, sponge fingers) 

How to

  • Cook coffee first and let it cool in a bowl.
  • Separate egg white and egg yolk, use egg yolk only.
  • Mix well egg yolk with sugar.
  • Add vanillin sugar and Cointreau.
  • Move the mascarpone by hand.
  • Add a bit of lemon skin before finishing with the mascarpone.
  • Keep the mass in the fridge (raw egg is delicate!) and start working with the Savoiardi.
  • Roll each Savoiardi in the coffee (it need to soak the coffee in but not be too wet to fall apart).
  • If you want to prepare servings by glass like in the photo above, then break on Savoiardi in half and lay in each glass 1 biscuit broken in half. You will get 12 servings. If you want smaller servings, use espresso cups and use only half biscuit for each cup. You will get 24 servings. You can also prepare one large container and serve by spoon. 
  • After the first layer of biscuits, add a layer of egg-mascarpone-mass on top.
  • Add another layer of biscuit.
  • Top with a last layer of egg-mascarpone-mass.
  • Sieve dark chocolate powder on top.
  • Cover with clear wrapping or aluminium foil and keep in the fridge at least for 4 h before serving.
  • Before serving sieve one more time a bit of chocolate powder on top.

Tips:

  • Although raw eggs are delicate, and you will only use freshly bought eggs, you could prepare the tiramisu the night before serving it as it even taste better the longer the Savoiardi biscuits are soaked with all the flavors.  
  • Don't use the electric mixer for working the mascarpone. Work only with a hand mixer and do not over-do it as some mascarpone is more delicate than others and its consistency might become liquid. To rescue the desert you would then need to freeze it and serve "tiramisu ice cream".
  • Some more recent recipes include beaten white egg or cream. This results in double of the amount of mass. It might appear more light, but it is also more liquid and has a more intense egg taste.  

Story:

Tiramisu is an Italian desert originally from Piedmont, Northern Italy and the name comes from the Italian words "tira mi su" which translates as "pull me up". Some say "pick me up". But it is less about picking or pulling someone, and rather more about something that needs an uplift or support ...

The stories vary, and there are also pastry shops in Treviso, Venice and Siena that claim to have invented or re-invented the recipe. But since Savoiardi biscuits (The Savoy were the Nobles from Piedmont) are part of the recipe, I will just tell the story I heard from Turino in Piedmont: Once upon a time there was a signora that had a pasticceria near a brothel. And the brothel's male customer passing by were in need of something heavy in calories and protein to gain back strength. So the signora prepared a special desert with sugar and eggs. It was very tasty and apparently had a 'lifting up' effect. A kind of early Viagra. So the desert was called "tira-mi-su" and became famous. Today, the desert is still called Tiramisu, but most people, like me, have never heard about the brothel story. BTW, the stories from Treviso and Venice also include brothels. ;-)    

 

How to make green Pesto Genovese

Homemade Pesto alla Genovese  

Homemade Pesto alla Genovese  

It's very easy when you have a food processor at home that mixes your ingredients into a delicious pesto sauce in just a few seconds. Else you can use a mortar. 

Ingredients:

  • 200 gr fresh basil
  • 100 gr pine nuts (pinoli)
  • 30 gr Parmesan cheese 
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • olive oil (cold pressed extra virgin) 
  • salt (3-4 pinch)

This amount of ingredients resulted in about 300 gr of fresh basil pesto sauce and could be stored in 2-3 glass containers. 300 gr pesto could be served with 500 gr pasta and make up to 5-6 servings.  

How to:

- Cook water in a pot with salt. 

- Clean the basil leaves by washing. Shortly blanch the the basil in boiling water. This is the "secret" to keep the leaves green (after the blending) and take away a bit of the bitterness.

- Take the leaves out and dry them on kitchen paper.

- In the meantime grate Parmesan cheese and peal the garlic.

- Then throw half of the ingredients in the food processor (to reduce the volume), add some olive oil. Later add the rest. Taste the pesto to add ingredients up to your taste.

How to serve: If you serve pasta with pesto alla Genevese boil a medium size potatoe (cut into small cubes) in the pasta water. Before pouring out the water, use one ladle of the cooking water to add into the sauce.Then add the pasta. Add more parmesan cheese on top of each serving, decorate with a basil leave and some pine nuts. Bon appetito!

More Tips:

  • While mixing the ingredients taste the pesto and adjust it to your taste. You can use less garlic (but at least 1 clove for the spice), you can use more Parmesan or Pecorino cheese, more salt, more pines, more oil. The sauce might become less green though.
  • If you don't use the pesto right away, store it in a glass jar and top the surface entirely with olive oil.
  • You can easily cover the surface with olive oil and freeze the glass jar up to a couple of months. 
  • Don't make the mistake and serve spaghetti with pesto - it's the wrong pasta! Classic Italian style is to serve linguine with pesto! Or another flat pasta (bavette, fettuccine).   

Today, I saw that some branches of my basil bush on the balcony had become to heavy and broke (or was it the cat?). It was time to process the beautiful basil to a pesto sauce. I had already stocked up pine nuts for that reason. - In the evening my son declared that I am smelling deliciously from pesto. His favorite sauce at the moment and he ordered pasta with pesto sauce for dinner. It was so yummy and we were so hungry that I almost forgot to take a picture. :-)

 
Linguine con Pesto alla Genonvese

Linguine con Pesto alla Genonvese

 

Bon appetito!

Day 8 Travelling to Asia

If I have to get up at 4.50 am for a long and inconvenient trip, I always remind myself of how people used to travel in the past, by boat to other continents and that they were travelling for weeks if not months.

Pizzo - Bangkok this time would be our most inconvenient trip so far. Since we were travelling at the end of the European Easter holiday and the beginning and end of the Thai New Year holiday all direct flights between Rome and the Thai capital (usually just three per week with Thai Airways) were fully booked.

We left Pizzo 5.30 ish for the 6 am check-in for our 7 am flight from Lamezia to Rome. Luckily, the small bar that serves great coffee and even greater conni (I chose mine with Nutella) was already open! 

 
Lamezia airport bar, departure and inflight magazine

Lamezia airport bar, departure and inflight magazine

 

Our plane departed on time and arrived even a couple of minutes early in Rome Fiumicino. The inflight magazine of Alitalia 'Ulisse' featured a 6 page Special Calabria (which should become content of another post).

Our connection flight with Alitalia to Paris - yes, that's our detour - was scheduled just over an hour later. Enough time for a second cappuccino at our favorite airport bar (Ferrari) in Roma. However,  apparently not enough time for our luggage to be transferred! (Which we didn't know back then). 

Actually, I was looking forward to land in Paris. I haven't been for ages in the French capital, where I spent exciting times, went to school briefly and later worked for a short period. Today, while descending towards Charles de Gaulle airport, the air was a bit hazy, but I still managed to spot the Eiffel Tower (Montparnasse and Défense along) in the distance! 

Our layover initially was 3 hours. (Departure around 2pm, same like the direct flight from Rome). But Air France had already indicated in the morning a 2 1/2 h delay. So we decided to do the best of our extra time and picked a newly opened nice looking restaurant and had a pleasant lunch (entrecôte). But waiting almost 6 h to board a plane is not that pleasant. At least the duty free shop had this 20% discount campaign on Champagne (alcohol is extremely expensive in Thailand).  

When finally boarding was announced the plane was overbooked! Air France offered 800 Euro per person for those who would take the next flight. A super deal! And we would most likely have accepted it, if we wouldn't have been up since 12 h with almost another 12 h to travel and school and office waiting for us on Monday. (We didn't know at that time that our bags probably were still in Rome).

When we arrived in Bangkok the next morning  - I am always happy to have solid ground under my feet and don't complain about inconveniences that might have occurred - we were the last and only passengers standing waiting at the empty luggage conveyor belt.  

We were informed that our suitcases will arrive the next day. Well, two arrived the next  day. Mine arrived the day after - in total three days after departure in Lamezia. CC, of course blamed Air France. But it was Alitalia for sure. My bag even was checked to Paris only! Not through to Bangkok. That's why it needed another day to be shipped, I guess. Is that a sign?! Should I visit Paris next time?

At least a sign for us to better book early and direct flights. Luckily, in Europe there was still cool April weather and cheese, coffee, chocolate, tuna, and bottarga reached our fridge in Thailand in good condition. 

Day 7 A Boat Trip and Dolphins

The sun greeted me when opening the window shutters. The sea below was calm. So calm, the surface looked like a sheet of paper. Not a single tiny wave. Like a big deep lake. Amazing.

Like every morning I spent some moments on the balcony to observe the sea. In spring there is a chance to see dolphins. I have seen them before, and today, I felt, they must be near! But nothing yet. 

Time for boating.!, said Carlo. We had just put 'Ella' to water two days earlier and I haven't seen 'her' yet.  

I picked a few jackets, a blanket and a cashmere scarf and hat I found in the corner of my wardrobe. We are going on a short ride, said Carlo when he saw me with my bursting beach bag. 

Well, the trip was even shorter than that! We had just left the port of Vibo Marina and were heading towards Pizzo, when Angelo suddenly remarked: "We have no more gasoline!" He insisted the tank was at least half full last time... Angelo, when was last time? Could it be possible that they empty the tank for safety reason while the boat is stored during winter?, I was just saying ...

We immediately turned around and luckily made it back to the port. Funny, if it's not the 'Guardia di Finanzia' that stops Angelo and fines him for not having all documents on board, it's the gasoline (or lack of it) that stops him.

 
Boat trip April 2015

Boat trip April 2015

 

How awesome would it have been to have dolphins swimming along the boat? Maybe another time.

For lunch, our son went home with Angelo to eat with 'nonna' while we were driving back to Pizzo. We were invited by a friend at a restaurant at la marina. We were sitting outside in the sunshine and observing the first brave bathers in the sea. The view of the beach in front of us, and a glass of wine made it a perfect spring day.

Later in the afternoon we needed to meet our kitchen planners in Maida. We spent there a couple of hours, and while it seemed endless, we still managed to decide on 2 kitchen designs! One kitchen is a bit more complicated from the layout this time, as it will be built around and above the vaulted ceiling of a lower stairways.  

While we were out, our son stayed at home. When friends came over and they went together on the balcony, he all in a sudden spotted whales! He told us about a huge water fountain and their fins that came out of the water. Oh, wow, I couldn't believe it, but it happened before that whales were seen in the bay. The kids were talking 'balena' (whales) - but when I talked to the mum, she clarified they were seeing two 'delfini' (dolphins). Haha! - I knew it! I knew they were near. Wild life spotting from our balcony!

A day later Dolphins were spotted in Tropea (I saw a photo on FB and shared it, but my son insisted that "his" dolphins were way bigger!). I was told that there will be more dolphins and tuna in the Tyrrhenian Sea this year due to the appearance of black algae (very yummy for them) after recent volcanic activities.

This was our last day in Pizzo. And we are quite happy with what we achieved to decide during that week of a short holiday. 

For our last dinner we invited the grandparents and while sitting outside in the restaurant in the piazza (first time it was not too cold for sitting outside), a couple of friends we haven't seen yet passed by. I called their name and waved them over to our table, and since they had no plans yet, they joined. How lucky we were. Such a lovely and mild evening. If only we would not have to pack yet. 

Day 6 Happy Day

It was a beautiful day today In Pizzo. I was busy in the house, can't remember what I did. But at one point I picked the key and run into the piazza for an aperitivo. We had a lunch invitation at my mother-in-law's place and were about to leave shortly. I wanted however enjoy the sunshine in the piazza and do some people watching and more over to enjoy life. My son joined me and we ordered one Spritz and a Crodino. Served with green olives, tiny pieces of pizza, and potato chips. At twelve the church bells ring and an Ave Maria is aired over Pizzo via speakers ... Ah, heaven!

The old man and the sea, iron net statue by Eduardo Tresoldi, Pizzo. 

The old man and the sea, iron net statue by Eduardo Tresoldi, Pizzo. 

In the evening, we had friends over for dinner. Actually, it was Tonino and his family with the grand children. Team Palazzo Pizzo celebrating a busy season ahead. We are looking forward to welcome our guest!