Showing posts with label sage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sage. Show all posts

Saturday, October 28, 2017

Strangolapreti (Strozzapreti), with silverbeet, onion weed and sage flowers


I had lots and lots and lots of silverbeet and Swiss chard in the garden, I filled a big basket and though of a recipes to use them all, plus the omnipresent onion weed, plus flowering sage. Strangolapreti is a type of gnocchi made either with spinach or with silverbeet, plus bread crumbs or stale bread. 


First divide the leaves from the stalks and wash well (the stalks will be used in a different recipe)



Then cook the leaves with a little water and a pinch of salt, drain, add the raw onion weed (well washed) and blend.


Place into a bowl, add a couple of tbsp of grated Parmigiano, and some breadcrumbs, enough ti get a soft dough. If using stale bread grate it to breadcrumbs (if very dry), or soak it in milk and break it up, if not dry enough to grate. Add salt and pepper to taste, and if you like add one egg (it will keep the 'gnocchi' more 'together'. 


Shape into longish gnocchi, more or less the size of a cotton bobbin. 


Bring a pot of water to the boil, add salt and then turn the heat down to a gentle simmer. Add the strangolapreti one by one, and if you have big quantities cook just a plate at the time. They will loose some green bits during cooking, but not their shape (unless you did something wrong!) Pick them up when they rise to the surface and place them in a plate.


Drizzle with butter, melted in a pan with a few sage leaves, and sprinkle with fresh sage flowers (and onion weed flowers too, if you like). Add more Parmigiano and serve hot.




Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Fried sage leaves - foglie di salvia fritte



I have beautiful sage leaves in the garden now, big and fat, perfect for frying! Make a batter with egg, flower and a pinch of salt, add some cold water to thin it down and coat the sage leaves. Fry in hot olive oil, drain on kitchen paper and sprinkle with salt. Serve with aperitivo. you can also fry sage leaves without batter, just as they are, they are delicious!

And now some flowers from my garden:


Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Monday, November 23, 2015

Peperoni e salvia fritti - fried capsicums and sage


Red capsicums are so nice fried in olive oil, and then sprinkled with a little salt… this time I tried a different pairing though: sage! And it works really well. Of course I really like fried sage, so I guess that that help. (In the background I have some fried eggplants for the parmigiana, but you all know how to make that right?) :-)

Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

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