Posted on
January 14, 2011 by
Stile Mediterraneo

What I and Marika like the most about making our own bread at home is all the nice memories that it brings back.
There is nothing better than the flavors all around our house when we bake the bread in the oven. It reminds us of our childhood when our Grandmother would make the bread for all her grandchildren. She would call us when the bread was still in the oven and bring us together around her kitchen table: we would eat that delicious and warm bread with just extra virgin olive oil and fresh tomatoes. Nothing else. It was the best bread ever, made with lots of love.
Nowadays, once a week I and Marika make our own bread. The nice smell of the bread baking in the oven reminds us of those moments.

This is the recipes of the bread we made this week. We usually use durum wheat flour to make bread in Puglia, but for this specific recipe we used Kamut flour (asa Triticum turgidum and Khorasan). Kamut flour is an ancient type of wheat related to the durum variety. It is richer in protein, minerals (magnesium and zinc), Vitamin Bs and Vitamin E, than common wheat. It is easy to digest and, being not refined, it retains all nutritional qualities.
INGREDIENTS
2 lb 8oz kamut flour
3 cups water
5 1/2 oz sourdough starter (or natural leaven /mother dough)
2tsp sea salt
PREPARATION
First have to make your own sourdough starter (we will make a post about it).
Put 2lb 2oz of kamut flour in a bowl. Add the water and the sourdough starter. Stir the ingredients together with a wooden spoon. Add the sea salt. Cover the bowl with a moisten napkin and let the dough rise for 24 hours.

Move to a marble table and knead the dough with your hands after adding the remaining 6oz kamut flour. Make a round or rectangular shape. Prepare a baking pan with some olive oil and flour. Place the dough on the baking pan and let it rise for another hour.
Pre-heat the oven and bake it at 400 F° for the first 10 minutes and at 350°F for the last 20 minutes.
What memories does home-made bread bring you back?
Tags: breadItalian recipes
Category
Focaccia & Bread, Focaccia, Bread & Pizza
Posted on
March 30, 2010 by
Stile Mediterraneo

I and Marika have been cooking for the whole day today, trying different recipes for our Sunday’s Easter lunch menu.
We are very happy about our decision!
It is always hard to pick what to make, because in Puglia we have lots of traditional dishes that we only prepare during the Easter week. What we like about all our Easter recipes is that they are simple and made with very local and seasonal ingredients.
So,for our Sunday’s Easter lunch I and Marika we’ll make this Easter focaccia bread. It has the shape of an interweawed garland, topped with eggs and with lots of suprises inside!
In fact we’ll stuff the bread with everything we like: olives, cheese, ham, tomato, onion and….Marika’s delicious capers!!! (people attending our cooking classes in Puglia may remember them!)
It is similar to the Easter bread we made last year, because this focaccia bread also has eggs. They are symbol of Easter and they can’t miss on our table. However, the preparation, stuffing and resulting taste are totally different.
This Italian Easter focaccia bread is made with the same dough we usually use to make our bread or focaccia.
With the dough, we make three different strips that we fill with olives, cheese, tomato, capers and onions. Then, with the three strips we make the shape of a garland, that we top with eggs and decorate with holy olive palms.
Just for you to know, soon after we took the picture, we tried this focaccia bread (still warm): fantastic!!
What traditional Easter recipes do you have?
Tags: Easter holidaysEaster recipes
Category
Focaccia, Bread & Pizza
Posted on
August 09, 2009 by
Stile Mediterraneo

In summer time every occasion is good to make a
focaccia. It’s such an easy and delicious dish: you can prepare it for a last minute dinner or for a picnic on the beach. Also it is fantastic when it is warm as well as when it gets cold.
In Puglia (mainly in Lecce) a focaccia is usually a double-crusted savory pie, stuffed inside.
In the Bari area “focaccia” is more like what’s called focaccia in the rest of Italy. It’s just one layer of dough but very soft and thick. You may be tempted to add some mozzarella on top….but that’s not the authentic way!
You can only put green olives, cherry tomatoes, extra virgin olive oil and oregano!
The beauty of this focaccia is that it is so soft!
Please let us know if you need the recipe.
Tags: breadfocaccia
Category
Focaccia, Bread & Pizza, Recipes
Posted on
July 25, 2009 by
Stile Mediterraneo

Everybody knows the many different types of bread from Puglia: bread from Altamura, Matera, bread made with durum wheat, barley, rye, semolina etc. All these types of bread are made with different flours and in different shapes and size.
There is a very typical bread from Puglia that is a bit less famous, but that all the locals would have in their homes and eat regularly: the frisella dry bread!
Frisella is made with exactly the same ingredients used to make bread. However, frisella bread is baked twice in the oven, instead of just once. Because it is dry, you have to soak it in the water just for one or two minutes before eating it. The frisella can last for many months.
The best frisellas are made of rye flour, but you can also find made of durum wheat semolina.
To prepare the frisella, just soak the dry bread in water for one or two minutes. Dress it with cherry tomatoes, wild rocket, oregano a pinch of sea salt and a very intense extra virgin olive oil!
You need to eat right away and using your hands.
Please let us know if you ever try it! The best is the one you can have on the beach with a glass of good Negroamaro wine!
Tags: breadfrisella
Category
Focaccia, Bread & Pizza
Posted on
May 01, 2009 by
Stile Mediterraneo
I and Marika are so excited to leave for one of our cooking tours. It will be lots of fun!
Before leaving, we would like to share with you one of our favorite recipes. It is similar to the
local Focaccia from Lecce (but the size is much smaller). It can also remind you of some small Italian Panini.
We call it “The Roses Cake” (la torta di rose) because it reminds us of many little roses.
Ingredients for 5 people:
-250 grams flour
-1 yeast
-½ tsp sugar
-1 tsp salt
-2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
-200 grams of fresh pecorino cheese
-5 tomatoes
-3 basil leaves
-Pinch of oregano
-1 tbsp capers
-3 anchovies
For the dough: melt in a cup the yeast with some warm water and the sugar. Pour the water with the yeast in a bowl with the flour and salt. Knead with your hands and let it rise for about 1 hour. Then, knead again the dough on a wooden board and cut it in small pieces, of 50 grams each.
For the inside: cut the tomatoes, cheese, basil leaves and anchovies in small pieces and dress in a bowl with oregano, olive oil and capers.
Roll out each piece of dough and place a spoon of tomatoes and cheese in the middle.
Fold the dough and close it very well.
Prepare a baking pan with some olive oil. Place each piece of dough one next to the other and let them rise for other 30 minutes.
Bake in the oven at 180° C for 35 minutes (350F).
Let us know if you make this recipe. It’s perfect to be used on the table instead of the regular bread.
Tags: breadfocaccia
Category
Focaccia, Bread & Pizza, Recipes
Posted on
April 13, 2009 by
Stile Mediterraneo
The “Pasquetta” Day is one the most exciting holiday in Southern Italy. Pasquetta is the day after Easter and literally means the “little Easter”.
All friends and families get together for a whole day outdoor. The tradition wants that one person offers his or her house at the beach or in the countryside; all friends bring something to eat and to drink to be shared with the others.
All friends of friends are welcome and so you can have about 200-300 people in the same house.
The Pasquetta day starts very early in the morning and ends very late at night: it’s all about eating and drinking (as if, we did not have any food on the day before, Easter!!) and playing soccer or volleyball with friends.
All people at any age attend the Pasquetta. For Southern Italians, it’s a tradition! Italians from the north, don’t believe how important the Pasquetta is for us!
This time, I and Marika will bring a ricotta and spinach Focaccia. We thought the focaccia would be perfect for a pic nic and also for all our girlfriends who like vegetables and want to be healthy!
This is the recipe (for 6 servings):
- 250 grams durum wheat flour;
- yeast (better the natural yeast);
- a pinch of sugar;
- 1 kg spinach;
- 150 grams fresh ricotta cheese;
- 70 grams parmesan cheese;
- 2 whole eggs;
- 1 garlic clove;
- pepper;
- salt;
- 2 tbp extra virgin olive oil
Spinach preparation:
In a big saucepan, cook the spinach with the garlic, a pinch of salt and a pinch of spicy pepper. Cook the spinanch at very low flame, stirring and covering with a lid. When they are al dente, remove the garlic, let them cool down and then reduce them in small pieces using a knife. Add 1 egg and the grated parmesan cheese.
Dough preparation:
Add some warm water to the yeast and a pinch of sugar. Mix together the flour with the yeast and water, 1 egg and the 2 tbs of extra virgin olive oil. Knead the dough. Add 1 tsp of salt to the dough.
Divide the dough in two pieces and with a rolling pin, make two thin and round layers.
Prepare a baking pan with some olive oil and breadcrumbs. Place the first layer in the baking pan, cover with the spinach and with some pieces of ricotta cheese. Place the second layer on top.
Cook in a pre-heated oven for about 30 minutes at 180°C (350 F).
Do you have any similar Easter traditions?
Please let us know if you ever make this recipe.
Tags: focacciahealthy foodricotta
Category
Focaccia, Bread & Pizza, Recipes, Vegetables & Legumes