Admission: admission essay writing
Personal statement:Writing a personal statement
Essay writing:buy essay
Live life as a long delicious journey!
Stile Mediterraneo

Italy Puglia cooking vacations and wine tours



Very simple recipe with farro 0

Posted on July 03, 2010 by Stile Mediterraneo

Italy cooking schools and classes


If you ever come to Puglia and Southern Italy you will certainly notice that there are many people and women in particular who live up to 100 years and in very healthy conditions.
Certainly the slow and relaxed Mediterranean lifestyle has a big influence on this: everybody goes back home for lunch, eats with the family and takes a little nap before going back to work at 5pm.

However, the Mediterranean diet is one of the main reasons why women and people in general, live so long. One of the most important features of the Mediterranean diet and cuisine is that people eat a combination of carbs, proteins, and fats at every meal (breakfast, lunch, dinner). What is extremely important is that, everything is eaten in moderation and that focus is on GOOD carbs, proteins and fats.

In Puglia extra virgin olive oil is used almost for everything, even for sweets. Lots of vegetables are eaten at every meal. Proteins come from seafood and most of all from legumes which are eaten at least twice per week. Very little meat is used, sometimes once a week and always in small servings.

Lots of students attending our cookery courses are always impressed with the fact that we eat pasta almost every day and keep asking Marika, as a cardiologist, whether this is a healthy thing to do! Don’t we eat too many carbs?

It is true that in Puglia and Southern Italy we eat lots of carbohydrates. However we mainly eat those with a low glycemic index. Pasta in Puglia is made with no eggs, but just with semolina durum wheat and water. Also, we eat lots of grains such as barley, farro and rye and lots of fruit.

A recent study led by the National Institute of Cancer in Milan, shows that there is an increased risk of heart attack caused not by a diet high in carbohydrates, but by a diet rich in rapidly absorbed carbohydrates. 

This is a very simple and delicious recipe made with farro, a very good carbohydrate (which in English should translate into emmer). 

FARRO WITH MUSSELS, TOMATOES AND EXTRA VIRGIN OLIVE OIL

Italy Puglia traditional cuisine

INGREDIENTS

1 lb farro
2 lb black mussels
1 garlic clove
15 cherry tomatoes
1/2 cup parsley
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
pinch black pepper

PREPARATION

Cook the farro in water for about 25 minutes. Remove it al dente.

On the side pour in a sauce pan a few drops of extra virgin olive oil with the garlic clove and chilly pepper. After one minute add the black mussels and cherry tomatoes and everything cook.

Once the mussels are open, add the farro and finish cooking everything together.

Switch off the flame and add freshly chopped parsley, extra virgin olive oil and black pepper.

Eat right away!

Share

Italian fresh tagliatelle pasta with mussels 0

Posted on April 22, 2009 by Stile Mediterraneo
In Puglia we have many culinary traditions associated to a day of the week or a holiday. Minestrone is on Saturday; orecchiette hand-made pasta with tomato sauce and ricotta cheese is rigorously on Sunday; fava beans or lentils on Monday …..and so on. Every day of the week has a traditional menu that all the local families respect!
Of course we have traditional menu per the special holidays: we have some special fried pastries (called pittule) on Dec. 8th (the Virgo day) and for Christmas; Ciceri and tria (sort of tagliatelle with chick peas) on March 19th (Saint Joseph); fried cod fish during Passover; lamb on the Easter day.
I think the funniest thing is that we also have culinary traditions depending on whether months have a “R” in their name.
Therefore, we don’t eat mussels in months such as: FebRuary, MaRch, ApRil etc. because mussels are likely to be empty. We only eat them in May, June, July, etc.
Well, Puglia is a big producer of mussels: the economy of the area around Taranto or nearby Lecce, by the Ionian sea, is based on the mussel farming. This means that we have so many recipes with mussels in our traditional cuisine of Puglia.
In general I just love mussels! It’s like with cherries: when I have a big plate of mussels in front of me, I start with one and then I can’t stop anymore! I love them cooked in all the possible ways: pepata di cozze (just with garlic, white wine, pepper and parsley); tiella (baked in the oven with rice, potato, cheese, wine and tomatoes); stuffed (with breadcrumbs, eggs, pecorino cheese, pepper)….and of course with PASTA! I love pasta with mussels!
So after all the past months with a “R”, today ApRil 22nd….. a local fisherman told me that a “true gourmand” appreciates mussels in months with a R! He did not need to tell it twice. I was craving for some hand made tagliatelle with mussels. Now, I am the happiest person in the world.

Italy best gourmet tours

This is the recipe. It also works with linguine…but of course of good quality (they need to be “al dente”).

4– 8 servings
- 1000 grams mussels
- 1 carrot
- 1 garlic clove
- pinch red chili
- 10 cherry tomatoes, halved
- leaves of parsley, chopped
- 2 tbs white wine
- 1 tbs extra virgin olive oil
- 500 grams of hand made tagliatelle

Warm a large pot, pour in a few drops of olive oil, then add garlic and chili. Cook for a few seconds, then add the mussels, the sliced carrot and the cherry tomatoes. Pour in the wine and cover with a lid.
Cook for 2 minutes or until the shells are open. Remove some of the shells (keeping the inside!).
In the meanwhile cook the pasta al dente, drain it and add it to the mussels. Add the parsley, mix everything and cook all together for 2 minute. Serve immediately.

Do you have any other recipe with mussels? Please share it.

 

Share
  • About our Blog

    Puglia Cooking schools

    About: Stile Mediterraneo is much more than an Italian Cooking and Wine School. It is a deep and authentic cultural experience. It is unique because run by local people native to Puglia: the two sisters Marika (Cardiologist) and Cinzia Rascazzo (Harvard MBA, wine sommelier and olive oil taster). Follow them on a gourmet tour of Puglia. Learn the secrets of the ancient Mediterranean cuisine and culture, handed down from their Grandmothers, for a long happy and tasty life. Read more
  • Search this Blog

  • Video

  • Follow Cinzia Rascazzo:
  • Join us on Facebook

    Italy cooking holidays
  • Pictures

    			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Matera Italy www.italycookingcourses.com			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Matera travel www.italycookingcourses.com			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Matera Italy www.italycookingcourses.com			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Matera Italy www.italycookingcourses.com			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Matera vacations www.italycookingcourses.com			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Matera tours www.italycookingcourses.com			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Matera holidays www.italycookingcourses.com			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Lecce Puglia www.italycookingcourses.com			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Alberobello Puglia www.italycookingcourses.com			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Alberobello Puglia www.italycookingcourses.com			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Alberobello Puglia www.italycookingcourses.com			Italy Cooking Courses posted a photo:	Alberobello Puglia www.italycookingcourses.com
  • Links

  • Proud member of FoodBlogs


↑ Top

Legal

All content, photos, video and materials in this site are protected by copyrights and are the property of Cinzia Rascazzo, unless otherwise noted. Only short extracts of the text (not photos and videos) may be reproduced on the condition that Stile Mediterraneo Cooking School Italy and Cinzia Rascazzo are properly credited with also a link to http://www.italycookingcourses.com

Copyrights @ Cinzia Rascazzo 2005-2010. All rights reserved - P.IVA 02099690741

Contact | Newsletter | Calendar | Reserve | Sitemap