ZUPPA INGLESE AL LIMONE

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Buon giorno!

With the holidays upon us, what more perfect way to celebrate family and friends than with a fabulous dessert that will leave them talking long after the last Champagne or Prosecco cork is popped?! Zuppa Inglese Al Limone (Zuppa Ingese with Lemon) is just such a dessert! As someone once said -and now for the “beauty part”: It can and should be made a day ahead!

Zuppa Inglese

OK – so what exactly is Zuppa Inglese anyway? A fair translation is English Soup. Now you ask – why does she suggest soup for dessert? Well – because it’s not soup! It is the Italian version of English Trifle – the very traditional British dish, known for it’s appearance at high tea – very often made with sherry, jam, and custard. Many years ago at just such a high tea, I experienced an amazing version of Trifle in Bristol, England, while visiting the thatch roofed cottage of a lovely British family. A beautiful glass bowl which had been in the family for generations for just this purpose held layers of fruit, jam, cake soaked in sherry with a rich custard, and the wonderful Double Cream for which the British are so famous. Jolly good – but…

In my humble opinion, the Italians, even if accused of playing copy-cat, have cornered the cookbook on this one. This is a dessert presented with pride and fanfare at the holiday tables of Tuscany and Umbria in particular. The addition of Limoncello, as well as lemon curd, in this version of  Zuppa Inglese, give it a warm and velvety lemon kick. This dessert is all lemon and cream right up to the raspberries that crown the top. My mother, Loretta, would have loved this one as she had a passion for whipped cream and anything made with it.  Mom, this one’s for YOU!

About Limoncello –Of all the Italian after dinner pick-me-ups, Limoncello is by far my favorite. There is something wonderful and “tummy settling” about this smooth lemony elixir that always seems to close a meal or an evening on just the right note. The lemon flavor clears the palate and its “not too sweet-ness” finishes a meal leaving the taste buds in a happy zone. It bears an intense lemon flavor without the tartness. This dessert is best served chilled and most often kept in the freezer or refrigerator until it makes its appearance at the table.

Of course, there might be just the hint of bias in my strong preference for this lovely liquid in that it hails from the homeland region of ma famiglia, Napoli! This bay area with the beautiful Amalfi coast nearby is famous for its large and golden abundance of lemon trees growing almost everywhere. It is hardly surprising that this bounty of lemons would give birth to such a heavenly concoction as Limoncello..

With the assistance of this very special liqueur, Zuppa Inglese Al Limone makes a beautiful entrance on your holiday table. It is lovely to look at and will provide the desired drama and “flash” that every special event requires. It is the single course that when introduced to your guests will elicit the cry of “Finalemente!” (FINALLY! AT LAST!)

Of course, I suggest serving it with a small glass of Limoncello alongside the plate! -unless, you just happen to have some of my good friend Carolyn’s homemade Blueberry Vodka which would compliment this dessert as well. If you have that good fortune, you might switch the raspberries on the top with fresh blueberries which are are known to have a long time “partnership” with lemon!

In fact, those celebrating Hanukkah might actually prefer to top this beautiful lemon tower with both blueberries and some of the lovely silver sugary balls called “dragees”  used in cake decorating, thus using the blue and silver colors most often thought of with the season.

This beautiful dessert, served with a large spoon, would also offer a splendid finale to a New Year’s Eve celebration accompanied by Asti Spumante, Prosecco, or Champagne.

It needs no further introduction…

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ZUPPA INGLESE AL LIMONE

1 Lemon Pound Cake – I make my own, but you can purchase one. Of course, it is always better homemade – the more lemony the better!

Filling:

16 oz Mascarpone Cheese (very much like cream cheese – but better!)

1/2 c. sugar

Grated zest of 1 lemon

2 Tbsp. Limoncello

1 1/2 tsp Lemon extract

Beat the above together until soft and combined.

Whip:

12 oz Heavy Cream

Fold into the above Mascarpone mixture gently until combined.

Lemon Curd – About 2 1/2 cups – you can make your own or purchase many fine examples of this product jarred in the baking section of most grocery stores.

1 c. Candied Lemon Peel – chopped

I strongly suggest making your own. It is wonderful, easy, fun to do, and can be used in so many other things or on its own. It is more fun than anything you will ever do–OOPS – well almost anything!

The extra homemade peel is also delicious dipped in dark chocolate and served with coffee or espresso.. Here is a link to one of my previous posts on making your own. Click Here

Purchased Candied Lemon Peel is fine as well and is available all through the holidays at your grocer usually in or near the produce department.

Topping

1 c. Heavy Cream

2 Tbsp Sugar

2 tsp. Lemon Zest

Whip the above 3 items together and reserve for the top.

ASSEMBLY

Use a trifle bowl or glass bowl of some sort as this is pretty to look at through the glass. Also, an alternative is to make individual versions of this recipe so that each guest has his own. Follow the same instructions, but use large goblets or oversized Martini glasses instead of the single bowl.

You will need about another 1/2 c. Limoncello depending on how much you like for brushing the cake. I like to brush liberally with the liqueur.

Slice your lemon pound cake in 1/4 inch thick slices, carefully removing any crusty edges and brush both sides of the cakes slices with the 1/2 c. Limoncello.

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Lay the pieces of brushed cake on the bottom of the bowl and begin layering first with cake.

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Next spread 1/3 of the Lemon Curd over the brushed cake slices. If making individual

Zuppas”, use about 2 tbsp. of the curd per layer. See photo:

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Then follow with 1/3 of the Mascarpone cream mixture spreading across the curd.

Finally add a sprinkling of the chopped Candied Lemon Peel.

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This completes the layer.

Do this 2 more times, making 3 layers in all, ending with a “topper” of brushed cake slices.

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Cover the top layer of cake with the Topping noted above: Whipped Cream containing sugar and lemon zest that you made and reserved.

Note on making individual “Zuppas”: Amounts for making individual versions will vary according to size of glasses used. You might choose to do two layers instead of three as they can be quite rich. As a guide for you, I made 6 goblets using ½ the given amounts of ingredients in the recipe.

If making one large “Zuppa” in a trifle bowl or similar: the recipe as written will make one large bowl.

Decorate the top with Fresh Raspberries and dust with powdered sugar. Refrigerate OVERNIGHT. This is important. It needs to set. The whiteness of the powdered sugar should disappear once refrigerated, and leave in its place a sugary icy coating on the berries which will glisten in the candle glow of your table. It is truly magical!

BUON NATALE!

Also: See the RECIPE OF THE MONTH on LINDA’S ITALIAN TABLE!

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Food Photos By Tommy Hanks Photography

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PIZZA — THAT’S AMORE!!

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Buon Giorno!

Looking for that great new Pizza Recipe? Perhaps Pizza Dough?

When it comes to PIZZA, the feeling of most aficionados is best described by Dean Martin in his infamous song. Indeed – That’s Amore!

Italians, Americans, – let’s face it – the whole world is in love with PIZZA!! The international favorite! This is the Italian standard that everyone can relate to on some level. This is the Italian dish that probably started as mere sustenance and became a craze worldwide. There is probably not a city of stature in the world without a pizza joint – New York’s Little Italy, in my opinion, being the best of the best in the USA in that arena.

To illustrate, here is my husband, Tom, enjoying a slice in the heart of this famous arena of Italian food. Street food is king in Little Italy, and there it nothing quite like it anywhere.

Tom in Little Italy

Dating back to ancient times, many existing cultures served pizza in some form and prepared it with the hot stone method that has returned to us in our modern times. Traditional pizza, as we know it today, using the tomato, which was previously believed to be toxic in earlier centuries, had its origins in Naples, Italy, native land of my father, Attilio. (He would tell you that most good “eats” got their start in Napoli!) Pizza, thought to have originally evolved as a staple among the poorer classes, would fall into the category of what my mother, Loretta, called “peasant food” – food simply prepared, with simple ingredients, and enjoyed without thought to class and rank. (Read more about Attilio and Loretta at Linda’s Italian Table click here ) Pizza has evolved into many forms today from the sweet and fruity to the savory and spicy and sometimes to the very unlikely in terms of toppings.

I remember pizza growing up as the “Saturday Night Special”. My parents would either make their own dough or short-cut it by procuring it from the reliable Dirienzo Brothers Bakery in my hometown, Binghamton, New York. The preparation for their dough was very simple: flour, yeast, salt, water with 2 rounds of rising. After the second rise they rolled out the dough on their tiny round kitchen table. I loved to be around for this. It was truly a family affair with everyone gathering around to watch and throw in his or her preference as to what should be included in the toppings– and then the agonizing wait for the finished product. Do you have a pizza story? I would wager there are many.

Pizza is not just the “Saturday Night Special” anymore, making its way into even the most sophisticated of cocktail menus. It happens to be one of my favorite cocktail appetizers when cut in little squares with endless imaginative toppings from mushrooms to salmon and caviar. Pizza, as an appetizer, is a great accompaniment to drinks, especially the martini served “Dry as dust” as Nora Roberts wrote in “Morrigan’s Cross”, and in particular – my personal choice, Tom’s Bada Bing Bada Boom! Click here for recipe

I thought it might be fun to discuss a more unusual version of pizza and mix it up a little. Today we’ll explore PIZZA WITH ARUGULA, SAUSAGE, SUN DRIED TOMATOES, AND GOAT CHEESE - red, white, and green for the Italian flag!!

I can’t say Arugula without smiling and thinking of Steve Martin in “My Blue Heaven” where he speaks of “A-ROO-gula” and pronounces it a “veg-et-a-ble”! Nutritionally speaking, Arugula is a source of protein, thiamin, riboflavin, Vitamin B6, minerals and a good source of dietary fiber.

This delicious pizza is kind of a take-off on the tradtional dish, “Pasta with Sausage and Broccoli Rabe”, found on many Italian restaurant menus. Here we substitute the light, tender, and peppery Arugula for the bitter Broccoli Rabe (the rabe is an acquired taste I have found).

And now we begin either by purchasing a perfectly fine dough at Trader Joe’s or Whole Foods or another of your favorite places — OR MAKING YOUR OWN!

SING IT, DINO! Click here for a treat!

PIZZA DOUGH

(courtesy of Mama Loretta with a slight twist from me!)

Makes 4 loaves of pizza dough for a thinner crust – 1 to use – 3 to freeze! (Makes 2 loaves if you like a thicker crust.) There is nothing like craving pizza and being able to go right to your freezer for a loaf of dough just waiting for you!

Each loaf will also make 2 individual “pizzettes”.

7 cups Flour (Loretta used all purpose flour and it is just fine!)

1 envelope dry yeast dissolved in 1/2 c. lukewarm water

5 tsp. sugar

2 tsp. salt

2 c. hot water

1 Tbsp. olive oil

Put flour, sugar, and salt in large bowl. Make well in center. Add yeast/water mixture, then, the hot water & oil.

Mix with hands until dough pulls together to form a lovely ball of dough.(You can also use a food processor or dough hook – but I love getting my hands in it like Loretta did!) Knead and rub a couple of drops of oil over ball. Let rise in a bowl rubbed with a few drops of oil for 2 hours in a warm place. Mom used to put a towel over the bowl and put it in the oven – not heated.

After the first rise, it’s “aggression time”. Punch that sucker (aka ball of dough!) down like it was your worst enemy and give it a quick knead. Ahhh – stress reliever!

Now place the dough back in the bowl to let rise one more time for about another hour. Then divide in half to form 4 balls (loaves) and chill to use or freeze for later.

When ready, roll out or stretch your dough on a floured surface to your desired shape and thickness – round if using a stone. Use your fingertips to assist in shaping. Lift it, turn it, shape it.

I like to use the pizza stone method which I think provides a crispier crust. I discuss this here.

Preheat the stone at 450” for about 15 minutes until crust is crisp and golden or a little longer depending upon your oven. Note – some like to bake their pizzas at 500 or 550. This is fine – but your cook time will be shorter.

When you are ready to add the pizza to the stone – sprinkle the stone with some cornmeal to keep the pizza from sticking.

I use a peel to slide the pizza onto the stone which also has cornmeal on it under the raw pizza. I use the peel again to remove the cooked pizza from the stone.

Caution: Do not prepare your pizza and leave it sitting on the peel, or anywhere for that matter, to cook later. Your crust may become soggy. Always rub the dough with a little olive oil before topping, as this will help to seal your crust and inhibit any sogginess. Then add your toppings and pop the pizza into the oven immediately.

PIZZA WITH ARUGULA, SAUSAGE, SUN DRIED TOMATOES AND GOAT CHEESE

(aka: Not Your Mother’s Pizza)

TOPPING:

4 Cups fresh Arugula

3 Tbsp Olive Oil

3 cloves garlic

1/4-1/2 tsp red pepper flakes (depending on your palate)

Salt and pepper to taste

2 links Italian sausage (I like to use 1 mild and 1 hot) each link about 5 inches

8 Sun Dried Tomatoes packed in oil and sliced in strips

1 c. grated Fresh mozzarella (fresh a must – buffalo all the better)

3 oz. Goat Cheese

While preheating the stone, heat the garlic cloves in the oil til golden and add the arugula, red pepper flakes, salt and pepper. Gently toss until arugula is just wilted (just a couple of minutes) and covered in the flavorful oil. Remove garlic cloves.

Remove the sausage from the casings in small pieces about an inch wide and saute in a tbsp of olive oil til just browned. Discard the casings, reserve the sausage, as in “leave the gun, take the cannoli”.

ASSEMBLY

Put about a tablespoon of olive oil on your rolled dough and spread around with your fingers. Add the grated mozzarella by sprinkling around the dough. Distribute the arugula next and follow with the sausage pieces, sun dried tomatoes, and goat cheese broken into small bits. A sprinkle of good Parmigiano-Reggiano is always a nice finish.

Bake in 450 oven for about 15 minutes or until bottom is crispy and golden.

Serves about 4 depending upon the appetite.

I suggest serving this with a St. Bernardus ABT12 Belgian Abbey Ale - a strong full bodied, flavorful Belgian ale which stands up well to the strong flavors in the pizza – Not Italian – but good anyway! Of course, a fine Chianti is always a good pick.

PARLA COME MANGI!

Reminder: Be sure to visit my website,Linda’s Italian Table, for the new Recipe Of The Month!

Food Photos by Tommy Hanks Photography

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