Truffled Red Wine Risotto with Parmesan Broth

Manicotti Recipe Summary :

Difficulty : Medium

Active time : 2h 30 min

Yield : 6 servings

A great substitute for the truffle butter is an equal amount of plain butter seasoned with a drizzle of truffle oil. Parmesan cheese rinds are available at cheese counters and cheese shops
Ingredients

 

 

How to cook :  
Make parmesan broth:

Melt butter in heavy large saucepan over medium heat. Add leek, fennel, onion, and garlic. Stir until vegetables are soft, about 5 minutes. Add tomato paste and cook until beginning to brown on bottom of pan, about 2 minutes. Add cheese rinds, thyme, and parsley. Add enough water just to cover. Bring to boil; reduce heat to medium-low, cover, and simmer 2 hours, stirring occasionally. Strain, discarding solids in strainer. Return broth to saucepan. Boil over medium-high heat until reduced to 1 1/2 cups, about 15 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. DO AHEAD: Can be made 2 days ahead. Cover and chill. Rewarm before using, whisking to blend.

Make risotto:

Place first 5 ingredients in double layer of cheesecloth; gather ends. Tie tightly with kitchen string; trim excess cloth.

Bring chicken and beef broths to simmer in medium saucepan. Cover and keep warm. Melt butter in large saucepan over medium heat. Add herb bundle, onion, and garlic. Cook until onion is soft, stirring occasionally, about 5 minutes. Add rice and stir to coat. Add wine; increase heat to high. Boil until almost dry, about 6 minutes. Add warm broth mixture 1 cup at a time, allowing each addition to be absorbed before adding next and stirring often until rice is tender but still firm to bite, about 20 minutes. Add truffle butter, verjus, parsley, and chives. Stir until butter is melted. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Divide risotto among bowls. Pour 1/4 cup warm parmesan broth around risotto in each bowl and serve.

 

Wine suggestion:  
a White wine : a DO Penedes - Loxarel Cora-Muscat/Chardonnay- 2005 - The acidity and the alcohol are well-balanced. Its aftertaste is persistent and with fruit notes. Flowery, roses and honeysucklem with aromas that remind us of Muscat grapes. Dry fruit appears, represented by hazelnut.

The fresh grape aromas entertain a nice pasta, risotto or paella dish

Bon appétit

FFP Team

(recipe by : Douglas Keane - photo by : Noel Barnhurst)

Posted under Gourmet by admin on Friday 30 October 2009 at 20:08

Roast Turkey with Black-Truffle Butter and White-Wine Gravy

Turkey with Truffle

 
Recipe Summary :

Difficulty : Medium
Active time : 45 min
Total time : 3 1/2 hrs
Yield : 8 servings
 
 
   

   

 

 

When food editor Shelley Wiseman was asked to develop a recipe for an over-the-top turkey, she began by rubbing truffle butter under its skin. “It’s a cheap shot,” she admitted, “but it’s damn delicious.” We all agreed—it’s the best turkey most of us have ever tasted. The butter, an excellent carrier of that unmistakable truffle flavor, moistens the turkey’s meat and crisps its skin during a high-heat roast. For this splendid centerpiece, a nuanced French shallot-wine sauce is just the thing.                    

Ingredients :                          

 
  • 1 (12-to 14-pound) turkey at room temperature 1 hour, neck and giblets (excluding liver) reserved for turkey stock
  • 6 ounces black-truffle butter*, softened, divided
  • 3 cups water, divided
  • 1/2 cup finely chopped shallots
  • 2 cups dry white wine
  • 4 cups hot classic turkey stock
  • 5 tablespoons all-purpose flour

(*) Makes 1/4 pound (1/2 cup) of truffle butter.
Ingredients: 8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter
1 ounce fresh black truffle, coarsely-grated
1 teaspoon sea salt
In a small mixing bowl, combine the unsalted butter, grated black truffles, and sea salt. Fold together. You can certainly add more truffles. Place the compound butter in the middle of a large swathe of plastic wrap. Form into a log and wrap tight. Store in the refrigerator. Will keep several months.

Equipment: kitchen string; a 17-by 14-inch flameproof roasting pan with a flat rack; a 2-quart measuring cup or a fat separator.

 

How to cook :

 
 Preheat oven to 450°F with rack in lower third.Rinse turkey inside and out and pat dry. Working from large cavity end, gently run your fingers between skin and meat to loosen skin, being careful not to tear skin. Push two thirds of truffle butter (4 ounces) under skin, including thighs and drumsticks, and massage skin from outside to spread butter evenly. Mix 2 1/2 teaspoons salt and 1 1/2 teaspoons pepper in a small bowl and sprinkle it evenly in turkey cavities and all over skin. Fold neck skin under body, then tuck wing tips under breast and tie drumsticks together with string.Put turkey on rack in roasting pan and pour in 2 cups water. Roast, rotating pan 180 degrees after 1 hour of roasting and adding remaining cup water, until an instant-read thermometer inserted into fleshy part of each thigh (test both; close to but not touching bone) registers 170°F, 1 3/4 to 2 hours total.Carefully tilt turkey so juices from inside large cavity run into pan. Transfer turkey to a platter and let stand, uncovered, 30 minutes (temperature of thigh meat will rise to 175 to 180°F). Discard string.Strain pan juices through a fine-mesh sieve into 2-quart measuring cup and skim off fat (or use a fat separator), reserving fat. Straddle roasting pan across 2 burners and cook shallots in 1/4 cup reserved fat over medium heat, stirring, until golden, about 2 minutes. Add wine and boil, stirring and scraping up brown bits, until mixture is reduced to about 1 cup, 5 to 8 minutes.Add enough turkey stock to reserved pan juices to bring total to 4 cups, then add to wine mixture and bring to a boil. Strain through a fine-mesh sieve into a 2-to 3-quarts heavy saucepan, pressing on and then discarding solids, and bring to a boil.Mix flour with remaining 2 ounces truffle butter to make a paste, then add to boiling sauce, whisking until thickened. Simmer, whisking occasionally, 3 to 5 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.Serve turkey with gravy.

Cooks’ notes: • Butter can be put under skin 1 day ahead; chill turkey, covered with plastic wrap. Let stand at room temperature 1 hour before roasting.

• Flour paste (with truffle butter) can be made 1 day ahead and chilled.

 

Wine suggestion:

 
 a Red wine : AOC Bordeaux Superior - Chateau Le Grand Verdus 2003 - Merlot/Cabernet This estate is regulary recognized by wine tasters to be amongst the very best Bordeaux Superieur. This vintage received a Silver Medal at the Concours General de l’Agriculture de Paris 2003.Food Matching : Matching an extensive range of dishes including braised, grilled or roasted beef, pork, lamb and poultry, but also meat-based or vegetable-based pastas, smoked ham, pate. As for Asian food, it can match fried rices, Asian style spaghetti and not too spicy curries.

Bon appétit

Brice

(recipe by Shelley Wiseman - photo by: John Kernick)

Posted under Gourmet, Special Events by admin on Thursday 1 October 2009 at 02:49

Spicy Sauteed Fish with Olives and Cherry Tomatoes

Spicy fish olives tomatoes

Recipe Summary :

Difficulty : Easy

Active time : 30 min

Yield : 4 servings

Candida Sportiello writes: “As owner and chef of Il Giardino restaurant, on the tiny island of Ventotene off the coast of Naples, I’ve been cooking professionally for twenty-five years — but I’ve been cooking for pleasure for a good fifty years. As is the Italian way, most of my favorite recipes were handed down from my mother and grandmother, so they date from the early 1900s.”
“I love having so many amazing ingredients at my fingertips on Ventotene: fish, lentils, wild asparagus, mushrooms, fava beans, and artichokes. They make it easy to produce home-style cooking at its best.”

Ingredients :

How to cook :

Heat olive oil in heavy large skillet over medium-high heat. Sprinkle fish with salt and pepper. Add half of fish to skillet and sauté until just opaque in center, about 3 minutes per side. Transfer fish to platter. Repeat with remaining fish. Add parsley and crushed red pepper to same skillet; sauté 1 minute. Add tomatoes, olives, and garlic; sauté until tomatoes are soft and juicy, about 2 minutes. Season sauce with salt and pepper; spoon over fish.

Wine suggestion:

a White wine : a AOC Alsace - Tokay Pinot Gris A. Schrer- 2004 - Reserve Particuliere - Powerful and round wine, rich, full bodied with the complex flavors, with its long finish it often advantageously replaces a red wine with the white meats and game. Its richness makes it pair well with grilled fish, but also beef, lamb, pork and even braised game. It also goes down well with up to medium-spicy Asian dishes. Then it’s the perfect wine for this succulent dish..

Bon appétit

Brice

(recipe by Candida Sportiello - photo by: Dasha Wright Ewing)

Posted under fish by admin on Wednesday 2 September 2009 at 01:14

Seafood and Ricotta Cannelloni

Crab and Ricotta Cannelloni
Recipe Summary :

Difficulty : Easy

Active time : 25 min

Start to finish : 45 min

Yield : 6 servings

Delicately flavored version of the Italian specialty, loaded with crab meat, spinach, and ricotta and topped with a smooth béchamel sauce.


Ingredients :



How to cook :


Cook pasta according to package directions. Drain and cool slightly. In a large bowl, mix together the ricotta, grated parmesan cheese, egg yolk, basil, spinach, salt and pepper. Preheat oven to 350° F. Fill cooked pasta noodles with the crab meat mixture and place in a greased baking dish. Melt butter oven medium heat in a saucepan. Add flour and whisk until smooth. Gradually add in the milk, whisking constantly, until the sauce is thick, smooth and creamy. Do not boil. Whisk in cheese. When melted, remove from heat, stir in salt, pepper, nutmeg and red pepper. Pour the sauce over the noodles and sprinkle with 1/2 cup of parmesan cheese. Bake until bubbly and slightly browned, approximately 15-20 minutes. Serve hot.

Note: you may want to spoon a small amount of the sauce in the bottom of the pan before adding the pasta shells to help keep them from sticking to the pan.

Wine suggestion:


a White wine : a AOC Muscadet - Chateau de Souche - Muscadet sur Lie - 2003 - Muscadet (or Melon de Bourgogne - Muscadet grape produces wines that are at their best with seafood. Indeed, the “sur Lie” technique produces a blend of freshness, neutrality and soft texture that makes it the perfect seafood wine. Perfect with grilled, steamed, baked or raw seafood and fish. Also enjoyable with non-vinegarish salads, scrambled eggs and seafood or white meat based pasta, risotto and fried rices.

Bon appétit

Brice

(recipe by RecipeTips.com)

Posted under Pasta, Seafood by admin on Saturday 1 August 2009 at 04:18

Italian Chicken Salad

Italian Chicken Salad
Recipe Summary :


Difficulty : Easy

Active time : 35 min

Start to finish : 35 min

Yield : 4 main-course servings


Ingredients :

For Croutons

For Vinaigrette

For Salad

  • 2 cups coarsely shredded cooked chicken (1/2 lb; from a rotisserie chicken or from the “Rubbed and Sauced Barbecued Baby Chickens” recipe below)
  • 1 cup bocconcini (small fresh mozzarella balls; 6 oz)
  • 2 hearts of romaine (3/4 lb total), torn into bite-size pieces
  • 1 (8-oz) jar roasted red peppers, rinsed, drained, and cut lengthwise into 1/4-inch-wide strips
  • 1 cup assorted marinated brine-cured olives (5 oz)


How to cook :

Make croutons
Put oven rack in middle position and preheat oven to 400°F.

Toss bread cubes with oil and salt in a large shallow baking pan and spread in 1 layer. Bake, turning over once, until golden and crisp, about 8 minutes. Cool in pan on a rack.

Make vinaigrette and begin preparing salad while croutons bake
Whisk together all vinaigrette ingredients except oil in a small bowl until combined. Add oil in a slow stream, whisking until emulsified.

Toss chicken and bocconcini together with 1/4 cup vinaigrette in a bowl and let stand 10 minutes to allow flavors to develop.

Make salad
Toss together romaine, red peppers, olives, chicken and bocconcini mixture, croutons, and remaining vinaigrette in a large bowl until combined.


Wine suggestion:

a Rosé wine : a VDP Corsica - Marestagno - 2004 - Niellucciu / Grenache / Cinsault - This rosé is lightly pressed and fermented at a low temperature to keep its natural aroma of its hot and arid soil. Lively and fruity, with a hint of orange, and finished with a hint of berries. This medium-dry and quite tannic rosé is best enjoyed as nan aperitif or with grilled meat, pasta, and, of course, salad.

Bon appétit

Brice
(recipe photo by: Romulo Yanes)

Posted under Chicken, Salad by admin on Sunday 31 May 2009 at 10:45

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