Once
again, it’s the month of May in Indianapolis, and things are FINALLY starting
to warm up. That means one thing: it’s sandal weather! And the festivities are
already starting. School is starting to wind down a bit; the primary elections
are on Tuesday; work is going well; the Indy 500 is turning everything black
and white checkered across the city; and everyone on the interstates thinks
they are practicing for the race.
It may be from San Marino, but it's colors almost looks Italian. |
Normal
people would be spending the day outside, but I never claimed to be normal.
Instead, I’m going to make some amazing food today. I’m starting with Piadina
Romagnola. In a large bowl, I combined 4 c of all-purpose flour and 1 tsp salt.
Then I mixed in 1 1/4 c of milk, 4 Tbsp of olive oil, and 2 tsp baking powder.
I kneaded the dough for about 10 minutes until it was smooth and soft. I formed
it into a ball and covered it in plastic wrap, letting it rest for about a half
hour at room temperature. Then I divided it into 8 balls and let my son flatten
them out into disks that were about ¼” thick or so. Some were circles, some
were ovals, but it was all good. In a heated skillet on medium-heat, I cooked
each disk until it started to brown on one side and flipped it to cook the same
on the other. Once they were cooled, I folded it in half kind of like a pita,
and filled it with ricotta chese, sopressata, and arugula. This was really
good. It was almost like a street food or a quick lunch kind of thing. I could
eat a couple of these for lunch and be good.
Definitely a meat-lovers version of pasta. |
My
main dish is Sammarinese Ragú Bolognese, and it certainly took the most time. I
heated butter and oil in a large sauce pan over medium-high heat. Then I added
in my chopped chicken livers, ground pork, and ground beef until all the meat
was browned. I strained the meat into a bowl, and then dumped half of the
drippings. I poured the other half of the drippings back into the pot and added
in some chopped onion, garlic, diced celery, shredded carrots, 4 cans of diced
tomatoes, chopped sage leaves, and red pepper flakes. I let it cook for about
10 minutes until they were soft but not browned. At that point, I added my meat
back into the pot along with some milk, red wine, chicken stock, and bay
leaves. I brought everything to a boil before reducing the heat and set the lid
ajar for steam to escape. The recipe said to let this cook for 3 hours, but I
let mine only cook for about 2 1/2 hours, stirring occasionally. During the
last half hour when the sauce was thickened, I added in a cup of heavy whipping
cream, a little bit of soy sauce, some Worcestershire sauce, a little basil and
parsley, salt and pepper. After I let this all simmer for another 20 minutes, I
served this over linguine. I really enjoyed this, albeit it seemed a little
oily. I think the wine flavor and the livers in the sauce kind of turned off my
son, who normally likes spaghetti with marinara sauce, but my daughter ate all
of hers.
This is the best kind of salad I can think of. |
To
go with this, I made Nutty Rocket Salad. Apparently, rocket is another word for
arugula (I had never heard the term rocket).
To mix the salad itself, I mixed together some arugula and baby spinach and
sliced radishes. In a separate bowl, I mixed together my pecans and walnut
pieces along with some pomegranate seeds and a little bit of cayenne pepper,
tossing everything together. I added the nut mix to the greens and added in
some feta cheese and some sopressata (that I had lightly sautéed to make
crispy). I tossed everything together. For the vinaigrette, I heated my oil in
a small saucepan and added in my garlic. Once it was browned, I removed it from
the heat. Then I slowly added in balsamic vinegar, brown sugar, salt, and
pepper. I put it back on the heat and stirred everything together for just
about a minute or so, just enough to blend the flavors. I took it off the heat
again and let it cool before drizzling it on the salad. I really enjoyed this.
I think pomegranates and feta cheese were meant for each other. And the nuts in
it went well with the arugula.
What's not to love about this? It was amazing. I kind of wish I ate a whole one instead of sharing with my daughter. |
And
finally I made my own version of Torta Tre Monti. From what I gathered, it’s
most famously made by one bakery in San Marino. However, I bought some pizzelle
waffle wafers and coated one side with a thin layer of Nutella. I added another
layer and did the same thing. Then I added on more layer on top (so that I had
3 layers total). Then I coated the outer edges with Nutella as well. It has
been pretty warm and humid today, so it was a little melty, but it was tasty
nonetheless. I should have laid them on some wax paper and put them in the
refrigerator to cool and harden the Nutella a bit. But I ate it way to quickly
to think about doing something like that.
Overall, this was a fantastic meal! |
One
of the things that I saw San Marino was known for was their wine production. I
didn’t make it over to my local wine shop to see if they had any, but it’s
probably ok that I didn’t. I read later on that most wine from San Marino
doesn’t get exported out, even to Italy! One day, I’d love to drink my way
around the world. Instead, I’ll just have to drink and read books on my couch
instead.
Up
next: São Tomé and Principe
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