15 February 2011

From the Chef ~ Aglio Olio, Southern Italian Soul Food

Here is an old favorite from my family repertoire - simple, easy, satisfying.  Published April-May, 2007, in Casa Fiore #29, please enjoy this one from the archives!


  Surrounding the rosary and funeral of our patriarch Adamo Rossetti, we celebrated his nearly 91 years of gusto for life by cooking up his favorite dish in his Capitol Hill kitchen at breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

This simple and essential, salt-of-the-earth dish harkens back to the blood of my Southern Italian roots. Each time we prepare aglio olio we pay homage to Auntie Rose, Grandma Carm, Pop, Na Nan, and Grandpa Rossetti, the crazy old man on 18th East, all straight out of Carbonara and Valenzano near Bari in the south. Aglio olio typifies what much of the general public views as quintessentially Italian food:  garlic, anchovies, parsley, olive oil, and pastasciutt’. I’ve had this dish spruced up with a handful of capers or edgy olives, chopped tomatoes or mushrooms, hot pepper, and other additives, but this bare-bones rendition is the preparation I favor most.

1. Boil water for 1 lb. of dry pasta, which is preferred over its fresh counterpoint for this dish. Mince lots of garlic—6-8 large cloves at least. Sauté over lowest heat in a pan generously coated in olive oil (1/3 cup) until translucent.
2. Pat oil from 1 tin of anchovies, chop coarsely, and add to garlic. Sauté until anchovies melt. Throw pasta into boiling water. Throw a large handful of chopped parsley into garlic-anchovy-oil sauce.
3. Drain pasta when al dente (or literally, “at the teeth”, firm and not soft and soggy), reserving a couple of tbsp. of the water. Then mix pasta, sauce, and water together and, if you like, season with spoonfuls of pecorino romano cheese. Give a big smile for Grandpa Rossetti and enjoy!

03 February 2011

"Casa Fiore's Cucina" Cooking Class was a Success!

Thanks to all who attended and made this event a great success!  I enjoyed sharing with you some of my favorite dishes and hope you left with some new dishes that you can try at home.  We had a blast and hope you did, too! 

Tante belle cose, Fiore










28 January 2011

From the Chef ~ Notes from the Riviera: Penne alla Polpa di Granchio



Like learning a language, the best way to grasp a foreign kitchen is to just go there and eat.  And that is what I do wherever I go—whether it’s pomegranate juice and tahini in the streets of Cairo or grilled chorizo in a Oaxacan market or pizza, pasta, and focaccia anywhere in Italy.  Whatever the risk (and, yes, I have paid dearly for my adventuresome ways!), the reward is always greater when indulging in and comprehending the palette of another nation.  I eat and drink—and when it’s particularly memorable, I shoot a photo and even take notes.  Here’s one of those memorable meals from my diaries… Pasta with a Rosé Crab Sauce.  I had this plate of pasta circa July, 1998, in Corniglia, the middle and smallest—and my favorite—town of the famous Cinque Terre along the Italian Riviera.  I’ve recreated this one a few times and it pleasurably evokes that dish before me long ago.  Here are the notes that draw me back to that pranzo  humid high-80s day, damp swim trunks and a backpack, a rustic Mediterranean hamlet atop vine-covered hills that plummet instantly to the sea, a great plate of pasta.  An afternoon at Cecio’s, a ma-and-pa trattoria with pasta al pesto, wine from the hills, and fresh, grilled, whole branzino smiling at you.  Here are my notes, here’s my educated guess for you...

1. Heat water and prepare 1 lb. of pasta, preferably fresh.
2. Meanwhile, sauté a bit of minced onion or shallot (1/2 cup?) in some olive oil until translucent but not browned.
3. Add some pureed tomato (one 28 oz. can?) and simmer on medium for a bit to release some of the liquid (5 min.).
4. Add some cream (1/2 cup?  if we were in Italia, it’d be panna) and cook a bit to release some of the liquid.  Now add some crab meat (1/3 lb.?) and heat until just warm.
5. Add some fresh thyme and parsley—basil and a splash of cream sherry would be truly a decadent alternative.  Add al dente pasta and cook together briefly.  Serve and enjoy!











27 January 2011

Casa Fiore #57: Published and in the Mail!

This month's offerings include:
  • From the Chef:  Notes from the Riviera - Penne al Polpo di Granchio
  • Real Estate Need-2-Know 2011:  Seattle residential median prices for 2010
  • Referral Thank Yous
Stay tuned to CasaFioreOnline.com for the web release of selected articles.  Care to join the hundreds who receive their own old fashioned, snail-mail version at your doorstep?  Send along your address and let me know!