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Wednesday, 27 November 2019

♧ STAIRWAY GARDEN ♧






Hello and welcome back on my blog! Climate has changed, temperatures have dropped: it is winter already! With such a cold and rainy weather I started taking in all the plants that I want to save for next year, starting with my eureka pepper! 
Many people think that chili peppers are just seasonal plants, and it is just their destiny to die when the seasons change. But that's wrong! You can keep your beloved chili pepper plant alive for several years if you take it inside your home (or you put it into a greenhouse, or at least you cover it with a TNT cover) when the temperatures fall under 10°C. 
In the building where I live, in winter, the stairway becomes a beautiful garden with all the plants that the many families who live here, bring in for winter! Personally I like to show off with weird shaped or colorful peppers! Also that's so much fun for my neighbour's cat, who usually spends much time playing on the stairs, because it feels like playing in a garden! 
But where is chili peppers there also come aphids -ALWAYS: somehow they know it and eventually they'll come. So this year I tried to plant inside, in another vase, tagetes or marigolds, and as you see, they might be already be sprouting. This summer they did wonders in keeping aphids away from my peppers and I didn't need to spray them not even once! 


Actually I planted in the same vase marigolds and arugula (I love arugula and in winter I so miss it, so I tried to make them grow together) so I do not really know who is actually sprouting there! 
Let's wait and see! 
Thank you for reading and wish you all a lovely new week! 👩‍🌾🌱  

Thursday, 21 November 2019

♡ ZUCCHINE RIPIENE ♡






🔝🇬🇧FOR THE ENGLISH TRANSLATION SELECT THE LANGUAGE IN THE SLIDE OVER THE POST! 🇬🇧🔝

Oggi scriverò nella mia lingua, in italiano!
Prima di tutto... vi piace la mia nuova tovaglia? Tutta sulle sfumature di un bellissimo blu turchese brillante: a me piace moltissimo! Dicono che colori come il blu o come il verde non andrebbero usati in un contesto di cucina e ristorazione perché farebbero "passare la fame" o bloccherebbero la digestione. 
Direi <<meglio, così mangio meno!>>, ma alla fine, personalmente, non ho notato particolari differenze relativamente a una tovaglia rossa, o arancione! 
Invece il colore freddo e brillante di questa tovaglia conferisce serenità e distensione.
Comunque, veniamo alla ricetta di oggi!
Qualche giorno fa, mia mamma mi dice: <<avevo comprato queste zucchine tonde ma non trovo il tempo... Vuoi prepararle tu?>> 
E così, in una giornata in cui dovevo uscire a camminare, al rientro farmi la tinta, e andare a letto presto sapendo di avere una lezione la mattina dopo, tuttavia mi sono data da fare per riuscire a preparare anche quelsta ricetta prima che gli ingredienti andassero a male. Inutile dire che quando ormai avevo le zucchine tutte pronte in forno da mezz'ora, mia mamma si lamenta perché non ho eseguito questa e quella operazione che fa sempre lei e che io non sapevo di dover fare 😅
Ma al di là di queste sue iniziali critiche, il risultato finale è stato comunque delizioso e le critiche si sono rivelate soltanto preoccupazioni infondate dovute a un diverso approccio alla cucina! 😉
Dunque, ecco qui la mia ricetta: fatemi sapere se la proverete e se vi piacerà. Suggerimenti e critiche costruttive sono sempre bene accette! Ma ricordarevi: io non sono una chef, sono solo una semplice ragazza che si diverte a cucinare e condividere le proprie ricette! Un giorno mi però mi piacerebbe raccogliere in un libro tutte le mie creazioni,  per semplici e imperfette che siano, rendendole fruibili così a molte più persone. Perché la cucina è qualcosa che va condiviso. Perché va bene cucinare per sé stessi, ma quanto è più bello e divertente condividere un buon pasto in compagnia! Dicono anzi, che il cibo sia più buono quando consumato in compagnia! 

Ingredienti:


  • 3 zucchine tonde (una zucchina per persona, nel caso aumentare le dosi)
  • 300g carne macinata mista
  • 30g provolone dolce (grattuggiato)
  • 50g grana padano oppure parmigiano reggiano grattuggiato
  • 3 cucchiai di cipolla dorata tritata
  • 30g couscous secco
  • 1 cucchiaio di pesto rosso
  • 1 cucchiaio di olio evo + olio q.b.
  • 3 cucchiaini di curry
  • 2 cucchiai di salsa di soia (oppure sale q.b.)
  • 1 cucchiaino di dado alle verdure (oppure 1 tazza di brodo di verdura)
  • 2 cucchiaini di menta secca (oppure un mazzetto di menta fresca tritata)
  •  Succo di limone q.b.
  • 1 tazza di acqua calda (se non si usa il brodo)
🥕SE SEI VEGETARIANO: ti consiglio di sostituire la carne con 3 cucchiai di pangrattato e mezza scatoletta di funghetti trifolati, o pomodorini secchi!


Procedimento:

  1. Innanzitutto prepariamo il couscous, magari con un giorno di anticipo. Io mescolo in una piccola ciotola il couscous, 1 cucchiaino di curry, 1 cucchiaio di olio evo, il pesto rosso, 2 cucchiaini di salsa di soia, una spruzzatina di limone e il dado di verdure (se non si usa il brodo); poi aggiungo acqua calda (o il brodo se non ho usato il dado), copro con un piattino e lascio riposare finché la parte liquida non sarà stata completamente assorbita.
  2. Dopo aver lavato le zucchine, taglio via il cappello mettendolo da parte, e aiutandomi con un cucchiaio le svuoto lasciando un bordo alto circa 5mm. Online dicono di sbollentare le zucchine prima di questa operazione, ma io mi sono trovata benissimo anche senza sbollentarle
  3. Passare con una goccia di limone l'interno delle zucchine per non farle annerire, e allo stesso modo aggiungere qualche goccia di limone alla polpa che avevamo scavato col cucchiaio.
  4. Trito la polpa delle zucchine molto finemente ma grossolanamente con una mezzaluna. Deve essere molto fine ma non una "pappa" come diventerebbe con io tritatutto. Poi la sposto in una grossa ciotola con ancora una spruzzata di limone per evitare l'ossidazione.
  5. Nella ciotola aggiungo alla polpa delle zucchine, il parmigiano, il provolone, il couscous, la cipolla, la menta, il curry rimanente e la salsa di soia rimanente (oppure aggiustare di sale). Io aggiungo anche una goccia di olio per mantenere il ripieno morbido. Amalgamare molto bene il composto che diventerà il ripieno. Se dovesse risultare un composto troppo molle vi consiglio di aggiungere un cucchiaio di formaggio grattuggiato o di pangrattato 
  6. A questo punto mia mamma consiglia di massaggiare un pizzico di sale all'interno delle zucchine... 
  7. Riempire le zucchine con il composto e spolverare con pangrattato e formaggio grattuggiato. Disporre in cima alla zucchina ripiena anche una nocciolina di burro o margarina 
  8. Foderare una teglia con cartaforno e disporvi le zucchine SENZA il cappello
  9. Secondo consiglio di mia mamma: a questo punto mettere un dito di acqua e olio o acqua e vino bianco sul fondo della teglia per creare umidità. Io dissento: per i miei gusti, acqua e vino bianco darebbe un sapore troppo forte e acido alla verdura, che mal si sposa agli altri sapori... al massimo acqua e olio o acqua e curry. Ma come potete vedere dalla foto, anche senza aggiungere umidità, le zucchine faranno fuoriuscire acqua in cottura. 
  10. Cuocere in forno per 30minuti a 180°C - 200°C, poi coprire con il cappello e proseguire la cottura per altri 20minuti. Fare una prova stecchino per capire se la cottura è sufficiente e controllare che la parete delle zucchine sia diventata tenera prima di tirare fuori dal forno. Volendo si può lasciare in forno caldo spento fino al raffreddamento, oppure si può conservare in frigorifero e riscaldare il giorno dopo. A mio parere sono più buone il giorno dopo, servite calde!

Allora, che ne dite? Se volete fatemi sapere qui sotto nei commenti o su instagram! 
Buona settimana a tutti! 

Friday, 15 November 2019

♡ MY OKRA RECIPE ♡





Hi, and welcome back on my blog for this week's recipe! This is the last harvest of my beloved okra burgundy, so I prepared it in my favorite way, that I'm going to share with you because it is really easy but delicious. In Italy okra is not a common vegetable and most people, just by watching, end up mistaking okra for some kind of chili pepper. Also Italian people frequently find a little gross the peculiar stickiness of this vegetable, so even if they try it once, they won't eat it a 2nd time easily...
The problem is that the few Italians trying this vegetable for the 1st time, ask the grocer (who usually is not Italian) what this vegetable tastes like and how to cook it, and the grocer, in good faith, usually answers "like zucchini" on its own taste... but it is actually not like zucchini, and so, the Italian costumer gets a bad impression, when he cooks it like he would cook zucchini and gets such a different result, both in taste and consistency (not to talk about the stickiness).
On the opposite this vegetable is so good for many different reasons: it is very easy to grow, as it needs no specific cure, makes wonderful flowers, and most of all okra is rich in vitamins, minerals and nutrients. In particular,  it seems that it contains a good amount of folic acid! And this good nutrients are to be found in that sticky fluid that not everybody appreciate.

BUT there are also recipes to enjoy this vegetable without without that strange feel of stickiness, as this one that I'm going to share with you!
The result is yummy, soft inside and crispy outside, with a spicy but also delicate taste, that I bet you are gonna love!
For this recipe you will need to do everything quite quickly, so I suggest you to prepare all the ingredients near yourself before start.

Ingredients:
- fresh okra
- 1 little bowl of instant polenta (or corn flour)
- 1teaspoon of baking powder
- 2teaspoons of curry powder
- cold sparkling water or cold beer
- 1 little bowl of breadcrumbs
- oil for frying purpose q.s.
- salt and pepper q.s.

Recipe:

  1. Get ready on the fire a little fryingpan with hot oil for frying purpose. I suggest you to use something very little because you will need to make a layer of oil, deep at least 2-3cm for a perfect fry. 
  2. In a little bowl make a batter with instant polenta, 1teaspoon of baking powder, 1teaspoon of curry powder, salt and pepper q.s. and enough cold sparkling water or beer (even better!!!) to make the batter creamy but not liquid. IT IS VERY IMPORTANT THAT YOU USE CORN FLOUR OR POLENTA because other kinds of flour, unfortunately, will absorb too much the sticky fluid of okra, and you will get a dampish effect which is not very yummy...  
  3. In another little bowl mix together some breadcrumbs and one teaspoon of curry powder.
  4. When you have all your bowls ready, prepare a dish with some absorbent paper, and when the oil is hot you can start. 
  5. Do all the following very quickly, but fry no more that 3 pieces at a time: cut your okra in small pieces, dip them into the batter one at a time, and then, very quickly, roll them into some bread crumbs (again one at a time). Then fry them in the hot oil no more than 3 pieces at a time, and take them out with a skimmer as they turn golden and crispy. 
  6. Let them drain on the paper and serve immediately! 

No sticky fluids, just delicious crispy vegetable bites: will you try this recipe? Let me know if you like them in the comments!
Wish you a nice weekend!

Sunday, 3 November 2019

♧ RISOTTO BLU ♧



No synthetic dyes, wonderful colours and a recipe made 4 hands with a dear friend.

When I 1st talked to my friend Rossana about my blue risotto she was just back from Japan, visiting her parents. The photo that I showed her was not that good, since my camera could not get the actual colour of the dish, but she got very interested anyway and told me that it reminded her of something that she had in Japan. It was "zomramen"(=zombie+ramen), a grey-is /blue-ish ramen of which colour gave the dish its peculiar name.
About me I had never thought about zombies while creating, instead I was thinking about the beautiful spring colours including blue, and the "magic" trick turning the risotto from pink to blue with a sprinckle of sodium bicarbonate!
But Rossana's observation gave me the idea to post this recipe during the halloween week! So here we are... trick or treat? 👻

Me and Rossana came out with 2different versions of the dish both very delicious... and actually, in my opinion, you could also mix both!

Let's start with my own version.
If possible use "vialone nano" quality rice, but if you cannot find this quality where you live, please use some rice for risotto purpose rice.

INGREDIENTS:

70g rice per person
Water double the amount of rice
A pinch of salt
A pinch of pepper
A lot of gorgonzola cheese according to your taste (I'd say around 30-50g)
Cooked champignon mushrooms (I used canned ones)
1 cup of thinly minced red cabbage
1/3 teaspoon of sodium bicarbonate

RECIPE
Actually there are two ways of cooking rice, the 1st one is simpler, the 2nd one is more difficult. Feel free to try the one you like more. If you have rice cooker you can just put in water, rice, salt, bicarbonate and cabbage and let the machine do the cooking.

Cooking way #1


  • Prepare a pot with hot salty water
  • In a fryingpan put the red cabbage, mix it with the sodium bicarbonate until it changes colour, add the rice, and mix
  • In the fryingpan add the hot water one spoon at a time until the rice is perfectly cooked and creamy dry
  • Add to the rice gorgonzola cheese and the mushrooms and mix well together until creamy. 
  • If the colour gets pink again, you can add another pinch of bicarbonate (JUST A LITTLE!) and mix again.
  • Decorate with mushrooms and serve.

Cooking way #2
  • In a pot put water exactly double the amount of rice, with the cabbage, sodium bicarbonate and a pinch of salt
  • When the water is boiling add the rice right in the middle of the pot to create a pyramid peeping out of the water of just one inch
  • Let cook for the time reported on the box then turn off the fire
  • Cover the rice and wait 10 more minutes until the water has completely dry
  • Now add gorgonzola cheese, mushrooms and a pinch of pepper 
  • Complete as in cooking way#1

When I talked with Rossana she pointed out that crispy bacon or crispy speck would have been great on it, and also she said that she didn't like gorgonzola that much, so she proposed to use taleggio cheese or camembert cheese instead

Rossana's version:

INGREDIENTS:

70g rice for risotto purpose (Roma rice) per person
Water double the amount the rice
Salt&pepper q.s.
A lot of Taleggio cheese or Camembert cheese (according to your taste)
1 cup of thinly minced red cabbage
Crispy bacon or crispy speck stripes

  • Cook the rice as in cooking way#1
  • Add the cheese you have chosen
  • If needed add a little (A LITTLE!) more sodium bicarbonate to fix the colour
  • Add the crispy bacon/speck stripes on top and serve!

Both versions are delicious, but which one did you like most? 😊
I really thank Rossana for trying and sharing with me not only the delicious version of my recipe that she made, but also for having allowed me to use the beautiful photograph of her dish that I posted as this post cover. Unfortunately I'm not as good as she is in taking photographs and even if I tried so hard my pictures were awful and absolutely couldn't get the actual colour of the dish. You can see my pictures down here: as you see it looks grey but it is actually blue! 😂

Let me and Rossana know which version you liked most or tried here in the comments! 
As always have fun and wish you a wonderful week! 😄






  

♡ LEFTOVERS RICE CAKE ♡



9 october is my dad's birthday, and I remember when I posted about dad's b.day last year 😊 this year we had a relaxed meal at home with dad's favourite foods. But we had no cake! Actually mom had bought one, but dad already ate it the day before for breakfast, the glutton! 😂 So I tried to cook something with what I had in the fridge: it was so delicious that we almost ate the whole cake at once! It is made with rice and glutenfree flour leftovers, so if you're celiac you can enjoy it too (but if you're not celiac you can use any flour 😉)! Recipe: mince one dish of about 150g of boiled rice (even if it is already seasoned with oil and a pinch of salt it's ok!) in the mixer until it is a sticky cream. You can add a drop of milk to help it mix well. In a bowl mix well 60g of ricotta cheese (or other cream cheese with light flavour) with 3spoons of cane sugar. Add 30g of bitter cocoa, the sticky rice, 4spoons of flour, baking powder, 2 spoons of oil, half glass of milk (more if needed), 30g of chocolate drops and 1 egg. Bake at 180°C, for 45mins then turn off the oven and wait until cold. It is very delicious but also light! Will you try it? If so let me know if you like it! Wish you a wonderful week!



Saturday, 28 September 2019

♡THE BOLD AND THE BEAUTIFUL♡


Finally, after a long time, I'm back with my SaturdayGardening column!

It's almost October but my balcony is in full bloom! After the too torrid days of this summer, when all my little plants were suffering for the too much heat, now that the temperatures lowered and became nicely warm, all the plants on my balcony started producing amazing flowers!
Usually my gardening posts are about veggies, but this time I decided to dedicate this saturday post to my flowers (well, there is also a pepper, but it was so colourful!), because flowers have a deep importance in calling bees (that we know are so important to our environment!), keeping away harmful insects, and cheering up our mood!


Actually you can also cook with some flowers, in facts there are delicious recipes made with rose and marygold's petals, but for now I just want to enjoy their beauty!


Do you remember the little melange roses that I had for 50cents because the shop wanted to throw them away? Still gorgeously blooming this season too!


This year, marygolds have helped me out incredibly: they have been a real surprise, I didn't know that this beautiful flower can keep away aphids so well! For who has experience in growing peppers, you know that this plant is very easy on getting attacked by aphids, but this time, by chance, I had peppers surrounded by marygolds and guess what, for the 1st time in years, I didn't have to spray chili peppers not even once! Not a single aphid to be seen even nearby 😲 also I've noticed aphids  keeping a 30cm distance from marygolds. I did a rapid check online and noticed this special ability of this flowers and now I'm saving all the seeds that I can, because next year I want to surround every single veggie with this beautiful and helpful flowers!



Take a look at the following picture: perfectly clean and healthy chili peppers! Not an aphid!



Also you asked me about the little orchid that I posted some months ago: she has had a hard time a few days after she got to my place but now she's well and she even made new roots and a new little leaf! I guess she suffered the change from the shop to my home. It's the 1st time that an orchid lives so long and so well at my place and I'm so happy!

What I've learned is:
1) orchids love air conditioner's waste water or rain water, and hate the water from my tap
2) their soil must be completely dry before watering again
3) they need a sheltered place, bright but without direct light.

Until now I've kept her outside on a shelf on my north-facing balcony, and she appreciated, but now temperatures are lowering, so I've found for her a similar place inside home, in my kitchen. I hope she will be enjoying this new place too. I'll try my best again to make her survive winter: wish me good luck! 💪




Friday, 27 September 2019

♡ PURSLANE SAVORY PIE ♡






Last days of summer, I had a wonderful harvest of purslane, so I made this simple but delicious savory pie with it, and the good news is... you can cut it into pieces and freeze it into your freezer! When you don't know what to cook, you just take a piece out and defrost it in your microwave: it will be delicious, as just baked!



1. Wash your purslane (I had about 300g) and steam cook it for 10minutes.


2. Fry some onion until golden (depending on your taste. I used half onion)


3. When everything is cold, put them into a baking sheet with some greaseproof paper.


4. Make a liquid dough with 3 eggs, a spoon of grated pecorino or parmigiano reggiano cheese, 2 spoons of flour (I used 1 spoon more of corn flour because I had it leftover), 2spoons of bread crumbs (optional) 2 teaspoons of curry powder, 1 teaspoon of soy sauce, baking-powder and milk as much as needed to get to the right consistence.
5. Drop the dough in the baking sheet until all the purslane is covered.
6. Bake for 35minutes 200°C (check with a toothpick before turning off the oven) and... my trick is this: if it is cooked, I turn off the oven and leave the pie in overnight, or until the oven gets cold again. 😉

◇Tips: if you have it you can add garlic herb or chives, or even cooked nettle, they will give your pie an even more delicious taste! If you can't use diary products, you can use water with a spoon of oil instead of milk and skip grated cheese 😊 As always let me know if you try this recipe and if you like it! Thank you for reading! Wish you a wonderful week!


Wednesday, 11 September 2019

♡ BOILED MEAT LEFTOVERS RAGÔUT ♡




Today I went walking to burn the calories I ate this week and I'm just back home! As promised, here we go with a delicious recipe made with leftovers, are you ready? What to do with all that meat that remains after making homemade broth? I had some pieces saved in the fridge, so why not turning it into a delicious "ragôut" to season pasta? The secret with ragout is letting it cook for a very long time, up to a minimum of 3 to 6hours or even longer. Sunday was a cold rainy day, no chance to go out: the perfect time to try this experiment! I used some pieces of boiled meat that I saved in my freezer last spring, so, as always, I do not have the precise quantity, but I can say it was at least 400g of boiled meat, to which I added 100g more or less of guanciale bacon, all minced coarsely together. In a pot I fried with a drop of oil half onion, 1 carrot and a stalk of celery all coarsely chopped. Then I added the meat, let cook for a few minutes and then blended with a glass of red wine (I used negramaro wine). Then I added 2glasses of tomato sauce, 1spoon of tomato concentrate, 2 anchovies, a spoon of capers, 2 bay leaves, 10 to 15 juniper berries, some basil leaves (about the top of one branch), a pinch of salt and 200ml of water. I mixed all together and let cook covered, on over low heat (the lowest possible) for about 6hours, stirring from time to time, and adding water when needed. In the end I waited until cold and then freezed the ragôut in portions. By the way, yesterday night I defrosted one to season pasta. This time I used spelled tagliatelle noodles but any kind of pasta will be good! The result was very delicious: I suggest you to always mix the ragout with a spoon of the pasta's boiling water to get a more creamy consistence, also you can add some pecorino cheese grated on your dish, it will give it an even richer taste!

Thursday, 5 September 2019

◇ NEMO PROPHETA IN PATRIA SUA... so true! ◇

I always believed in that motto saying: 

"in a world where you can be anything, be kind" 

but unfortunately I have to say that this is not always possible. 
Sometimes, bad people, just think that if you're kind and respectful, then you're just stupid or an easy target to take advantage of. 
And in this way they force you to be the worst version of yourself in order not to get crushed. 
And this is the thing that I hate the most. 
From today on I change this motto into: 

"in a world where you can be anything, be kind... 
...towards who shows you respect, no matter what is your age, your race, your religion, your job, or your family's name" 

Monday, 2 September 2019

♡ SPAGHETTI GRANNY VIRGINIA ♡





Today I want to tell you about this recipe that has a deep meaning to me. This is spaghetti al pomodoro granny Virginia's way. When I was in middle school, there was no school canteen and we used to go back home, or to the restaurants nearby for lunch.
Virginia grandma used to live right in front of the school so every week, for lunch time, she used to cook for me this spaghetti. What makes this recipe special, let alone the memories, is a special ingredient that she used in the preparation of the sauce. In facts, usually tomato sauce is made with olive oil, but as North Italian, Virginia grandma used to grease the pan for pre-frying the onions and making the sauce with butter instead of oil.
A huge difference in cooking between North Italy and South Italy is the fact that North Italians prefer to cook with butter and South Italians prefer to use olive oil instead. This difference is something very ancient and comes from the fact that in the North of Italy it was quite difficult to grow olives trees because of climate reasons. This culinary gap shocked even Julius Cesar, who was once offered, in Milano, a dish of asparagus -his favourite vegetable- seasoned with butter, and he had to eat it not to offend his guests, though he felt quite disgusted because... at the time, ancient romans, used butter to grease their horses's seats!  
Nowadays this habit is changing even in North Italy in favour of oil for a more cholesterol free diet, and also some people would disagree on this choice of my grandma, but I think that butter gives to the sauce a special flavour that is very lovely and different from the version with oil. Anyway, even in the North of Italy tomato sauce is usually made with oil, and I do not really know if other people make tomato sauce this way. Until now I've heard of no one but my grandma to prepare tomato sauce this way so I think that this butter version is only my grandmother's variation of the original recipe. Do you know other people doing this recipe?
Grandma Virginia never taught me this little secret of hers, and after the middle school years, I long missed this very special flavour that I never tasted anywhere else. Then, some time ago I accidentally realized what I was missing!
Actually, that night I was working on my thesis and it was so late and I was so energy dried that I was feeling dazed, so I took a break to eat something. I wanted something delicious, energetic, quick and easy, so I first decided to make my beloved pasta seasoned with sage flavoured fried butter. But right after melting the butter I felt like I no longer wanted that, and I wanted tomato sauce instead. And what to do with the butter? Our elderly people would say that "to throw away is a sin!", and I kinda remembered one of the mottos of my other grandma, grandma "Lalla" that used to tell me: "if the ingredients are good, it will be good". But most of all I didn't have the time and the strength to throw away the butter, wash the pan and start again the preparation.
So I went on with the recipe. I threw into the melted butter some thinly sliced onion, and waited until it turned golden, and people, what a delicious smell! Then I added the tomato sauce, a pinch of salt, a drop of water and a lot of fresh basil leaves... and, always stirring, let it bubble for as long as needed for the sauce to dry and become creamy. Chefs and experts would say that it would be better to throw in basil only in the end, but I like this way more.
This is home cooking afterall. And home cooking, is messy, imperfect, uncorrect but... still there's nothing like that very unique taste that distinguishes the messy, imperfect, uncorrect, but still better - than - any - restaurant - in - the - world food that our parents and grandparents use to cook for us!
And this is right the kind of taste I want to convey to you today.
Grandma Virginia used to choose for this sauce, the most thin kind of spaghetti she could find, like n.3 or even better, the "capelli d'angelo" kind (angel hair, isn't this a lovely name for a kind of pasta?), and she used to prepare them a little in advance so that I would find them at the perfect temperature, little "fried"-like, and with the flavours perfectly blended.
Though now I get very near to the original taste, I already made my own little variation - to the variation - of my grandma's recipe.
This is my variation: I use both a drop of oil and a nut of butter together!

Here's the recipe:






1. In a frying pan let fry some thinly sliced onion in a drop of oil and some butter. I used half a spoon of butter, but you can adjust to your own taste. Add a pinch of salt and wait until the onion turns golden.


2. Add a lot of tomato sauce and a spoon of water



3. Add some basil leaves and let it cook until the sauce is firm and creamy.




4. Put A LOT of water on the fire, add a fist of coarse salt and wait until the water is boiling. Then add spaghetti and gently push them down with a spoon until they are completely under water. Let them cook for the time written on the packaging, stirring, time to time.



5. When pasta is ready (taste before draining), drain and put in the sauce, add a spoon of the boiling water they cooked in, and turn on the fire. Mix well until the water is well evaporated...


6. ...And spaghetti al pomodoro Virginia grandma's way are ready!!! 

I didn't have thin spaghetti at home when I prepared it, so I used bucatini instead. They were still delicious, but thin spaghetti, like n.3 or capelli d'angelo give this sauce a special taste, so I suggest you to try them in both ways if you have the chance!






As always, please let me know if you try this recipe and if you like it! 😊 
You can always leave me a message here below in the comments section or by commenting on Instagram 😉

Have a lovely week! 

Saturday, 10 August 2019

♡ROTTEN TOMATOES ♡





Hello and happy saturday gardening! 
As you may have been reading in my instastories, I won my fight against the apical rot that ruined my baby sanmarzano tomatoes harvest! 
As you know I love recycling and do-it-yourself stuff when it's a gardening matter... maybe I'm also a little stingy about it, but most of all I love creating and no wasting, plus my city's garden center is a bit far from my place, and in this hot summer days, the idea of taking a bus that I might have needed to wait under the sun for a comsiderable amountnof time wasn't very appealing. So, for these and other reasons, when my tomatoes showed symptoms of apical rot, instead of going to the garden center to buy calcium nitrate, I started thinking if I could find another solution., and that's what I thought.
Usually, when you plant tomatoes it's a good thing to put eggshells in the ground, so that they gradually release calcium into the soil and prevent the formation of the rot, but when the rot is already there, the problem is that you need something quicker, available immediately, rapid to absorbe for the plant. And simple eggshells left in the soil do not release calcium quickly enough. So I thought "if it's in the water, maybe the plant can absorbe it right away"...and here is what I did: 

1. In a mortar, with a pestle, reduce at least 3 dry eggshells to dust. They must look like flour. It can be a little pink if the shell of the eggs you're using is brown

2. Put them in a bottle (VERY IMPORTANT use glass bottle because plastic could release harmful substances- I realized that after taking the picture so in the photograph you see a plastic bottle) with half liter of water. 

3. Leave the GLASS bottle in the sun for at least one week, shaking it very well every day. The heat of the sun will help the powdered eggshells to release substances in the water. When shaking the water turns cloudy and makes some foam, but that's totally ok! 

4. Give some of this water (after shaking) to your tomatoes with rot once a week right before watering, but never empty the bottle completely. Always leave 1/4 of the bottle and add water right after. And add in the bottle other powdered eggshells every time you have some. 

To my plant it worked, and my second harvest showed perfect healthy tomatoes, so I thought this might be helpful to share this method with you. 
Hope it is useful! 😄 


This was before



And this is after


♧ STAIRWAY GARDEN ♧

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