Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Garlic-Parm Zucchini Sauté Most days, we don't have time to make an elaborate side dish, and something simple is all we crave. This easy, quick-sautéed zucchini is the perfect side dish for ...
Chicago-style giardiniera is commonly made spicy with sport peppers or chili flakes, along with a combination of assorted vegetables, including bell peppers, celery, carrots, cauliflower, [8] and sometimes gherkins or olives, [9] all marinated in vegetable oil, olive oil, soybean oil, or any combination of the three.
Remove the chicken breast halves from the marinade, scraping off the shallot. Slice the chicken on the bias 1 1/2 inches thick and season with salt and pepper. In a large skillet, heat the ...
Zucchini are widely used; the largest ones are fried with vinegar and fresh mint (a scapece). The male flowers of zucchini can be fried in a salty dough (sciurilli ). [2] Regular red and yellow peppers are widely used, and a local variety of small green peppers (not spicy), peperoncini verdi, are usually fried.
Filled with zucchini, cherry tomatoes, Kalamata olives, and sharp crumbled feta, these tender stuffed peppers have all the flavors you love from a Greek salad, plus a hearty addition from herby ...
A dish of dry agnolotti pavesi, a type of stuffed pasta, with a Pavese stew-based sauce. Due to the great territorial and historical variety of Lombardy, it is very difficult to identify a unified Lombard cuisine: it makes more sense to identify a continuum of provincial cuisines having similar elements throughout the region.
Roasted spaghetti squash is tossed in a creamy rich sauce with crispy pancetta bits for a new spin on the classic Italian ... topping of marinated feta, tomatoes, olives, cucumbers, red onion, and ...
Zucchine alla scapece is a Neapolitan cuisine dish of large slices of zucchini prepared with vinegar, seasoning, and garlic.. An old paraetymology traces the term scapece to the Latin [1] ex Apicio, from the name of the alleged creator, in reality it comes from the Spanish escabeche, [2] with which it has already been used in different parts of the world for making reference to the process of ...