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Guanciale (Italian: [ɡwanˈtʃaːle]) is an Italian salt-cured meat product prepared from pork jowl or cheeks. [1] Its name is derived from guancia, meaning 'cheek'. [2] Its rendered fat gives flavour to and thickens the sauce of pasta dishes. [3]
' Tuscan soup '), also known in Italy as minestra di pane (lit. ' bread soup ' ), is a soup from the region of Tuscany , northern Italy. While there are many variations, its most common ingredients are cannellini beans , potatoes , and kale .
The Italian sausage was initially known as lucanica, [3] a rustic pork sausage in ancient Roman cuisine, with the first evidence dating back to the 1st century BC, when the Roman historian Marcus Terentius Varro described stuffing spiced and salted meat into pig intestines, as follows: "They call lucanica a minced meat stuffed into a casing, because our soldiers learned how to prepare it."
If you’ve seen (or heard of) Ina Garten’s creamy sausage pasta, then you’re probably as eager as we are to taste-test the recipe. After all, the Barefoot Contessa, 75, has never let us down ...
A dish of Rigatoni pasta, with a tomato sauce with dried sausage, bacon, pecorino cheese: Rigatoni con la Pajata: Lazio: A Roman dish of rigatoni pasta, with the typical pajata tomato sauce. Pajata is the term for the intestines of an "un-weaned" calf. The intestines are cleaned and skinned, but the chyme is left inside. Then the intestine is ...
While the dish varies from region to region, it is most commonly made using cannellini beans, navy beans, or borlotti beans and a small variety of pasta, such as elbow macaroni or ditalini. [4] The base typically includes olive oil, garlic, minced onion, celery, carrots, and often stewed tomatoes or tomato paste. Some variations omit tomatoes ...
Bigoli (a typical Venetian fresh pasta, similar to udon), fettuccine (hand-made noodles), ravioli and the similar tortelli (filled with meat, cheese, vegetables or pumpkin) and gnocchi (potatoes-made fresh pasta), are fresh and often hand-made pasta dishes (made of eggs and wheat flour), served together with meat sauce often made with duck meat ...
Amatriciana derives from a dish called pasta alla gricia. [4] The origin of the word gricia is unclear. In papal Rome, the grici were sellers of common edible foods, [5] who got this name because many of them came from Valtellina, at that time a possession of the Swiss canton of Grigioni. [5]