Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
a sesame-seed bread, or the layered New Orleans sandwich made with it, stuffed with sausage meats, cheese, olive salad, etc. Panelle: Sicilian fritters made from chickpea flour and other ingredients. They are a popular street food in Palermo. Pani câ meusa: organ meats (lung, spleen) and sausage served on Vastedda, a sesame-seed bun Pasta ...
A Cremona dish of marubini dumplings, filled with braising, salame Cremonese (Cremona salami), Grana Padano cheese, nutmeg, cooked in a broth with beef, pork and chicken Mpurnatu: Sicily: A Campobello di Licata baked pasta dish, made of ziti pasta, a ragù sauce with pork, cauliflower, eggs and pecorino cheese: Nidi di rondine: Emilia-Romagna
"Sloppy Giuseppe" – Italian version of the Sloppy Joe: ground beef and salsiccia (Sicilian fennel and pork sausage) cooked in a pan with caramelized onions, green peppers, brown sugar and secret spices, topped with red sauce (made from olive oil, minced garlic, tomato paste, water, fresh basil, and a secret spice blend), served on a butter ...
This fall pasta recipe is equal parts salty, savory and satiating, thanks to shallot, garlic and lots of crispy bacon. "It has a bit of tang from a secret ingredient: apple cider vinegar," Gillen ...
This typical Syracuse dish has very ancient roots. The recipe, which has now become part of the culinary tradition of the geographical area, initially presented itself in a very different way: the name of pasta alla siracusana (which preceded that of today's spaghetti) was used to indicate a type of processing of durum wheat decidedly thinner, known as capelli d'angelo, characterized by a very ...
Mix into a bowl all the dried ingredient: bread crumbs, oregano, parsley, orange zest, garlic, black pepper and parmesan. Stir the ingredients inside the bowl with a whisk, and slowly add the extra virgin olive oil and orange juice.
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."
Break the eggs into the pan of cooled pasta and sauce, then add the grated Parmesan. Mix together. Brush the remaining oil over the side and base of an 8 1/2-inch round nonstick baking dish with ...