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  2. List of Italian foods and drinks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Italian_foods_and...

    Pesto, pesto alla genovese, pesto alla trapanese, pesto di fave (or marò), pesto di pistacchio, pesto modenese; Quatara di Porto Cesareo; Ragù, ragù alla barese, ragù alla bolognese (lit. ' Bolognese sauce '), ragù d'anatra, ragù di castrato, ragù di cinghiale, ragù di coniglio, ragù di lepre, ragù di salsiccia, ragù napoletano (lit.

  3. Cuisine of Liguria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuisine_of_Liguria

    Trenette al pesto Cappon magro La cuciniera genovese (1877) Arbanella with salted anchovies Farinata di ceci Coniglio alla ligure (with olives and pine nuts) Olio di oliva della Riviera Pesto Linguine with pesto Trofie with pesto Agliata with cauliflower Salsa alle noci Focaccia alla genovese Focaccia al formaggio Focaccia con le cipolle Pissaladière Panissa Farinata Torta pasqualina Polpette ...

  4. Pesto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pesto

    Ingredients for pesto alla genovese. Pesto is traditionally prepared in a marble mortar with a wooden pestle. First, garlic and pine nuts are placed in the mortar and reduced to a cream, [2] and then the washed and dried basil leaves are added with coarse salt and ground to a creamy consistency. Only then is a mix of Parmesan and pecorino added ...

  5. Portal:Food/Selected recipe/12 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Food/Selected_recipe/12

    Pesto (Italian:) or more fully pesto alla genovese (Italian: [ˈpesto alla dʒenoˈveːse,-eːze]; lit. ' Genoese pesto ') is a paste made of crushed garlic, pine nuts, salt, basil leaves, grated cheese such as Parmesan or pecorino sardo, and olive oil.

  6. Italian cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_cuisine

    In 1829, Il Nuovo Cuoco Milanese Economico (The New Economic Milanese Chef) by Giovanni Felice Luraschi featured Milanese dishes such as kidney with anchovies and lemon and gnocchi alla romana. Gian Battista and Giovanni Ratto's La Cucina Genovese (Genoese cuisine) in 1871 addressed the cuisine of Liguria.

  7. Talk:Pesto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Pesto

    This recipe, which has developed from the original 19th century recipe and has become a staple of Ligurian cuisine, is often altered both in home-made pesto and in commercial pesto, to the extent that some ingredients are totally replaced by other products (resulting in a pseudo-pesto alla genovese): for example, pine nuts are sometimes ...

  8. Linguine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguine

    Linguine, a type of flattened spaghetti, was initially documented in the 1700s in Genoa, Italy, by Giulio Giacchero, an economist writer; Giacchero, author of a book on the economy of Genoa in the 1700's, writes about linguine served with green beans, potatoes and a Genovese specialty—basil pesto. [12]

  9. Trenette - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trenette

    Trenette (Italian:) is a type of narrow, flat, dried pasta from Genoa, Liguria; it is similar to both linguine and fettuccine. [1] [2] Trenette is the plural of trenetta, but is only used in the plural and is probably a diminutive of the Genoese trena, meaning 'string'. [3]

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