Showing posts with label baking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baking. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

Panzanella salad



I have been a week in Italy for my birthday and I turned back to my mum food because I couldn't cook that much.
At the begin I didn't get too hung up on their food style, because my parents eat tones of veggie and I was missing my mum scents.
But eating again in that way reminded me some odds.
Get drowsy after a meal, the mind blurred, my creativity completely dormant. A sense of irritability that I was trying to calm down with fruit or bread, or both.

My parents diet is based on raw fruit, vegetables and olive oil; plus, over-boiled veggie, long pressure cooked minestrone soup and bread, pasta, bran.. I should say that almost everything is whole, organic and from local farmer production.
But, the cooking styles are a Yin-Yang gymkhana.
I introduced pressed salads, crispy-cooked vegetables, grains boiled in carrot juice and kanten. In few days I felt fit again.
Well, but since bread and salad are one of the most simple, easy and delicious summer in Italy, I decided to made a Macro variation of the a traditional Tuscan salad: Panzanella, my father's love.
I served Panzanella at my birthday party and all guys drove into my dish... they licked their bowls clean! My father found my choice more digestible and even more appetizing than the original recipe.

"Instead" time: Instead of raw salad I used pressed veggie.Carrots which contain fibers and are a very good source of Vitamins A. Celery, good source of amino-acids, Vitamin K and Potassium. Cucumber rich in fiber and minerals and amino acids. So adding other foods with complementary amino acid profiles to this veggies may yield a more complete protein source and improve the quality of some types of restrictive diets. Pressed salad is refreshing as well as the raw, but slightly fermented are easier to digest and doesn't make you feel swollen.
Instead of white bread I used my Kayu bread, a mixture of whole flour and overcooked grains. Is a yeast free, overnight fermented bread. A digestible potion also rich in amino-acids.
Instead of tones of oil I used Ume vinegar. Sour, salty and fruity, is a mount-watering condiment.

Umeboshi is used as natural preservative in the hot&humid Japanese weather so was been perfect in the Italian summer.
The following recipe is for 12 serving.


{ingredients}

 

{pressed salad} 

6 large carrots
4 large cucumbers
2 beautiful red onions
1 stalk celery, very tender
3 tablespoons sea salt
a few drops of lemon

{panzanella}

¼ loaf of bread Kayu or 1 / 3 of
sourdough bread,
5 tablespoons of ume
1 tablespoon of shoyu
lemon juice to taste
½ cup sunflower seeds
4 Tbs of extra virgin olive oil or toasted sesame oil
few leaves of basil
oregano or marjoram to taste

{tecnique}
{insalata pressata}



Wash and dry the vegetables.
Clean the carrots with a coconut brush or a sponge, without peel. Grate or cut into thin matches, sprinkle with lemon juice so don't turn dark.
Peel the cucumbers, cut into 4 lengthwise and remove seeds. Cut into eighths, then into cubes.

Clean the celery from any hard wire and cut it to thin diagonal slices.
Cut the onion into half, following the veins, and then into very thin slices, always following the pattern of veins.
Place all vegetables in a glass or ceramic bowl, add salt and mix with your hands. Place a second smaller bowl oinside the first, and let stand for 2 hours or more with a weight on top (a bottle of water for example).

{panzanella}
 

Cut the bread into thick slices and steam for 10 to 15 minutes.
Meanwhile, toast the seeds until gold, turn off the heat and sprinkle stirring with soy sauce.
So cut the bread into squares, being careful not to break it.
Drain the vegetables from the water that is formed, (which you can keep as a base for a soup or to moisten salad if it is too dry, remember that is salty!).
Chop a few leaves of basil. Who likes and digests it, can add some chopped garlic.


{to assemble}

Gently mix the bread, vegetables and basil, add the seasoning little at a time, tasting to feel how much you prefer.

Garnish with the toasted seeds and fresh basil just before serving.

 _______

.



Sunday, 29 May 2011

Genova Focaccia Bread



An other lovely sunny week end. The only places were I want to be is my kitchen and my garden. So this recipe is just what i need for a nice picnic. ( sorry i forgot to take a shot, so instead I placed the normal Kayu bread, I promise to make a nice shot next time to replace this one).
Kayu is the Far East word for “soft grain”, Rice Kayu Bread is the favourite bread among macrobiotic people, and this is my personal recipe for a Genovese Focaccia Bread. I really love this recipe and I'm so proud to share with you!
As a perfect marriage between Macrobiotic and my Nanny's recipes, I truly love this bread, and I wish you'll love as well.
If you are in a good health condition you can eat this focaccia once a month, try to do not exaggerate, baked food is really yang, in addition focaccia needs a lot of oil (actually more than I'm using in this recipe).
Bread comes better during sunny days and clear nights, is alive, it born and rise in you hands, need your love and comprehension, take the time to take care of it.

When I make bread I clean my mind, and in the brightening silence of the night I deeply relax kneading my dough.
This recipe is about metal because the baking but can also be about Tree because the fermentation.

{tools}

Pressure cooker or heavy pan for the rice
Oven round pan
Wooden or ceramic pot
Steamer
A warm place for the dough
Clean tea towes


{ingredients}
{rice}
1 cup of brown rice
4 cup of spring water
a pick of salt


{dough}

2 cup of soft cooked brown rice (like a porridge)
2 cup of your favorite wholemeal flour (I mill the grain at home so usually is a mix of barley,  rice and  wheat)
2 to 3 teaspoon unrefined sea salt
½ cup of extra virgin olive oil or sesame oil
¼ cup spring water
2 sweet and not watery tomatoes (mix green or yellow and red)
Smoked tofu cut in cubes or crumbled (Dragonfly Organic)
A bounce of mixed beetroot leafs (white, yellow and purple)
Some lettuce leaf.
Basil, oregano and rosemary to taste

{technique}
{rice} 
Wash the rice and set aside to soak for half an hour, than dry and  place in the pan, add the water. Bring to boil, add the salt and turn the flame to the low and cover. Leave to cook until soft and dry.
Leave to cool down until warm in a ceramic or glass pot.

 {dough}
Mix together the flour and 1 tesp of salt.
Add the flour to the rice mixing gently and form a dough into a ball.
Knead the dough 400 times adding a little flour time to time to prevent sticking. When you are kneading, relax your shoulder and breath calm. The dough should be quite soft at the end.
The amount of flour change on the weather, so always you can adjust it following your instinct.

Whisk 1/8 cup of olive oil with 2 spoon of water and oil with this mixture a 24 cm round pan.
Shape the dough into a loaf and place in a round pan pressing down gently.
Place the pan in a warm place covered with a wet towel 10 or more hours, occasionally moisten the damp towel. The dough is ready when is approximately the double from the initial size.


{topping}

Cut in half moon the tomatoes and take away the seeds, spread a little bit of salt over and leave aside.
Mince finely the herbs.
Whisk the left oil with ¼ cup of spring water, the teasp of salt and your minced herbs.


{to cook}

When your dough is ready, preheat the oven at 300 degree. [Wait to have the condiments ready before take out your focaccia from the warm place in order to avoid a temperature shock.]
When everything is ready take your focaccia out and, with your fingers, make  much holes as possible all-over the surface.
Spread the focaccia with the water and oil mixture filling the holes. Rise the tomatoes from their water and top with them the surface.
Place in the oven for 30 min at 250° C or until cooked.
Remove from the oven and leave to cool down until warm, then garnish with steamed tofu and coloured beetroot leafs.

{ to assemble}
Steam the other leaf and the lettuce and serve as a focaccia side dish with some pressed carrots and daikon.