La storia di Crocetti Archive

It’s L.A. County Fair Time

Posted September 9, 2011 By Adri

LA County Fair Ribbons

It’s time for the Los Angeles County Fair and it’s County Fair Season all across the country.
Good luck to all the competitors!

1986 LA County Fair Plate1987 LA County Fair Plate1988 LA County Fair Plate

 

 

 

 

 

What did you enter? Is your recipe a family treasure or from a cookbook?
Something from the County Fair Cookbook, perhaps?

1989 LA County Fair Plate1990 LA County Fair Plate1991 LA County Fair Plate

 

 

 

 

 

I love the Fair, and it’s fun to bring home Ribbons, Plates, and souvenirs.
Let me know how you did. A Blue Ribbon perhaps?
Email a photo to my Readers’ Gallery.

1992 LA County Fair Plate

Buona fortuna!!

 

Note: You can click on any picture for a larger image, and to see a slide show!

I have no affiliation with any product, manufacturer, or site mentioned in this article.

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Cooking With Nonna

Here I am on the Cooking with Nonna web site – Rossella Rago put out the call for a special recipe to celebrate her birthday.  And I won with my Corzetti Stampati al Limone!

Thanks Rossella for selecting my recipe, and thanks also for all the wonderful interviews with all the nonne.  I very much regret that my own grandmother, Angela Barra Crocetti, is no longer with us.  She passed away years ago, but in our home she lives on.  May I also say, that “Cooking with Nonna” makes an invaluable contribution to the heritage of every Italian-American, preserving the recipes and the culture and history that is so entwined with them.

Grazie!

To learn more about Corzetti and to see some additional recipes see my other articles:

click HERE for Part 1 – Corzetti Edible Art

click HERE for Part 2 – The Intagliatore of Chiavari

click HERE for Part 3 – Corzetti Stampati agli Spinaci con Gorgonzola

click HERE for Part 4 – Where to buy Corzetti stamps

 

Cooking With Nonna

I have no affiliation with any product, manufacturer, or site mentioned in this article.

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Los Angeles City Schools Coffee Cake

Posted June 25, 2011 By Adri

LAUSD Coffee Cake

 

Well, my blog is one year old today!  To celebrate, I am going back to the beginning.  My inaugural post was about the Sweet Rolls that were sold at Nutrition at Paul Revere Junior High and Palisades High Schools.  Those cinnamon brown sugar delights were my preferred “Nutrition” time treat.  There was another choice, however, and kids were of one stripe or the other.  It was either Sweet Rolls or Coffee Cake.  Read more… »

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Buttermilk Panna Cotta

Posted June 12, 2011 By Adri

Butter Milk Panna Cotta

When I think of buttermilk I think of Mrs. Schwinger, my piano teacher. In her living room stood two Steinway grand pianos. And on one of them, at the beginning of every lesson Mrs. Schwinger placed a glass of buttermilk. Over the course of the hour, she drained her glass, and taught me how to make the piano sing. It’s been over forty years since my last lesson, but to this day I think of her, the two pianos and her love of music every time I open a carton of buttermilk. Thank you, Mrs. Schwinger for sharing your love and knowledge of music – and buttermilk.
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Created 122 years ago – June 11,1889 – Napoli, Italia

Get your pizza on. Pizza Margherita to be specific. It’s what’s for dinner.

Queen Margharitha di SavoiaYes, 122 years ago – June 11, 1889 Queen Margherita of Savoy’s coach rolled into Napoli, and in her honor pizzaiolo Raffaele Esposito of Pizzeria di Pietro e Basta Cosi (translation: “Peter’s Pizzeria and That is Enough”, now called Pizzeria Brandi) baked three pies for her. Read more… »

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Italian Seeds

Posted April 16, 2011 By Adri

Italian Seeds 01

 

Italian cuisine is not all about pasta. Oh no. The Italians have a way with vegetables. And they grow their own. They have developed the most magnificent array, and now we in America can buy Italian seeds. Yes, now you can grow Italian. Each year I see more and more imported Italian vegetable and herb seeds at garden centers, but the go to place remains Seeds from Italy. The number of their offerings is astounding – more than thirty varieties of radicchio and chicory alone. And it just keeps getting better – by September they expect to have Italian garlic – Sulmona from Abruzzo and Berrentina Piacentina from Piacenza. The list goes on – beans, cabbages, kale, cavolo, caulifower, endive, escarole, and I’m only to E.  My favorites, however are the pumpkins, le zucche.  You’ll find a tremendous selection, and you have never seen ones like those grown from Seeds from Italy. The only thing you will regret once you peruse their catalogue of imported Italian seeds is that your backyard garden is not larger. Life is good in the garden. Start planning!


Note: You can click on any picture to see a slide show of even more pictures!

 

Pumpkin Harvest

I have no affiliation with any product, manufacturer, or site mentioned in this article.

 

Italian Seeds
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