Recipes Archive

Corzetti Stampati – and a Giveaway!

Posted October 9, 2013 By Adri

A Pasta with a Past


We have a winner!

The winner is Carolina Chirichella of the website La Cucina Della Prima Donna!
Congratulazioni, Carolina!


Corzetti stamp from Artisanal Pasta Tools

Win this corzetti stamp made by Artisanal Pasta Tools!
Tell me your favorite pasta shape in the comments at the end of the article!

This is Part 5 of The Corzetti Files



corzetti, corzetti del Levante, corzetti stampati, croxetti, curzetti n. coin-shaped, embossed egg pasta, typical of Liguria

Call this pasta what you will, the craze is on. When I first wrote about corzetti stampati (stamped pasta coins) almost three years ago, a Google search yielded few hits in English. Today there are hundreds. Corzetti even has its own Twitter hashtag: #corzetti. Tradition is a good thing, especially when it comes into vogue. One of the people driving this popularity is Terry Mirri, owner of Artisanal Pasta Tools. In his Napa California workshop he fashions wooden corzetti stamps and other tools of classic Italian cooking. I extend my thanks to Terry who has provided a hand made corzetti stamp fashioned of Osage Orange wood as a prize for this Giveaway.


The contest is now closed.


Map of Liguria

Liguria is a verdant strip of Italy that arcs along the Italian Riviera. Green herbs, garlic, vegetables, fruit and nut trees grow in profusion in this sun-drenched land, protected from the bitter northern winds by the mountains that form Liguria’s land borders. As the summer sun recedes and the wet weather arrives, the fertile earth gives forth meaty porcini mushrooms. This is a land where plants and flowers thrive, and the silvery leaves of olive trees glimmer in the Italian sun.


Making Corzetti Stampati


Corzetti stampati has been part of the region’s culinary tradition for hundreds of years. The pasta stretches back to the height of The Most Serene Republic of Genoa. A maritime titan, Genoa (now the capital of Liguria) grew rich through trade. Her gold and silver Crusader coins with their images of the Crusader’s cross, also known as the Jerusalem cross, and the gates of the city were memorialized through the two piece wooden stamps used to make this pasta.

Stamps also feature coats of arms, lucky symbols, Christian crosses, and other decorative designs, all made to order for families and cooks. These ingenious tools both cut and imprint the pasta. Traditionally they are made of neutral woods such as pear or beech, woods that will not flavor the dough.


White, Wheat, Chestnut Flour

The dough can be made with white, whole wheat, or chestnut flours. Often all three versions are served together for textural and color variation. Vermentino wine and marjoram can be added to the dough, imparting true regional flavor; even the steam that rises from the pot is remarkably fragrant. For this recipe I used proportions I learned from Giuliano Bugialli, the master himself. Read more… »

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
147 Comments so far. Join the Conversation

One Hundred Years in America

Posted September 15, 2013 By Adri

Tagliatelle agli spinaci con polpettine d’agnello


Gaetano Crocetti

Gaetano Crocetti


One hundred years ago this month my grandfather, Gaetano Crocetti, arrived in America. He left his native Abruzzo and traveled west to Naples where he boarded the steamship Hamburg for the long voyage, trading the region’s towering mountain peaks, verdant hillsides, fields, vineyards for the smokestacks and steel mills of Steubenville, Ohio. America was good to him, but he never forgot his homeland, and my grandmother’s cooking kept those memories alive. Read more… »

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
68 Comments so far. Join the Conversation

Ricotta-Punch Abruzzo Ice Cream

Posted September 5, 2013 By Adri


Ricotta Punch Abruzzo Ice Cream


One of the saddest casualties of the digital age is surely Gourmet magazine. Of course now I am kicking myself for having discarded all my old issues. I know there must be literally thousands of jewels forever lost to me. However, I remembered a recipe for Ricotta Ice Cream that I had seen in the magazine years ago. Thank heavens that recipe made it onto the digital archives. I used it as a starting point for this ice cream, making a few changes, including adding Punch Abruzzo instead of the rum originally called for.

This ice cream is rich, but not heavy, and the bittersweet chocolate is a nice foil for the citrus and sweet fruitcake notes of the Punch Abruzzo. Punch is one of my favorite liqueurs. I write about it and mention it so often, people ask if I work for the company. In case you too are wondering, the answer is no, I do not work for them. I just love the stuff. Read more… »

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
40 Comments so far. Join the Conversation

Blackberry-Sangiovese Sorbetto

Posted August 31, 2013 By Adri


Blackberry Sangiovese Sorbeto


Smart ScoopMy new ice cream machine has rendered the process of making ice cream, gelato, sorbetto and other frozen desserts very simple. I have been making so many, I haven’t had the time to put them up for everyone to enjoy. With summer on the wane, I figured I’d better get the recipes up soon.

A couple of weeks ago I returned home from the market with several pounds of plump blackberries. Dark and heavily perfumed, the berries were so sweet and flavorful I knew they deserved more than my basic berry sorbetto treatment. I remembered a recipe I had seen for Blackberry-Sangiovese Sorbetto in Gelato! by Pamela Sheldon Johns. Read more… »

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
48 Comments so far. Join the Conversation

Stracnar and Stracenate, 2 names, 2 regions, 1 pasta


It is the height of summer here in Southern California, and I’ve been busy with frozen desserts, but a family has to eat. In between grilled steaks, chops and lots of salads we enjoy pasta tossed with hearty sauces of meat, tomatoes and herbs.


Stracnar with Sausage Ragu


This dish comes from Southern Italy where the days are hot and the sun is high. The regions of Italy’s south, known collectively as the Mezzogiorno, include Abruzzo, Basilicata, Calabria, Campania, Molise, Puglia, Sardinia, and Sicily. This large swath of the country has long been regarded as separate, divided linguistically and culturally from the north. Even today, over one hundred and fifty years after unification, Italians proudly proclaim their own region’s unique heritage, and enjoy the same foods as their ancestors. Read more… »

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
56 Comments so far. Join the Conversation

Granita di Caffè con Panna

Posted August 21, 2013 By Adri

Espresso Granita with Whipped Cream

Espresso Granita with Whipped Cream


Dateline: Rome, August 1971

It was hot. Hot like only Rome can get in August. That’s why the Romans leave the Eternal City to us tourists. I walked toward the Colosseum and realized the asphalt was literally sinking beneath my feet. I could feel the heat of it through my shoes. Like I said Rome is hot. I decided to take a detour and grab something refreshing. I said to the waiter, “Prendo una granita di caffè, per favore.” “Con panna?” came the response. I thought a second and said, “Si, con panna.”

That interchange was almost lightning fast, and so was relief. The translation is simple, “I’ll have a Granita di caffè.” “With cream?” “Yes, with cream.” Very quickly the waiter brought me a glass of icy coffee crystals topped with softly whipped cream. I don’t know if service was always that fast or if I presented in a most precarious state. Cool and icy, with the taste of strong coffee and a kiss of sugar, it hit the spot. I felt better and continued on to Emperor Vespasian’s iconic amphitheater. Read more… »

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
32 Comments so far. Join the Conversation
Content Protected