Katie Caldesi's Diary of Italian Living, Food & Culture.

7th August, 2008
 

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Sunday on Eastbourne Seafront

2007/01/30 08:39 | Katie Caldesi | Cooking with children, Eastbourne, The sea

It was one of those freezing cold winter day’s last Sunday and we decided to go to beach in Eastbourne where I grew up. There was bright sun, blue sky but a fierce cold wind. My father always says that weather like that blows the cobwebs out of your head, it certainly did. My boys and I loved it and played in the sand and threw stones into the sea. Giancarlo forgot his scarf, wore a open-necked velvet designer jacket and generally behaved like an Italian! After two minutes he complained about catching a cold (even when I reminded him that was a virus and had to be transmitted from someone else with a cold and there was no one around). He then said he could get pneumonia and retired to the warmth of the car.

When we were reunited we couldn’t resist a family trip to the fish shop on the beach. They sell a wonderful array of local and not so local fish and seafood. The boys love to see the lobsters, still blue and wandering around their tank. They have no quarms about eating them and on our last visit we horrified my parents by bringing back live crabs to cook, all at the request of Giorgio. This time we went for ready cooked crab claws, smoked eel, roast smoked salmon, smoked herring (smoked in the smokehouse above the shop) and some marinated anchovies. Back at the house we made a selection of antipasti and some pasta with smoked eel. Here are the recipes:-

Tajarin (Pasta from Alba) with smoked eel

Makes enough for six small portions

2 smoked eel fillets, chopped into bite-size slices ours came frozen but defrosted quickly out of the fridge.

1 red onion

Extra-virgin olive oil

Sea salt and fresh black pepper

Enough pasta for six

Fresh torn parsley to finish
1 284ml pot double cream, you may not need all this

Put some salted water onto boil for the pasta. We used some Tajarin thin egg pasta that I had leftover but any thin pasta would work such as spaghetti or linguine.

Chop the onion finely and fry in the olive oil in a frying pan until softened and the sweetness has developed. Meanwhite cook the pasta.

Add the eel to the pan with some salt and pepper and toss well until the eel is cooked. Next add the cream, enough to make a sauce for six, cook gently over the heat for a couple of minutes until the pasta is ready. Adjust the seasoning to taste and add the parsley. Next add the drained pasta to the saucepan, toss together well to make sure the pasta is coated in the sauce and eat straight away in warmed bowls.

Salted or Marinated Anchovies with Red Onion and Parsley
I small red onion
A couple of sprigs of parsley, roughly torn

Thoroughly, wash the salt off the fish under a tap and open them up, remove the spines, In the case of marinated anchovies, simply wash them under a tap to remove a little of the sharp vinegar taste (you may not need to do this, we didn’t on Sunday).
Dry them on kitchen paper on both sides and spread the fish out onto a serving platter.
Chop the red onion very finely and sprinkle over the fish.
Scatter over the parsley and drizzle with extra-virgin olive oil. Serve with crusty bread for mopping up the juices.


 

2 things to do with the children when its dark, cold and raining outside… again!

2006/12/19 13:09 | Katie Caldesi | Cooking with children, Recipes
We live in a flat with no garden and have two boisterous, energetic boys so I am constantly thinking of ways to amuse them - and me too. Since I spend so much time cooking and I love it I try to involve them wherever possible. I also find it helps them become more adventurous with what they eat if they have seen it being made and shared a part of that process. This is one of the quick suppers we enjoy making at home…

Roman Jump-in-the-Mouths
(Saltimbocca alla Romana)
Whilst watching the chefs in our restaurant kitchens make this on a regular basis it occurred to me that children would love to do this – all that bashing and banging! Traditionally Roman cooks would use veal but chicken or turkey works equally well. “Saltimbocca” means “Jump-in-the Mouth” , we think it’s because it is so delicious you wish they would jump straight from the frying pan into your mouth.
Serves 4:

  • 8 escalopes (approx 400g) veal, chicken or turkey
  • 120g Prosciutto, cured ham, thinly sliced
  • 16 sage leaves
  • Salt and pepper
  • 8 toothpicks
  • Flour for dusting
  • Olive oil for frying
  • 50ml white wine, optional (add a little more meat stock if you are not using it)
  • 100ml chicken or meat stock
  • Knob of butter

Bash out the escalopes between two sheets of cling film using a meat tenderiser, pestle or rolling pin. Take care not to tear the meat. It should end up as ½ cm thick. Peel off the cling film and season each side of the escalopes with salt and pepper.
Cover each one with a sage leaf (leave it out of some if children aren’t keen) and then a slice of Prosciutto. Using a toothpick pierce through the ham, leaf and escalope and out again the other side. Heat the oil in a frying pan. Meanwhile dust the escalopes with a little flour each side and when the oil is hot fry them ham side down for about 30 seconds. Then turn them over and cook for about 4-5 minutes or until the meat is cooked through. To check this press the escalope with a fork and make sure the juices run clear.
Remove the escalopes from the pan set aside, pour the oil away from the pan. Add the white wine and a little meat stock to the pan and reduce for a couple of minutes to let the alcohol burn off. Then add the knob of butter and stir well.
Pour the hot buttery sauce over the saltimbocca and serve with mashed potatoes mixed with some Parmesan.
WHat the kids can do:

  • bash the meat between the sheets of cling film, with guidance so that the meat isn’t too thin and becomes torn
  • season the meat
  • pierce the meat and leaves with the toothpicks
  • add the wine, butter and stir the sauce
  • put the leaves and slices of ham on the escalopes

If you are serving mash, let them grate the Parmesan and mash it in with the potatoes, adding lots of butter, salt and pepper.


 

2 things to do with the children when its dark, cold and raining outside

2006/12/07 08:27 | Katie Caldesi | Cooking with children, Recipes

You will need a plastic tray, if you dont have them you can buy them easily at pound shops - that way you don’t care what happens to them!Some sticks, moss, pine cones, stones, shells etc

A couple of little dishes

Plasticine

Food colouring, not essential

Optional plastic miniature animals

First go on a hunting/gathering trip to the park or garden. Collect anything small that looks interesting from the list above and preferably get quite a bit of moss.

When home make a miniature garden on your tray using the sticks as bridges and trees supported by a blob of plasticine stuck onto the tray.

Fill the dishes, cover with silver foil if they are patterned, and fill with water. This is even better if you splash a few drops of food colouring in the water so you can have blue and green pools. The moss can then be arranged around the edge of the pools and animals can be placed on the moss having a drink at the pool.

Pine cones stood up on a little plasticine make a great wooded area. If you find any empty snail shells bring them back to life by making the snail out of plasticine and sticking the shell on top.

Walnut shells also make great parts of an animal.

My children do an enchanted garden about once a week now and spend ages putting them together. I love the look of the trays and seeing what they come up with to make out of what they have collected.

Our most recent attempt contains nativity figures to follow the Christmas theme. Giancarlo says when he was young he used to help the local priest in the church make their Presepio - the Nativity brought to life through moss, waterfalls, donkeys and little figures. I have seen some of these in churches at Christmas time and couldn’t believe how intricate and beautiful they are. It must be wonderful to see when you are a child.

Good luck with the trays, do have a go - the results are worth it.


 
 

 

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