Tuesday, November 25, 2014

In the Eternal City Again

I discovered a delicious little restaurant just around the corner from the Campo di Fiori at 53 via del Pellegrino - the Cantina Lucifero. Just 28 people can fit in here. I ate there 3 nights in a row. Fresh tagliatelle with fresh porcini mushrooms - one night I had this dish with slivers of fresh white truffle from Alba, fragrant and with a sublime taste, and homemade ravioli of fresh spinach and ricotta. There are also meat dishes and the restaurant's speciality, various cheese fondues. Ask Francesco, who runs the restaurant, for his advice on wine. In this neighborhood you find a mix of tourists and locals and this holds for the Cantina as well. The staff is friendly and helpful and multilingual. Open only in the evenings 7 days a week.The parent restaurant, the Locanda Lucifero, is on a parallel street.

For breakfast, because I had rented a small flat, I walked to the Campo and ate at Obicà, a trendsetting mozzarella bar that also makes pizza, salads and other dishes. You never know what is inside an Italian croissant: sometimes jam, sometimes chocolate. And splendid coffee. There are three kinds of mozzarella to be had - delicate, intense or smoked. All the salads, for a small additional sum, can be enhanced with your choice of DOP mozzarella.

Off to the Vatican to visit the scavi, the underground archeological ruins. First, into what remains of Constantine's basilica and then down into the lowest level, into the Roman mausoleums,  many of which have mosaics and frescos, a whole city of the dead. And most moving of all there is the tomb of St. Peter, whose bones have been gathered into a small plexiglass box. I found the visit to be a moving experience, regardless of belief. You have to reserve on the internet in advance for a guided visit.


Tagliatelle ai funghi porcini as prepared at the Cantina.

For 4 people

Sauté 600 grams of fresh porcini, cut into small pieces or slivers, in 3 T. of extra virgin olive oil, with 1 minced clove of garlic. When the mushrooms and garlic are soft (do not let the garlic brown, or it will be bitter), add 4 T. of freshly chopped Italian parsley. Cook 360 grams of fresh tagliatelle egg pasta, and when al dente, drain, and toss with the porcini sauce. Pass freshly grated parmesan to garnish. Simple and delicious.



Puntarelle in Salsa d'Acciughe

It's Puntarelle season again. Puntarelle is a kind of chicory; you can see not so young ladies cleaning it and stripping it of its outer leaves at the Campo di Fiori market every morning. I have never seen Puntarelle except in Rome. So if you, too, cannot find it where you live, you can use Belgian endives, or curly endive, or radicchio. This is a very Roman salad.

Put one head of cleaned Puntarelle into a bowl and mix with the following dressing, which you can puree by mashing with a fork, or by using a robot or blender.

3 anchovy fillets - I prefer to use salted ones that I desalt by soaking in water for half an hour and then cleaning. But if that is too fiddly use canned anchovies in olive oil.
2 cloves garlic - peeled, core removed, and minced
3 T. white wine vinegar
4 T. extra virgin olive oil

According to David Downing, in the past, chopped hard-boiled eggs were added to the salad.




Sunday, January 12, 2014

Irresistible Istanbul

What a wonderful city; what friendly, helpful and tolerant people.

Where to stay: I stay at the Valide Sultan Konagi, a 17 room hotel of charm. In Ottoman times the Valide Sultan was the name of the sultan's mother. The staff is always ready to help you. The rooms are small, but beautifully kept. The last time I stayed here my room was in the shadow of Saint Sophia, which was just outside my window. The delicious breakfast is copious and interesting and included in the room price. The hotel restaurant serves simple, but often delicious food; try the stuffed vegetables. The filled eggpant, or imam bayaldi - translated as the imam fainted because the dish was so delicious - is indeed very tasty.

Where to eat: To note - food in Istanbul is not overpriced, but wine is. My favorite restaurant is Asitane, away from the center. The restaurant serves traditional Ottoman food, often based on recipes for dishes served in 1539 at the circumcision of the son of Sultan Süleyman. The meze, or first courses, are delicious, carefully prepared and beautifully served - I began with fava bean purée (hummus) and creamed cheese  Turkish cuisine, like the cuisine of ancient Rome, often  serves fruit with meat. Try the quince stuffed with lamb. Desserts are sublime.

For excellent meze and fish, but not always pleasant service, Balikci Sabahattin in Sultanahmet is a good choice. When I was there with an English speaker the waiters were polite, but when I was there with a French friend, and we were speaking French, the waiters were very rude. The grilled sea bass and rice with mussels are very good.

In one of the hans near the Grand Bazaar, I ate in a tiny restaurant that served only fresh, batter fried anchovies and large, light crepes stuffed with herbs and spinach. The drink was ayran, a yogurt drink that I like but that may not be to everyone's taste. Unfortunately the restaurant had no name. You will have to follow your nose. About 5€ for lunch.

Another inexpensive and always crowded spot, especially at lunch time, near Saint Sophia, is Tarihi Sultanahmet Köftecisi, where you eat köfte - lamb meatballs - white beans, rice and salad. Yummy and inexpensive.

Hamdi, filled with both locals and tourists - large wandering Japanese groups who would not touch their desserts - from its top floor overlooks the Bosphorus and the Galeta Tower.  Enjoy the many sorts of kebabs, especially the one of ground lamb with pistachios. The baklava is exceptionally good. The tablecloths are white and the waiters are professional and helpful.

Where to shop: I cannot stay away from the Spice, also known as the Egyptian, Bazaar. I go there everyday just to inhale the smells and to look about me. All kinds of spices and food products are on sale.
The Grand Bazaar is fun, too, but the prices can be exaggerated. For Turkish carpets go to Adnan and Hasan, whose owner speaks perfect English. Do NOT bargain here. The store only sells good quality merchandise.
Food and ceramics are my two weaknesses.
For the best Turkish Delight, or lokum, go to Haci Bekir; there are two locations, one near the New Mosque, near the Spice Bazaar, and the other in Beyoglu.
For beautiful ceramics, often real Iznik, and sometimes just copies of Iznik designs, you cannot go wrong at Fettah, just across from the restaurant Asitane. Look at the beautiful work by Emine Peker, who was born in Kütahya, one of Turkey's ceramic centers.

Lamb with Quince

Brown 1 chopped onion and 500 grams lamb, cut into small pieces, in 4 tablespoons olive oil. Add 3 tablespoons pomegranate molasses and 1 cup water. Then add 1/2 teaspoon each of ground cinammon, ground allspice and salt and 1/4 teaspoon of freshly ground black pepper. Cover and simmer for 1 hour.

In a separate pan brown in 4 tablespoons butter two peeled quince, cut into small pieces, until caramelized. Add the quince, 2 tablespoons brown sugar, a pinch of ground cloves and 1/2 teaspoon of ground cinammon to the stew. Continue simmering uncovered for 30 minutes.

Serve with basmati rice. For perfect rice every time, soak the rice in cold water for several hours. Drain and put into a pan with water that is 1 and 1/2 times the amount of the rice. Cook on high heat until the water has almost evaporated and there are pock marks on the surface of the rice. Turn off the heat and cover the pan tightly for 10 minutes. Fluff up and serve.

If you cannot find pomegranate molasses you can make it yourself:  Boil a litre of pure pomegranate juice -  best place to find it is in a health food store -  with 100 grams of sugar and the juice of one lemon. Simmer for an hour until syrupy.