This month, the challenge is cooking with wine. My first thoughts were all about low
and slow with blood red bottles of wine.
Then I changed course.
I had just made that remarkable fois gras ravioli that I’d read a description of online. That made me think of one of my favorite dishes –– inspired by a Food & Wine description –– Gruyere-fondue Ravioli with Beet Sauce and a shower of lovely flowers and greens. It is soooo good that I’ve been making for years. What can be bad about pasta pillows filled with molten cheese, wine and Kirsch??
I had just made that remarkable fois gras ravioli that I’d read a description of online. That made me think of one of my favorite dishes –– inspired by a Food & Wine description –– Gruyere-fondue Ravioli with Beet Sauce and a shower of lovely flowers and greens. It is soooo good that I’ve been making for years. What can be bad about pasta pillows filled with molten cheese, wine and Kirsch??
It had been on my mind since I recently noticed that the
Italian restaurant that inspired it was in the Pelligrino Top50 Restaurants of
the World list (the one that put Noma at #1).
# 32, Le Calandre,
Padua, Italy. (#20 last year)
Padua (or more properly Padova) is one of the
oldest cities in Northern Italy and positively oozing ancient charm.
Thing is, you won’t find Le Calandre there.
Thing is, you won’t find Le Calandre there.
Instead, Le Calandre
ended up in Sarmeola di Rubano, 4
miles or so away from the magnificent Prato della Valle of Padua in an area better known for strip malls than
cathedrals, palazzos or Donatello statues in the piazza.
Don’t let this keep you away. If you go to Venice… try to make it here. It’s only an hour’s drive away from
Venice and only a few miles outside of Padua. The restaurant was begun 20 years ago by the current chef’s
parents (that may have something
to do with the location). I know
I’m dying to go one of these days, even if the dinner would set me back $300 or
so before the wine (for a lighter tariff, they are open for lunch).
That chef, Massimilliano Alajmo, got his 2nd
Michelin star at 22, the youngest chef ever to win that honor. Then, another record was broken when he
got his 3rd star at 28 –– the first 3 star accolade awarded to a
chef under 30.
Although he studied with Veyrat and Guerard as a teen, his food is his own. He
has been called ‘il Mozart dei fornelli’
(Mozart of the stoves) and a Food & Wine article on Massimiliano revealed
Mario Batali is a huge fan who believes that his original approach to flavors
…”evoke grandma’s palate but also a sorcerers tool kit, to create harmony on
the plate between taste tradition and presentation innovation.” Many feel his is the best restaurant in
Italy (menu HERE).
Last year, La Calandre
became a 3 star restaurant without white tablecloths… very bold indeed. They
let the beautiful wood of the tables act as a frame for the food. I love the idea.
The dining room is beautifully austere, isn’t it? The attention to detail is
everywhere. Some of the glasses
and tableware are handmade by local artisans, their food is locally sourced and
Alajmo tries to meet with suppliers on their own turf to know everything about
their products… going to farms to see how animals are fed and vegetables are
grown. He says it helps him
understand the food and develop dishes to use the ingredients to their best
advantage.
This drawing
becomes cappuccino
de seppie al nero on the menu.
His vibrant imagination is everywhere. He makes a custardy
tofu out of fava beans –– combining it with grilled shrimp, apples and Damascus
rose-scented radicchio. One of my
favorite inventions is a carrot zabaione with fried vegetables and balsamic –– turns ketchup and fries on its ear –– is
that a great idea or what?
He also makes a renowned saffron risotto with licorice
dust. He gave some of the secrets
to his risottos at a demonstration he gave in NYC, Food & Wine
reported. To begin with, he cooks
his risotto for a shorter cooking time after toasting the rice gently for 2-3
minutes in oil, only then adding the already sautéed onions that have been
cooked separately. He also pours the boiling broth down the side of the pan to
collect any starch there and saves one ladle of broth to toss in when the
risotto is removed from the stove.
He adds a little lemon at the end to balance the creaminess and starch.
Some of his other risottos are made with rose petal and peach or a caper coffee
risotto inspired by a sense memory.
The Food & Wine article talked about a magical sounding
dish with porcini, mango and chanterelles topped with candied juniper and
raspberry dust as well as a pasta made with smoked dough, smoked broth and
smoked butter. This man knows how
to play in the kitchen!
He also loves to play with essences, as do I. He has a line of sprays called Le
Essenze created by master perfumer Lorenzo
Dante Ferro ––scents like lemon bergamot and ginger that you can buy for 19.50 € at their online store. Massimiliano thinks; “We eat with our
nose… Smelling goes straight to the brain’s center of long-term memory, it
connects us to past emotions.” I
so agree and can attest to the wonderful things that happen to my food when I
use Aftelier chef's essences here in the US.
I think you will agree when you taste the flavors in this
dish that they are spectacular and a really creative combination of ingredients
from a superb chef. I just love
the way the tangy beet sauce and the wine in the fondue work together… it shows what wine can do when it steps out from its supporting role
into a bit of the limelight. This
is really one of those “close-your-eyes-and-absorb-the-wonder” dishes.
Gruyere Ravioli with Beet Cream inspired by Calandre
serves 4
½ pound gruyere, grated
2 T Kirshwasser
1T cornstarch
1 clove garlic, smashed
2/3 c white wine
1 t. lemon juice
1 t. lemon juice
pinch nutmeg
3 m beets
¼ c ww
1 large shallot, minced
3 T elderflower vinegar (or verjus or cider vinegar)
¼ - 1/3 c cream
recipe for pasta to make ravioli or fresh pasta or gyoza wrappers ***
poppy seeds
1 T elderflower vinegar
2 T hazelnut oil
pinch of salt
a few handfuls
of arugula
mixed fresh herbs ( marjoram is excellent, thyme, savory, chervil,
edible flowers)
Bake the beets in foil at 400º for about an hour or until
soft. Heat the vinegar, wine and
shallots till they are softened and the liquid is reduced to a syrup. Peel the beets and put in the blender
with the shallot mix. Add the some
of the cream and blend… add more if you need it to blend. Reserve.
Add the kirshwasser and cornstarch together. Warm the white wine, then add the
garlic. Stir in the kirshwasser
blend and add the cheese in handfuls keeping the temperature low.
Stir till blended, remove garlic and then use an immersion blender to blend to a
smooth, creamy consistency. Freeze it for a while –– this makes it easier to make
the ravioli while still keeping the luxurious loose texture
Roll out the pasta into sheets and cut into circles. Wet each one and put a spoon of the
cheese mixture into it. Close and
seal with a fork. Put back in the
fridge for a few hours to dry. You
will have some cheese mixture left over and around 16 ravioli.
When you are ready, heat a wide deep pan with water a splash
of oil and salt. Keep it on medium
heat as a fast boil can open the ravioli. Place them gently in the pan. Boil gently for a few minutes after
they rise. Drain.
Put the beet mixture on a plate (this can be warm or room
temperature). Heat the remaining
cheese mixture.
Plate the ravioli (4 per person) and drizzle with warm
cheese.
Toss on some arugula and herbs, sprinkle with poppy seed
dressing and serve.
*You can make this very easy by skipping the ravioli idea
and using fresh pasta like linguini... then just toss with the cheese sauce.
Pasta Dough
1 cup all-purpose flour plus 2 T semolina
2 large egg yolks
1 large egg
1 teaspoons olive oil
1/2 tablespoon milk
Mix together and knead for 5 minutes till elastic… you may need more flour to do this. Let rest for 1 hour then put through the pasta machine in 3 parts. You will only need one for this recipe.
** If you have any problems with alcohol, this is not the
dish for you… it has a good hefty alcohol content!!