A Plum By Any Other Name

  • Stories
  • About
  • Recipes
  • Images

A Woman Named Vera and her Manicotti

December 02, 2013 by Emily Gelsomin in For Herbivores

I thought long and hard about how I might introduce this recipe. Family traditions come dangerously close to violating one of my two rules of the Internet.  

One. Before posting anything, first ask yourself: am I okay with mom seeing this?  And two.  Does anyone give a damn?

The latter is what we are concerned with today, as manicotti is fairly unobjectionable to most.
In the interest of preemptively stifling a few yawns, I will skip the details in which this dish shows up on our yearly holiday buffet and, instead, focus on the reason it does.  Mainly, because grandma makes it.  And because it is very, very good.

Our family recipe originates from my great grandmother—and from Naples before that—though it has had a few twists and turns along the way.  I can feel you nodding off, so here is what you should know.

You will need four eggs, equal parts flour and milk, and patience.  Grandma claims success with her burner set at 4.  She will advise you of this, then add to figure out what works best for you.

You would be wise to heed this advice.  Because an airy, crepe-like pasta is what you are after.  Then you will fill it with lightly seasoned ricotta and sauce it with a few delicate spoonfuls of your finest tomato garnish. It might not make for the most glamorous of Internet posts or pictures. Few things that are ‘mother approved’ ever do. 

No matter.  Manicotti with a salacious story is not what we are after here.  We are after a woman named Vera and her manicotti.

Vera’s Manicotti

Ingredients:

for the manicotti

  • 4 eggs
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1 cup whole milk
  • canola oil, for the pan

for the ricotta filling

  • 1 pound ricotta
  • 1 egg
  • 1 to 2 tbsp finely chopped herbs, like parsley and basil
  • 1 tbsp grated pecorino cheese
  • ½ tsp sugar
  • few grinds of a pepper mill
  • pinch of salt

for the top

  • a few cups of your favorite sauce, this recipe will likely be a winner if you need direction
  • plus a dusting of grated parmesan or pecorino

Instructions:

Prepare some wax or parchment paper torn into squares to sandwich the cooked crepes between. (The recipe makes about 16 crepes, but you won’t need a new square for every single one.)

Set the oven to 350 degrees. 

In a medium bowl, whisk the eggs, flour, and milk together until no longer lumpy.  Heat a 6-inch skillet on medium heat.  Grease with a little oil; you’ll want a fine sheen, so pour out any oil that pools in the pan. 

Spoon about ¼ cup of batter into the center of the heated skillet and then gently, but quickly, swirl the pan so that the batter spreads into a thin circle.  It helps to pick up the skillet to do this; it also helps to correct the heat if it gets too hot.  

The crepe should cook in about a minute, maybe a little less.  You’ll know it’s done when its center is firm to the touch.  (You won’t have to flip it.) It may take a few crepes to get your technique down.

Repeat until the remaining batter is used.  You may need to adjust the heat if they start browning.  You may need to add a little more oil every few crepes.

To make the ricotta filling, combine all ingredients; set aside. 

To assemble the manicotti, ladle a little sauce into two casserole dishes (I used a 12 x 6 and a 12 x 9), just enough to cover the bottoms.  Spoon between 1 to 2 tbsp of the ricotta filling into the center of each crepe and then roll it up, setting each one seam side down in a line, side by side.  

Fill each pan with only one layer of crepes.

Cover the top lightly with sauce and dust with cheese.  Bake for about 20 to 25 minutes uncovered, or until the sauce is bubbling and the manicotti is heated through.

Makes 16 manicotti

Notes:

  1. You will want to use a simple tomato sauce.  Briefly cooking down a 28-ounce can of tomatoes with some onion, garlic, olive oil, and chili flakes will work.  (It should not take longer than about 20 minutes.) Typically, I make a double batch to have some leftover.
December 02, 2013 /Emily Gelsomin
italian, pasta
For Herbivores
cuc sandwiches.jpg

Cucumber Cream Cheese Cilantro Sandwiches, for Now

November 17, 2013 by Emily Gelsomin in For Herbivores, Eat Vegetables

I am in a bit of a sinkhole at the moment.  

I am researching the role of pasta in post-unification Italy for my final paper this semester.  I am also recovering from making the world’s worst pudding on Friday night.  And if I am truly being honest, I did not fair much better attempting a chocolate poppy seed krantz cake on Saturday.  Though, I did learn if your dough only slightly rises you can turn krantz cake into "rugelach." 

What I really want to do is sit down with the Sunday Times, have a mangled krantz-rugelach with a cup of coffee, and stop time.  But a paper on pasta in Futurist-Fascist Italy is not going to write itself.

Which is why I am bringing you cucumbers in November. 

This is one of my all-time favorite sandwiches.  They are perfect for summer, which is when I first made them. (Dave and I smuggled them onto the Downeaster to Portland a few months ago.)  They are also quick, and so they fit in any old time.

The ingredients hardly require a garden in our age of the supermarket.  It is also worth mentioning if you make any of Jeni’s ice creams—and are bagel-deprived—you’ll need a use for the leftover cream cheese.  (Here is one of my favorite recipes using her lovely base.)

So allow me to introduce the cream cheese cucumber sandwich, of which I am ideological fan.  In reality those two need some spunk to get me excited about consuming them in tandem.  The chili garlic sauce, cilantro, and capers come in to make the magic happen.  You will also want a really good sourdough or nutty multigrain bread because the outsides are as important as the insides when crafting a sandwich.

Which we have the luxury of securing.  Because—thankfully—this is not fascist Italy.  This is post-ice cream New England, with sandwiches.

Now back to the twentieth century.

Cucumber Cream Cheese Sandwiches with Chili and Cilantro

Ingredients:

  • 4 ounces cream cheese
  • 2 tbsp capers, roughly chopped
  • 10 to 12 cilantro sprigs, stems and leaves finely chopped
  • 1 scallion, finely chopped
  • black pepper and salt to taste
  • about 1½ tbsp chili garlic sauce, divided
  • 1 cucumber, sliced
  • slices of bread (I recommend sourdough)

Instructions:

Combine the cream cheese, capers, cilantro, and scallion; taste and adjust seasoning.  Spread a little of the mixture on each piece of sourdough (about a tablespoon).  

Place a few slices of cucumber on one slice of bread and spread about a tsp of chili sauce on the other.  Combine sides.  

Slice and eat.

Makes 3 to 4 sandwiches

Notes:

  1. Instructions are based on one sandwich.  The number of sandwiches will depend on how thick you spread it.
November 17, 2013 /Emily Gelsomin
cucumber, cilantro, sandwich
For Herbivores, Eat Vegetables
zucchini.jpg

Mom's Zucchini Appetizers

August 08, 2013 by Emily Gelsomin in For Herbivores, Eat Vegetables

I’ll bet you once had a childhood.  And during that time you probably did some snacking.  And I’d wager you likely have a few foods that you haven’t eaten in a good fifteen or twenty years, but if you saw them today, for a moment, you might forget all the nasty bits of growing up.

Maybe it’s those twin popsicles—the kind with the double sticks that came in a big translucent bag to clearly boast the flavors it held.  

Or maybe your pick is a bit more unusual, like boxed pistachio pudding, in which case, you were probably a strange little child, and we likely would have gotten along very nicely.

My sister was a pigs-in-a-blanket fiend.  In her presence, party trays would leave the kitchen half demolished.  I stalked the chips and dip bowl and would not leave until the French onion dip was taken down. 

Unless a little something my mother called “zucchini appetizers” was prepared.

These were admittedly an odd snack caught somewhere between a crustless quiche and a bouncy bread pudding, of a savory sort.  I loved to eat them cold and to this day, they still taste like summer.  If summer could be mixed with Bisquick® and cubed.

You can probably see where this is going.

I was thumbing through my mother’s recipe book awhile back and came across these square zucchini snacks of hers.  Though ten-year-old Emily was thrilled, the Bisquick presented a challenge.  These days I’m not one for premade pancake mix, so I had to indulge my very adult snobbery and find a proper substitute.

Luckily, the Internet is brimming with do-it-yourself Bisquick people.  And after a few trials, I had pretty much replicated the appetizers.  I decreased the garlic, because it gives thirty-year-old Emily dyspepsia.  And added basil because I believe basil can be added to pretty much anything.  And just did what I was told on mom's recipe card:

Mix all ingredients.  Spread in a greased casserole. Bake until slightly golden on top.  Cut into bite-sized squares.  Serve hot or cold.

I only ever remember ever eating them cold.  And bite-sized by the handful.

Mom's Zucchini Appetizers

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1½ tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 4 eggs
  • ½ cup olive oil
  • 1 whole scallion, minced
  • 1 small garlic clove, finely minced
  • ½ cup grated parmesan cheese
  • 3½ cups grated zucchini (about 3 small zucchini)
  • ⅓ cup roughly chopped fresh basil leaves
  • pinch of red pepper flakes
  • a few turns of fresh black pepper

Instructions:

Set the oven to 350 degrees.  In a large bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, and salt; set aside.  In a medium bowl, lightly beat the eggs and then add in the remaining ingredients and stir to combine; mix the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients until just combined.

Butter a casserole dish (I used a 10 x 7).  Pour the mixture into the prepared dish and bake until the eggs have fully set and the top is golden brown around the edges, about 40 to 50 minutes. (If you are using a larger casserole pan, the time may be less.)

Makes about 12 bite-sized squares (or 6 as part of a meal)

Notes:

  1. The 1 cup of Bisquick® originally called for in this recipe roughly translates to 1 cup of flour plus 1½ tsp of baking powder, ¼ cup of oil, and ½ tsp salt.
  2. This also makes a very wonderful savory breakfast (particularly if you were a slightly odd child).
August 08, 2013 /Emily Gelsomin
zucchini, summer, appetizer
For Herbivores, Eat Vegetables
  • Newer
  • Older

Copyright 2024