Meatballs (plain or stuffed with mozzarella)

Contrary to what Americans (USA) think, spaghetti and meatballs are usually not served together in Italy, but rather the pasta is eaten first, then the meat.

I usually make meatballs in tomato sauce and either serve them together with pasta or make meatball parmesan sandwiches with Italian bread. This recipe uses bread crumbs but I sometimes use 1 or 2 slices of white bread, broken up into little pieces, instead. My mother used to add small pieces of butter or margarine to the meat which made the meatballs really tender and quite tasty, but I leave it out because it can make them a little greasy.

I like to make the meatballs stuffed with little cubes of mozzarella but you can leave that part out if you’d like. You can also bake or fry the meatballs and serve as appetizers.

Makes about 12 medium sized meatballs

Ingredients

1 lb ground beef, or 1/2 lb ground beef and 1/2 lb ground pork, or 1/3 lb beef 1/3 lb pork 1/3 lb veal
1/4 tsp salt or according to taste
1/4 small onion, minced
1/4 tsp garlic powder
1 T dried parsley (more if using fresh minced parsley)
1 large egg
2 T bread crumbs (seasoned or unseasoned)
mozzarella, small cubes

  1. in a large bowl, combine ground beef, salt, onion, garlic powder, parsley, and egg.
  2. add the bread crumbs and mix well.
  3. grab a small amount of mixture and roll into a ball (about the size of a golf ball). Make an indentation with your thumb and press a small cube of mozzarella in it then cover up the mozzarella.
  4. add to tomato sauce and cook until done.

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Stromboli Roll

This recipe serves approximately 4 -6 people if sliced and served as an appetizer, or 2 people if it is the main dish. You can leave out the prosciutto if it is too salty for your liking.


Ingredients

12 oz. pizza dough
4 slices of ham
4 slices of mozzarella
4 slices of salami
2 long slices of prosciutto
onion powder
garlic powder
oregano
pecorino romano or parmigiano-reggiano cheese
1 T olive oil

  1. preheat oven to 375°.
  2. in a large pizza pan spread the olive oil with your fingers.
  3. stretch the dough out in the pan and sprinkle onion and garlic powder according to your taste.
  4. spread the slices of ham, mozzarella, salami and prosciutto across the dough, leaving about an inch around the dough with nothing on it.
  5. fold about an inch of the dough on opposite ends, then roll one of the other ends until you have a log.
  6. sprinkle some oregano and grated cheese on top.
  7. bake for about 30 minutes, until golden brown.

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Pesto Sauce

I love pesto sauce so much I can eat it on Italian bread as a spread! The scent of basil reminds me of when I was little. My family and I lived in an apartment so we didn’t have a garden, but that didn’t stop my parents from planting herbs and vegetables in buckets and keeping them out on the fire escape during the summer. When they finally bought a house, basil was one of the first things they planted, along with tomatoes of course.

Pesto sauce is made with lots of fresh basil, although I’ve seen recipes substituting some of the basil with spinach and parsley to give it that nice green color. The basil in pesto will actually change to a brownish color after a short time because of oxidation (when certain substances react to being exposed to oxygen), but you can drop the leaves in a pot of boiling water for a few seconds to destroy the enzymes that cause it (read Why does my pesto turn brown?)

It also calls for pignoli, or pine nuts, which can be expensive so I usually leave them out and the sauce still has a wonderful, aromatic flavor.  And for the best flavor, I always use extra virgin olive oil. My favorite unfortunately cannot be bought here because it is made in my father’s town, Selvacava.

I like to use the food processor to mix the ingredients, but traditionally it’s made using a mortar and pestle.

Ingredients

1 clove of garlic
3 T of grated pecorino romano or parmiggiano reggiano
1 T pine nuts
50 leave of basil, rinsed and dried
1/2 c extra virgin olive oil
a pinch of salt

  1. in a food processor, add garlic, cheese and pine nuts and mix until it is a paste.
  2. add basil and salt and mix.
  3. slowly add the olive oil.

If you do not use it right away, the oil will separate from the rest of the ingredients so you have to stir it before adding it to anything.

I like to make a lot of pesto and freeze it because I don’t always have the time to prepare it just before I use it.

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