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shroomgirl
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Um... so while in NYC shopping and eating lunch with other cheftalkers in a really cool Italian grocery I bought bottarga....dried fish roe...this is already grated.
So now the question is whatdya do with it.....besides pasta with olive oil and this over the top???
We also saw Cedro> and it was a new one for us too....
cooking with all your senses.....
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Pete
- Professional Chef
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I would probably be good over a shellfish stew of some sort. How does it take to cooking? Maybe combine it with breadcrumbs and crust a fish with it? Other than that, not really sure. I will have to think about that one.
From Man's sweat and God's love, beer came into the World-Saint Arnoldus
http://www.onceachef.com/
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marmalady
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Pongi - we need you!!!
thought I'd be helpful Hannah, and just did a Google search for bottarga recipes - got loads, but they're all in Italian!!!
I seem to remember Mario Batali doing something with bottarga - maybe it's in one of his books.
Pongi - where are you?!!!
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"Like water for chocolate"
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shroomgirl
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Thank you so much!!! And yes I just happen to have cippolini from NYC Farmer's market.....
cooking with all your senses.....
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It is kind of Pongi to have posted the battarga recipes.
I have a couple questions about bopttarga. First, is the vacu-sealed bottarga the same quality? Second how do you store it?
" ...but in the spirit of 'stop, think, there must be a harder way, 'I figured starting from scratch might be more gratifying.'' (Judy Rodgers)
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cape chef
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Hey Shroomgirl,
Um, I don't recall you sharing your Bottarga with all of us at Chelsy market! What gives?? :)
Alexia, I agree with you..Pongi's recipes soung great.
You know whats cool about battarga? When you grate it on pasta with olive oil, it almost looks like curry.
Some fun history about Bottarga.
Bottarga, derives from the Aribic
batarikh which in turn derives from the Coptic pitaoichon or the Greek tarichoe, meaning salted fish or meat.
It's a very old art, and in Sardinia one of there favorite ways to prepare Bottarga is with spaghetti.
In Sardinia, Bottarga is made with either di tonna (Tuna) or di muggine (gray Mullet)
cc
Baruch ben Rueven / Chanaבראד, ילד של ריימונד והאלאן
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marmalady
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CChiu, Thanks for the tip!
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Pongi your recipes sound fantastic!
When I was in Sicily we ate a lot of bottarga- mostly with pasta / parsley and olive oil sauce. The oil and the parsley were so green contrasting with the orange /brown shavings of the tuna - it was amazing. I also ate it as a topping on a thin crust pizza with tomato sauce made from 'strattu (serious Sicilian tomato paste) and garnished with black olives and torn basil leaves. Yum!
Your recipes have made me hungry - I need to go back to Palermo soon!
Peace. :)
"Life is a banquet - and most poor suckers are starving to death" - Auntie Mame