Minestrone Genovese

Minestrone Genovese

Pam and her father Archie Perugi developed this recipe as remembered by Archie from his childhood.

Makes 12 servings

INGREDIENTS
1⁄2 lb dried cannellini beans or
24 oz canned/cooked beans 1⁄2 c olive oil
1/2 c olive oil
4 oz pancetta, chopped
2 lg onions chopped small
2 leeks (white part only) cut in half lengthwise & thinly sliced
1 bunch kale, deveined & chopped bite size
1 bunch swiss chard, chopped bite size
1⁄4 to 1⁄2 cabbage, chopped bite size
3 qts water/chicken stock (I make my own chicken stock and use 1 qt stock and 2 qt water)
4 potatoes, diced small (4 cups)
1⁄2 lb linguine broken into 1-1 1/4 “ pieces
Salt and pepper
1/2 c homemade pesto (or to taste) without parm cheese
Parmesan for sprinkling on each serving

DIRECTIONS

Soak the beans overnight with 1 teaspoon baking soda for at least 8 hours, drain.

Heat the olive oil in a large soup pan, brown the pancetta. Add the onions and leeks and cook for 5-10 minutes until wilted. Add all the chopped greens and cook until wilted. Add (the soaked dried beans)**, and 2 quarts of water/chicken stock, bring to boil then lower it to a simmer for 45-60 minutes (test the beans).

Add the potatoes, (canned beans)**, and the linguine. Add 1 qt water. Raise temperature to bring to a boil and then lower it to a simmer. Season with salt and freshly ground black pepper. Cook until linguine are al dente. Turn off heat and add Pesto. Serve with grated Parmigiano-Reggiano.

**Soaked dried beans need more time to cook than the canned beans.

Italian Feasting in Massachusetts and Virginia

Italian Feasting in Massachusetts and Virginia

For Christmas this year, Pam Marraccini made a Lasagna Bolognese for her family and Nancy and Ed’s families made the traditional Cappelletti Soup. Deb made Polenta Verde this week, Minestrone soup for Christmas Eve and Ricotta Christmas Cookies, Eva’s favorite! Cookie pics and recipe to come!

 

 

Minestrone Soup

Nona Battani (Grandma’s mother) – from N Krug

Boil beef chuck meat in salted water with 1 bouillon cube to make stock.
Cool and skim fat off the top.  Chop meat up.
1 can cannelloni beans
1 zucchini
Green beans cut in 1 inch pieces
2 chopped carrots
2 – 3 stalks chopped celery
2-3 chopped onions
Garlic powder
1 tsp basil leaves
2-3 chopped potatoes
2-3 chopped and peeled tomatoes
1 Cup Ditalini pasta

Saute onions, celery, and carrots in 1/4 stick of butter. Add 1 Tbsp. oil for flavor. Add zucchini, string beans, beans, potatoes and tomatoes.
Cook until soft. Add meat stock. Season with garlic powder, basil, salt and pepper. When soft and soup is thick, add pasta and cook al dente.

Editor’s Note: You can use vegetable bouillon cubes instead of the meat stock and no meat for a vegetarian version. I also add a piece of parmesan rind for flavor and offer grated parmesan to sprinkle on top. This is a surprisingly quick and easy dinner to make during the week.

Cappelletti

Dough:
5 C. flour
4 eggs
ground nutmeg
salt
1/2 eggshell water per egg
Knead well and let stand one hour. The more you knead the better.

Filling:
2 Chicken breasts browned in butter and put through meat grinder.
1/4 lb. prosciutto
1/4 lb. mortadella (with nuts, optional)
1/2 t. ground nutmeg
1/2 C. grated parmesan cheese
Stir. Add two eggs.

Add to homemade chicken broth or use canned Old Colony Chicken Broth. Serve with grated parmesan cheese.