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The final offerings 🌱 Carta di musica with a broad bean dip and pickled beetroot roses Banana blossom tempura and tofu panure à l’anglaise aka vegan fish and chips Sugar snap and bobbi bean vignole White sourdough and cashew cheese I bought into the lockdown sourdough craze and let’s just say there were several attempts and lots of head shaking 😅. But now I’ve FINALLY made a decent sourdough. 2 weeks from starter to loaf 😊. Thank you Helen for not allowing me to flatten this beauty with my heavy handed approach! #veganfoodie #vegancookeryschool #tempura #vignole #sourdough #bakingmad #vegancookingclass #demuths #veganeats #ukfoodie #f52community #f52grams https://www.instagram.com/p/CSTd-wJqgrs/?utm_medium=tumblr
Pic saint loup
Vignole
Vignole on Saturday 26 May 2018
We have asparagus. We have peas. We have freezer drawers full of broad beans from last year that I desperately need to use before replenishing with this year’s crop. It was time to make vignole.
This is my variation of the Roman spring vegetable stew that is based on Yotam Ottolenghi’s recipe found in the Guardian. (Note the dates. It was providence.)
Stewing young, bright green, tender vegetables might feel counter-intuitive, but it does work. It enhances their sweetness, and gazing upon a panful of verdant abundance inspires a feeling of gratitude like little else.
I used asparagus, mange-tout-type peas, and broad beans, because this is what we have. Use these as part of a mixture that might well include artichokes, sugar snaps, frozen peas, and spinach or chard, if you want.
I used pearled spelt because I can eat it; Ottolenghi uses orzo in his version, which cooks far quicker and goes in with the mange-tout and asparagus (and needs less liquid). Many traditional recipes won’t have any grain in it at all. Use it or don’t. It really is up to you.
Serves 4
3 perpetual onions, or one small onion, sliced
4 cloves garlic, sliced
50ml olive oil
175g pearled spelt
750ml water
1 lemon
450g fresh peas in their pods, to be eaten whole (so mange-tout), trimmed
400g asparagus, cut into 3cm lengths
350g podded broad beans
Sprig of fresh mint
Salt and pepper
Wash the spelt and leave it to soak in cold water while you prepare the mange-tout, asparagus, alliums, and the broad beans.
Boil the broad beans for six or seven minutes, until they are tender. Refresh them under cold water and set them aside.
In a large lidded pan, heat the olive oil and add the onion and garlic. Cook the alliums gently for five minutes until the garlic begins to take on some colour.
Use a vegetable peeler to skim five slices of pith-free lemon peel from the fruit. Toss these into the hot oil, followed by the drained spelt. Turn it around in the hot oil before adding the water, and a generous helping of salt and pepper. Bring to a boil, then cover and reduce to a lively simmer for ten minutes.
While the spelt is cooking, you can do some bean-podding. Slip the bright green beans out of their grey, papery envelopes.
After ten minutes, tip in the mange-tout and asparagus. If it is looking a little dry, add some more water. Keep in mind that the final dish shouldn’t be dry, but isn’t a soup. It’s somewhere in between. Cover the pan again and continue to cook over a medium to medium-low heat for another ten minutes. (You don’t want it boiling, but there needs to be enough action that things are cooking.)
Meanwhile, you’ll still be podding beans. Trust me.
After ten minutes, tip in your broad beans. Cook uncovered for two minutes, so that the beans can heat through. Take the pan off the heat. Squeeze in the juice of the lemon (it needs at least two tablespoons) and the zest where you haven’t shaved it. Stir everything before finely slicing the mint, scattering it over the dish, and serving immediately.
#vignole #venice #venezia #blondieslovepink #lifeispink @walkvenice @veneziadavivere
Créspine Gran Selezione 2009 - Vignole
Créspine Gran Selezione 2009 – Vignole
Bouquet zeigt sich komplex, dennoch nur von mittlerer Intensität. Ein schöner Mix aus Sauerkirschen, rote Kirschen, trockene Gräser, Erde und Würze. Am Gaumen lebendig, gute Dichte, extrem frische Fruchtsäure, ja gar leicht sauer an der Zungenspitze wie bei jungen Weißweinen. Sehr sanftes Tannin, kaum Adsringenz und eine schöne Persistenz. Noch etwas wild, allerdings ist dies auf das junge Alter…
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