Saturday, February 24, 2007

Minestrone di Riccobono


We are pleased to introduce our good friend Jennifer Riccobono as our guest blogger this week. Her husband Pete makes excellent minestrone and they were generous enough to share it with the world! Read on...
“My family has dinner on Sundays. Do you want to come to my parents’ house and join us this week?”

“I’d love to. Do you know what they’re having so I can bring something?”

“Oh, you don’t have to bring anything. And we have red sauce every Sunday.”

“Red sauce?”

“Mm, hmm.”

“What’s red sauce?”

Blank stare. And then, “Red sauce. You know, with pasta. Probably sausages and stuff.”

“Do you mean like, spaghetti sauce? Tomato sauce?”

“Yeah, red sauce…”

So there it was; my introduction into Italian family life. Seven and a half years later, after a marriage and a move to our nation’s Capital, I barely remember calling red sauce by any other name and I’d argue to the death that the best place to buy a cannoli is in Brooklyn, NY.

The RiccobonosThose Sunday dinners at my husband’s parents’ house taught me a few things about Italian American tradition and family dynamics. I am a foodie by nature and perhaps it’s no mistake that I married a chef, as my sister once noted. The culinary lines run deep in my husband’s family and Italian influence in many of the home cooked meals is a good thing. Preparations for many of the dishes are an all day event. They fill your home with the sublime smells of comfort and warmth giving your walls and chairs and tables a sense of dignity and a collective transition from house to home.

When we moved to this great city, I was fortunate enough to befriend some incredible people.Two of them are the proprietors of the Gracious Bowl, and they invited us to the first annual DC soup swap last month. As soup is one of my favorite treats I am a big fan of the Gracious Bowl blog, but had one problem.What soup are we (read: my darling husband Pete) going to make?

Since we would be sharing the soup with friends it seemed only natural to pick a soup that symbolized family warmth and casual comfort. Italian Minestrone was an obvious choice. The word Minestrone means “to dish up” or “to serve”. Traditionally filled with all the things in your kitchen you didn’t finish using for something else it exudes casual comfort. Bits and pieces of other meals created lovingly to serve to family and friends would have to have carried with them the positive energy of the dishes they were originally intended for.

So serve up this Minestrone di Riccobono (That’s right…Riccobono! Where you expecting Minestrone di Smith?) with some nice parmesan cheese and raise your wine glass to good family and good friends. Salute!

Minestrone di Riccobono
Serves 4

3 tablespoons olive oil
1 medium onion, chopped
3 cloves garlic, chopped

6 cups low-salt chicken broth

1 – 3” Parmigiano Reggiano rind
2 carrots, peeled, cut into 1/2-inch-thick rounds
2 celery stalks, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
1 zucchini, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
1 yellow squash, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
1 small eggplant, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
1 15-ounce can cannellini (white kidney beans), drained
2 tomatoes, peeled, crushed
2 cups green cabbage, chopped into 1 inch pieces

1 cup ditallini or other spoon sized pasta
Freshly grated Parmesan cheese

1. Heat olive oil in heavy large pot over medium heat. Add onion, garlic and sauté until soft, about 4 minutes.

2. Add broth and next 9 ingredients. Increase heat to high and bring soup to boil. Reduce heat to medium-low, and simmer, about 10 minutes.

3. Return to a boil and stir in pasta; boil until pasta is al dente, about 6-10 minutes longer.

4. Season the soup to taste with salt and pepper and remove remains of Parmigiano rind. Ladle soup into 6 bowls; Serve, passing cheese separately.

Photo of the lovely Riccobonos by Joe Foley.

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posted by Margaret at 10:20 PM

6 Comments:

Blogger adrienne said...

After I scored this at the soup swap, I took Jen and Pete's Minestrone to work for lunch not once, but TWICE. Those mornings I couldn't wait until 11-11:30 when I could dig in and I'm someone who usually eats a late lunch. It was a simple reheat and a perfect way to warm up on a cold day! Yum!

7:29 PM  
Blogger Bad Home Cook said...

Ooohhhhh....this is looking like next week's soup experiment.
But tell the bad home cook this; The rind you're talking about....that's a *cheese* rind? Huh?

12:47 AM  
Blogger Margaret said...

Bad home cook--to answer your question, YES! That's a real live cheese rind! You know the Italians use everything and waste nothing, not even the rind of the cheese. Just make sure you get a Parmigiano Reggiano cheese rind--most gourmet cheese shops will sell rinds separately for cheap! Just pull it out and discard before you enjoy the soup...let me know how it turns out!

10:11 AM  
Blogger Nick said...

Ah, Italian gumbo. It looks very nice.
I must confess this post confused me for a moment. At the beginning of the conversation I thought it was Margaret asking what red sauce was. I was afraid I would need to travel to DC and smack her. After rereading I am pleased that no such trip will be necessary.

3:02 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Actually, 'minestra' means 'vegetable soup' or 'broth,' and the '-one' suffix indicates that it is 'bigger,' or thicker, or in some way larger than the original.

But yeah, a classic recipe. And the beauty of it is you can throw in whatever you have as substitutes: garbanzos instead of other beans; escarole instead of cabbage, rice instead of pasta; vegetable broth instead of chicken. Every batch is different, and they are all equally delicious. But the parmesan rind is key, I'd never leave that out! And bread, you gotta have bread to sop up every last delicious drop.

1:27 PM  
Anonymous cooking4two said...

I love this blog! I found you guys via StumbleUpon and you are now in my regular cooking blog rotation. This is such a neat idea and I'll definitely link you for the benefit of my readers! Thanks so much for sharing :)

10:55 AM  

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