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Anna joins us again for another fun podcast, featuring an amazing day of food shopping with Paul, a delicious lunch, and a fun discussion about her new cookbook Eat Happy.
Topics we cover:
- Anything with zucchini noodles made with Paderno spiralizer
- Butternut squash cauliflower rice
- Low-carb pizza crust
- Pistachio crusted salmon
- Sausage zucchini bake
- Bacon broccoli
- Napoli salumi with peppercorns
- Some spicy Calabrese salumi
- Mortadella, how big and delicious it is in Italy
More on Stracciatella
Otherwise known as heaven on Earth at Villa Cappelli, it's a fresh cheese produced in Puglia using a stretching and shredding method. Thus the name which means "little shreds."
The way it was explained to me at one point is that it's the same as mozzarella before it becomes mozzarella. Meaning, the curds aren't worked quite as much.
After the shreds are made, they are mixed with cream. It's amaze balls. A creamy, smooth, delicious bite of heaven.
This is also the same cheese you find in the center of burrata, which is essentially stracciatella wrapped in mozzarella. So when you cut into the big ball of mozzarella, the stracciatella and cream ooze out. Also to die for, but for me, why not just enjoy the star of the dish on its own!
By Paul Cappelli & Steven Crutchfield, discussing all things Italian: food, cu4.7
168168 ratings
Anna joins us again for another fun podcast, featuring an amazing day of food shopping with Paul, a delicious lunch, and a fun discussion about her new cookbook Eat Happy.
Topics we cover:
- Anything with zucchini noodles made with Paderno spiralizer
- Butternut squash cauliflower rice
- Low-carb pizza crust
- Pistachio crusted salmon
- Sausage zucchini bake
- Bacon broccoli
- Napoli salumi with peppercorns
- Some spicy Calabrese salumi
- Mortadella, how big and delicious it is in Italy
More on Stracciatella
Otherwise known as heaven on Earth at Villa Cappelli, it's a fresh cheese produced in Puglia using a stretching and shredding method. Thus the name which means "little shreds."
The way it was explained to me at one point is that it's the same as mozzarella before it becomes mozzarella. Meaning, the curds aren't worked quite as much.
After the shreds are made, they are mixed with cream. It's amaze balls. A creamy, smooth, delicious bite of heaven.
This is also the same cheese you find in the center of burrata, which is essentially stracciatella wrapped in mozzarella. So when you cut into the big ball of mozzarella, the stracciatella and cream ooze out. Also to die for, but for me, why not just enjoy the star of the dish on its own!