• About the Author
  • Recipe Index
  • Contact Me
  • The Kitchen Crew
  • The Legal Necessities

More Savory, Less Sweet

Adventures in Food - Taste, Explore, Inspire and Share

Italian Wedding Soup

10/24/2014 by Laura 1 Comment

As I say goodbye to the best summer ever in the Pacific Northwest,  I try to convince myself there are benefits to the cooler weather.  I replace my t-shirt with my favorite sweater, my flip-flops with my awesome purple suede boots, and snuggle into a bed fitted with soft flannel sheets and a fluffy down comforter.  Drifting off to sleep,  I dream about SOUP!   Not July’s cold, fruity, melted popsicle like soup but hearty, hot, fill your belly, warm your soul, go on to live another day kind of soup!  Butternut Squash Soup, White Bean and Kale Soup, Lentil Soup, Beef and Barely Soup, Chicken Noodle Soup (always on hand in the freezer for unplanned cold or flu), and soups I have yet to invent, soups from foreign lands, made with spices, beans and grains I have never tried.  I snap out of my pre-winter doldrums and find myself almost giddy with excitement.  I have stock to make, bones and veggies to roast, broth to clarify, beans to soak, and recipes to research.  Where’s my tureen? I think I need a new stock pot! “Dave, I’m heading to Restaurant Supply, I’ll be back in an hour”!

Italian Wedding Soup

It has been pouring heavy, bone-chilling rain all week.  We’ve had a fire three nights out of five.  I finally made time to make a pot of soup.  I absolutely love Italian Wedding Soup.  I have no idea when or where I first had it, but I always order it when it’s on the menu!  I love the combination of the rich broth, the little one-bite meatballs and the strong, bitter greens, traditionally endive.  In researching recipes, I learned this soup has nothing to do with weddings.  Per Wikipedia, the term “wedding soup” is a mistranslation of the Italian language phrase “minestra maritata (“married soup”),” which is a reference to the fact that green vegetables and meats go well together.  As you can imagine, there are hundreds of variations of this soup.  My version is a combination of Whole Foods and Ina Garten’s recipes tailored to what I had on hand.

For the Meatballs

1 pound ground chicken

1 pound ground chicken Italian sausage

1 cup fresh white breadcrumbs

3 cloves minced garlic

4 tablespoons fresh minced parsley

2 tablespoons fresh minced oregano

1 cup freshly grated Pecorino Romano cheese

2 eggs

2 tablespoons of milk

salt and pepper to taste

Mince the garlic, parsley and oregano.  Place the meats, breadcrumbs, grated cheese, eggs, milk, garlic and herbs in a large bowl and mix well.  Season with salt and pepper.  Add a little more milk if the mixture is too dry and not sticking together.  Add a few more bread crumbs if the mixture is too wet and falling apart.  Make a “test” meat ball.  Warm a skillet over medium heat.  Add a little olive oil to the skillet.  Fry the test meatball until done, about 4 minutes on each side.  Taste the meatball and adjust the seasoning.  Proceed making small meatballs with the remainder of the meat.  The chicken mixture is a little sticky.  Dampening your hands with cool water will help.  Place the meatballs on a parchment lined baking sheet.  Bake for 10 minutes at 350′ to set the meatballs.  Set aside until ready to add to the soup.

Italian Wedding Soup

For the Soup

1 cup diced onion

1 cup diced carrot

1 cup diced celery

3 cloves minced garlic

4 tablespoons olive oil

Italian Wedding Soup

1 cup dry white wine

3 quarts rich chicken stock – I used the new Pacific Foods Organic Bone Broth – It’s as close to homemade stock as you can get!

1 14.5 ounce can fire roasted, organic diced tomatoes

16 ounces small pasta, I used mini-shells

16 ounces baby kale, or chard, or spinach or endive or any combination

salt and pepper

1/2 cup freshly grated Percorino Romano cheese

Sauté the onions, carrots, celery and garlic in the olive oil in a large, heavy soup pot, about 5-7 minutes.  Add the white wine and stir.  Add the stock and tomatoes.  Bring to a slow simmer.  Season with salt and pepper.  Add the meatballs and continue to simmer slowly.  Meanwhile, bring a large pot of salted water to boil and prepare the pasta.  Cook about 5 minutes, drain and add to the soup.***  Return to a slow simmer.  Stir in the grated cheese.  About 5 minutes prior to serving, add the greens.  Cook just until the greens slightly “melt” into the soup.  Ladle into soup bowls.  Garnish with additional grated cheese and a little minced parsley.

Italian Wedding Soup

***Both of the recipes I referenced instruct you to cook the pasta in the soup.  NEVER do that with any pasta.  You will end up with a big, cloudy, sticky mess.  As a matter of fact, it is often best to keep the pasta out of the soup entirely, until ready to eat.  Just place a little pasta in the bowl and then pour the hot soup over it when ready to serve. 

Build a big roaring fire, pour yourself a glass of Pinot Grigio, and hunker down with your hot bowl of soup.  We’ve got about 5 more months of this!

Have a great evening,

Laura

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: One Pot Meal, Pasta, Poultry, Soup Tagged With: cheese, chicken, garlic, Italian, meatballs, oregano, pasta, soup

Manicotti with Three Sauces

08/03/2014 by Laura 1 Comment

We were watching the food channel the other night; Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives, I think.  As we tuned in at the end of an episode, we caught a glimpse of a cannelloni with three sauces.  Dave, my nephew and I all commented that it looked really good.  The three sauces pesto, béchamel and marinara were layered on the cannelloni to represent the Italian flag.  So when the daily conversation turned to “what shall we make for dinner” I decided we would give it a whirl.  I had homemade pesto and marinara in the freezer and béchamel sauce only takes a couple of minutes.   We took a quick survey of the pantry and only needed a few things.  I usually use spinach and mushrooms in my filling, but since it is August and there are zucchini piled high in the veggie drawer, I decided that would be the “green” in the filling.   I think my nephew went home one day too soon!

manicotti 063.2

For the Manicotti 

1 – 1 lb. chub of Italian Chicken Sausage

3/4 cup finely diced onion

4 cloves of fresh garlic, minced

3/4 cup of small dice zucchini

2 Tablespoons freshly chopped Italian parsley

2 Tablespoons freshly chopped  basil

salt and pepper

olive oil for sautéing

1/2 cup dry white wine, to deglaze the pan

1  1 lb. container whole milk ricotta

2 eggs

3/4 cup of mozzarella, finely diced

(I like diced over shredded as you get little gooey cheese puddles in the filling!)

1/4 cup grated parmesan

12-16 manicotti tubes, boiled according to package directions

For assembly and serving

2/3 cup of prepared pesto

2 cups prepared marinara sauce

1 cup béchamel sauce

Add 2-3 tablespoons olive oil to a large sauté pan and heat over medium heat.  Add the sausage and break up the chunks while cooking.  Add in the zuchinni, onion and garlic and continue to cook until the vegetable are soft and the meat is browned.  Add the white wine, stir and let simmer about 5 minutes until the liquid has evaporated.  Season with salt and pepper.  Remove from stove, pour into a large mixing bowl and let cool.

manicotti 008.2

 

While the meat and vegetable mixture cools, prepare the manicotti.  Boil for about 5 minutes.  Drain and rinse with cold water.  Set aside until ready to stuff.

In a small bowl, mix together the ricotta, eggs, diced mozzarella and parmesan.  Add to the cooled meat and vegetable mixture and mix well.   Prepare a baking dish by lightly oiling it.

Fill the pasta tubes.  I used a very small spoon to stuff them.  When we finished Dave said “we should have used a pastry bag”!  Of course we should have used a pastry bag….what was I thinking?

manicotti 015.2

Lay the filled tubes into the baking pan.   Heat the oven to 350′.  Add 3-4 Tablespoons of water to the baking pan and cover tightly with foil.  Bake about 20 minutes and remove from oven.

While the pasta is baking, warm the marinara sauce in a small pan on the stove, prepare the béchamel sauce and pesto.

Basic Béchamel Sauce

4 tablespoons butter

1/4 cup finely diced onion

2 cloves finely minced garlic

1/3 cup Wondra flour

1/8 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg

1/4 cup grated parmesan

salt and pepper.

Melt the butter in a saucepan over medium heat.  Add the onion and garlic and sauté until the vegetables are soft.  Whisk in the flour to make a light roux.  Slowly add the milk and continue to simmer until thickened.  Add the cheese, nutmeg and salt and pepper to taste.  Set aside.  In a small bowl, mix about two tablespoons of béchamel into the 2/3 cup of pesto.

Remove the pasta from the oven.  Layer the sauces on to the pasta in the desired fashion.  My choice was three separate “sections”.  You certainly could layer marinara, then béchamel and then pesto, one on top of the other.  Return the pasta to the oven, uncovered and bake another 10 minutes.  Garnish with grated cheese and freshly chopped Italian parsley, and touch up the sauces, if needed.

manicotti 051

 Buono appetiteo!

 

Filed Under: Pasta, Poultry Tagged With: bechamel, Italian, italian chicken sausage, manicotti, marinara, mozzarella, parmesan, pasta, pesto, zucchini

Looking for a particular recipe? Search here!

Stay in touch!

Enter your email address to subscribe to More Savory Less Sweet, and receive notifications of new posts by email.

What we’re doing when we’re not blogging!

Follow on Instagram
This error message is only visible to WordPress admins
Error: There is no connected account for the user 17841401233545030.
Foodista Food Blog of the Day Badge

Copyright © 2023 · Lifestyle Pro Child Theme for More Savory, Less Sweet on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in