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MOTHER’S DAY: Filicori Zecchini Espresso


Whole espresso beans in high-design
packaging. Photo courtesy Filicori Zecchini.
  Once upon a time, most of the espresso served in America was imported from Italy. In the 1970s, when coffee bean stores began to proliferate in the U.S., some people began to buy espresso that was roasted locally—from Don Francisco’s in L.A., Green Mountain Roasters in Vermont, Peet’s Coffee in Oakland, Starbucks in Seattle, White Coffee in New York, and numerous others.

Now, returning to the roots, a venerable Italian espresso roaster, Filicori Zecchini, is bringing its beans from Bologna, Italy, to tempt espresso-loving Americans.

The coffee has attracted fine restaurateurs in sophisticated coffee towns from New York to Honolulu. When restaurants pioneer, consumers follow.

So until a Filicori Zecchini café opens near you, you can buy the beans on Amazon. There are seven blends in whole beans and pods. Hopefully, they’ll soon be coming to a retailer near you. The company also sells fine teas, cocoa and other products, including the chocolate and mint sauces used in the recipe below.

 
The family business, established in 1919 in Bologna by Aldo Filicori and Luigi Zecchini, is now managed by Giovanni Filicori, Aldo’s son, and Luca Filicori, Aldo’s grandson. Father and son share the founders’ passion for expert roasting and coffee blending, and are proud to combine their artisanal skills with technological innovation.

So you don’t have to go to Italy for an authentic espresso experience; that experience has come to you. At a recent tasting at Rosemary’s restaurant in New York City, which features the coffee, we couldn’t stop drinking cup after cup of classic espresso and specialty espresso drinks.

As a treat for an espresso-loving friend, family member or colleague, can purchase bags online at Amazon.com, which carries several of the company’s seven blends.

 

The menu at Filicori Zecchini cafés is packed with tempting coffee drinks, all delicious. We particularly were attracted to this “Cialdino After Eight,” a special ice cream cone filled with espresso, chocolate and mint whipped cream.

Unfortunately, the cialdini—plural of cialdino, for the type of ice cream cone—is not currently sold on Amazon with the company’s other products. But don’t let that stop you from making this delcious drink in a conventional espresso cup or a small glass:

RECIPE: AFTER EIGHT COFFEE

Ingredients Per Drink

  • 1 short espresso (1 ounce)
  • 1/2 ounce chocolate topping (chocolate syrup or dessert sauce)
  • 1 ounce mint whipped cream (recipe below)
  • Cialdino (cone), cup or glass
  • Garnish: chopped chocolate, mint leaves
  • After eight mints or chocolate mint cookies
  •  


    A memorable after dinner drink, the After Eight from Filicori Zecchini.

  • Variation: 1/2 ounce creme de menthe liqueur and regular whipped cream
  •  
    Preparation

    1. POUR chocolate topping into cup or cone. Follow with espresso.

    2. TOP with mint whipped cream.

    3. GARNISH with chopped chocolate and mint leaves on the top. Serve with a side of After Eight mints or cookies.

    MINT WHIPPED CREAM RECIPE

    Ingredients

  • 1 cup of heavy cream
  • 1 teaspoon mint extract*
  • 1 tablespoon confectioners’ sugar
  • Pinch salt
  •  
    *If adding creme de menthe, substitute vanilla extract.
     
    Preparation

    1. USE a whipped cream dispenser or whip the cream by hand. To beat by hand…

    2. CHILL the bowl, beaters and cream thoroughly before beginning. Using an electric mixer, whip the cream, mint extract and sugar in the chilled bowl until soft peaks form. Makes about 2 cups.

    Learn more at FilicoriZecchini.it and follow the brand on Facebook: and Twitter.
     
    WHAT IS ESPRESSO

    Espresso is not a type of bean; it’s a type of dark roast applied to the raw bean, as well as a method of preparation, the coffee beverage produced by an espresso machine.†
     
    Discover more about espresso and espresso drinks in our Espresso Glossary.

    †Technically, espresso is a beverage made from 7 grams of finely ground dark roast coffee, that produces 1.5 ounces of extracted beverage under 9 bars of brewing pressure at brewing temperatures of around 190°F to 200°F, over a period of 25 to 30 seconds of brew time.
      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Add Color To Each Plate Of Food


    How bland would the fish and asparagus
    look without the tomatoes? Photo courtesy
    Galli Restaurant | New York City.
      Did you ever wonder why some restaurants throw slices of hard, tasteless tomatoes into a salad? The simple answer is: to add color, which makes the dish look more appetizing.

    No matter how delicious a dish may be, the presentation needs a hit of color—green, red, yellow—to give it a lift.

    That’s the rationale for the ubiquitous sprig of parsley and the red berry and/or mint leaf atop rice pudding and vanilla ice cream.

    Much of the food we eat is beige or otherwise earth-toned. So do a color check on everything you serve.

    If it’s a sweetened food—from cereal to apple pie—add some color with raspberries or sliced strawberries, or fan a large strawberry to top a piece of pie or pound cake.

     

    RED GARNISHES ROCK

    For savory dishes, use cherry tomatoes, sundried tomatoes or diced red bell pepper. Sliced red jalapeño works if you like the heat. All can be marinated first, in a vinaigrette or flavored olive oil. In essence, the garnish becomes a mini salad.

    If you buy sundried tomatoes, look for a bright red color and use them up relatively quickly. They oxidize to a blackish red over time.

    Other red garnish options: radish slices (or the retro radish rose) or a sprinkling of red spice (paprika, chili flakes, pink peppercorns) along the rim of the plate.

    Shredded red cabbage, with or without a vinaigrette, and shredded radicchio leaves are other options. If you’re near a good farmers market, look for amaranth and red chard.

     
    MORE GARNISH IDEAS

    There are dozens and dozens of everyday ingredients that can be used to garnish. Check out our article, Garnish Glamour.

    And beyond nutrition, color is another reason to add brightly colored vegetables to your meals.

      

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    A Recipe For National Butterscotch Brownie Day (a.k.a. Blondies)

    May 9th is National Butterscotch Brownie Day, also called a blonde brownie or blondie. The difference between a brownie and a butterscotch brownie / blondie is a yellow (blonde) batter: flour, brown sugar, butter, eggs, baking powder and vanilla. A brownie is made from a chocolate brownie batter, which adds cocoa powder or melted chocolate.

    A butterscotch brownie (a.k.a. blondie) has a butterscotch flavor, from the brown sugar. Some might call it a caramel flavor.

    There can be a slight difference between butterscotch brownies and blondies. Blondies typically include chocolate chips and nuts. Butterscotch brownies add butterscotch chips (chocolate chips and nuts are an option). Some recipes use toffee bits instead of butterscotch chips.
     
     
    BUTTERSCOTCH BROWNIES HISTORY

    According to Food Timeline, blonde brownies predate the chocolate version by about 10 years.

    Around 1896, a molasses-flavored bar cookie (no chocolate, cocoa or chocolate chips) called a brownie appeared. The name honored the elfin characters featured in popular books, stories, cartoons and verses of the time by Palmer Cox (the Eastman Kodak Brownie camera was also named after these elves).

    After the later introduction and popularity of chocolate brownies, the bar became known as a butterscotch brownie (history of the brownie).

    The name “Blondie” surfaces in the 1980s. It was not named for Dagwood Bumstead’s wife.
     
     
    RECIPE: CHEWY, CHUNKY BUTTERSCOTCH BROWNIES

    In this recipe, cookbook author Dorie Greenspan uses toffee bits instead of butterscotch chips. She also adds some coconut, which you can keep or omit.

    The recipe is from Dorie’s book, Baking: From My Home To Yours. It makes you want to get an invitation to Dorie’s home, ASAP.

    Ingredients

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 3/4 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 2 sticks (8 ounces) unsalted butter, at room temperature
  • 1-1/2 cups (packed) light brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 6 ounces bittersweet chocolate chopped into chips, or 1 cup store-bought chocolate chips
  • 1 cup butterscotch chips, Heath Toffee Bits, Skor Bits or other toffee bits*
  • 1 cup coarsely chopped walnuts (we substituted pecans)
  • 1 cup sweetened shredded coconut
  •  
    *You can chop up any toffee you have on hand.
     
    Preparation

    1. CENTER a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 325°F. Butter a 9×13-inch baking pan and put it on a baking sheet. Prepare a stand mixer, preferably fitted with a paddle attachment, or a hand mixer and a large bowl.

    2. WHISK together the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt.

    3. BEAT the butter on medium speed until smooth and creamy. Add both sugars and beat for another 3 minutes, or until well incorporated.

    4. ADD the eggs one by one, beating for 1 minute after each addition; then beat in the vanilla. Reduce the mixer speed to low and add the dry ingredients, mixing just until they disappear into the batter.

    5. STIR in the chips, nuts and coconut, using a rubber spatula. Scrape the batter into the buttered pan and use the spatula to even the top as best you can.

    6. BAKE for 40 minutes, or until a knife inserted into the center of the blondies comes out clean. The blondies should pull away from the sides of the pan a little and the top should be a nice honey brown color.

    7. TRANSFER the pan to a rack and cool for about 15 minutes before turning the blondies out onto another rack. Invert onto a rack right side up and cool the blondies to room temperature. Cut into 32 bars, each roughly 2-1/4 x 1-1/2 inches.
     
     
    FOOD 101: THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BUTTERSCOTCH & TOFFEE

    Both start with sugar, butter and water. Then, it’s a question of the heat and any added ingredients.

    Here’s the scoop.
     
     
    > BROWNIE HISTORY

     
     
    > COOKIE HISTORY
     
     
    > THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF COOKIES

     


    [1] A classic butterscotch brownie / blondie. The recipe is below (photo © Dorie Greenspan | Lovin In The Oven).


    [2] We prefer ours with lots of chocolate chips (photo © King Arthur Flour).


    [3] Yes, please: chocolate chips (photo © Bella Baker).


    [4] Want nuts? We think that pecans taste best in a butterscotch brownie / blondie (photo © American Pecans).


    [5] The recipe is from Dorie Greenspan’s book, Baking: From My Home To Yours (photo courtesy Houghton Mifflin Harcourt).

     

     
     

      

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    FOOD HOLIDAY: National Moscato Day Cocktail Recipes

    You can celebrate May 9th, National Moscato Day, with a glass of Moscato: the slightly sweet white wine pairs well wherever an Alsatian Gewürtztraminer or Riesling would be at home (see the food pairings below).

    But for National Moscato Day, we present two cocktail recipes, courtesy of Gallo Family Vineyards, one of our favorite Moscato makers.

    MOSCATO DAY CELEBRATION PUNCH

    Serves 6-8 people.

    Ingredients

  • 6 ounces Moscato
  • 2 ounces blanco (silver) Tequila
  • 4 ounces grapefruit juice
  • 2 ounces lemon juice
  • 4 ounces strongly brewed chamomile tea
  • 2 ounces agave nectar
  • 4 ounces club soda
  • Garnish: grapefruit and lemon wheels
  • Ice
  •  


    Try a Moscato-Tequila punch. Photo courtesy Gallo.

     

    Preparation

    1. COMBINE all ingredients in a punch bowl or large pitcher filled with ice.

    2. GARNISH and serve.

     


    A Gimlet made with Moscato instead of gin. Photo courtesy Gallo.
     

    MOSCATO GIMLET

    Ingredients Per Drink

  • 3 ounces Moscato
  • 1 ounce fresh lime juice
  • 1/2 ounce agave nectar
  • Lime wedge or wheel
  •  
    Preparation

    1. COMBINE ingredients in a cocktail shaker. Shake and strain into a coupe glass.

    2. GARNISH with lime wedge and serve.

     

    ABOUT MOSCATO

    Moscato is a lighter-style white wine, lower in alcohol (5%-8% ABV, about half the alcohol of other wines). It is popular with brunch, dessert or as an apéritif. It is grown around the world. The Italian bottlings, from Italy’s Piedmont region, are called Moscato d’Asti: named after the grape, Moscato, and the Italian town of Asti, the center of production. Asti Spumante is sparkling Moscato.

    Straw-colored Moscato is known for its fruit (often peaches and tangerines, depending on region), its floral fragrance fragrance and its subtle sweetness.

    PAIRING MOSCATO WITH FOOD

    Don’t store Moscato: It’s meant to be drunk fresh and vibrant in the year it is vinified. Serve it with:

  • Antipasto and charcuterie plates
  • Asian foods, especially spicy cuisines such as Indian and Thai
  • Desserts, including apple desserts; biscotti and other cookies; fresh berries and fruit salad; fruit pies and cobblers including lemon meringue and Key lime pies; hazelnut desserts; loaf cakes and sponge cakes (delicious with lemon-poppy bread!)
  • Cheese, especially more pungent cheeses such as blues, Parmigiano-Reggiano washed rind cheeses; or with Brie and other double- and triple-crème cheeses
  • Shellfish, from the raw bar to grilled lobster, scallops, shrimp
  •  
    SEE ALL THE AMERICAN FOOD HOLIDAYS.

      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Make A Savory Yogurt Sundae

    People regularly top plain Greek yogurt with fruit, granola and other sweet ingredients to create yogurt sundaes or parfaits.

    But what about savory toppings?

    When Pinkberry recently added conventional Greek yogurt to its frozen yogurt shops, among the fruit flavors were two savory yogurt sundaes:

  • Tomato Basil Yogurt Sundae: grape tomato, fresh basil, olive oil, sea salt, balsamic glaze
  • Sunflower Cucumber Yogurt Sundae: cucumber, sunflower seed bites, olive oil, chili powder
  •  
    We liked them, and they inspired us to use vegetables and other savory toppings on our plain Greek yogurt, as well as vegetable-fruit mixes. An ingredients template follows so you can do the same.

     

    Pinkberry’s Tomato-Basil Yogurt Sundae. Photo courtesy Pinkberry.

     
    While it takes more time to chop, we like a smaller dice of vegetables and fruit, rather than large, chunky pieces. It’s more sundae-like, as opposed to salad-like.

    Vegetables

  • Avocado
  • Bell pepper
  • Celery
  • Beet, cooked or raw
  • Cucumber
  • Giardinera*
  • Grilled vegetables, mixed
  • Pimiento
  • Tomato (halved cherry or grape tomatoes or diced, seeded conventional tomatoes)
  • Zucchini and/or yellow squash
  •  
    Fruits

  • Apple
  • Berries
  • Citrus segments
  • Melon
  • Stone fruit
  •  
    Sauces

  • Balsamic glaze
  • Chutney (a savory variety, such as cilantro/coriander)
  • Fine olive oil
  • Flavored olive oil or other infused oil (basil, chile, lemon, rosemary, etc.)
  • Guacamole, thinned
  • Hummus (thin hummus with water to the consistency of salad dressing)
  • Mole
  • Peri-peri
  • Pesto
  • Salsa (red or green, including fruit salsa like mango or peach—see salsa types)
  • Tzatziki or raita (recipes)
  •  


    Pinkberry’s Sunflower Cucumber Sundae.
    Photo © The Wandering Eater | Flickr.
     

    Toppings

  • Beans and/or lentils
  • Caramelized onions
  • Cheerios, Corn Flakes or other unsweetened cereal
  • Corn kernels
  • Garlic, roasted
  • Green onions (scallions)
  • Nuts and/or seeds
  • Olives, whole or sliced
  • Pickles, chopped
  • Raisins or dried cranberries
  • Sweet onion or red onion
  •  
    Garnishes

  • Baby arugula
  • Basil, chiffonade
  • Chives, snipped
  • Cilantro
  • Cress
  • Microgreens
  • Parsley or other herbs
  • Spices: anise, caraway, celery seed, chili pepper flakes, cracked black pepper, dill seed/dill weed, fennel, toasted sesame seeds or anything appealing on the spice shelf, including flavored salts
  • Sprouts
  •  
    SWEET YOGURT SUNDAES

    We’d be remiss if we didn’t supply the recipes to Pinkberry’s sweet yogurt sundaes with Greek yogurt:

  • Chocolate Berry: Blueberry, raspberry, dark chocolate granola, chocolate shavings, cinnamon honey
  • Strawberry Mango: Strawberry, mango, strawberry purée, toasted almonds, shaved coconut
  • Kiwi Strawberry: Kiwi, strawberry, mango, honey almond granola, vanilla agave nectar
  •  
    *Giardinera is a mixture of pickled vegetables, Italian in origin, that can include carrots, cauliflower, celery, onions, red bell pepper and zucchini, carrots and cauliflower, pickled vegetables in red- or white-wine vinegar. It is typically eaten as an antipasto, and is also delicious on sandwiches.

      

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