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Sfoglini Pasta, Premium Artisan Pasta From The Hudson Valley

 
With National Pasta Day on October 17th, our Top Pick Of The Week is Sfoglini Pasta, a brand of fine artisan pasta that’s Italian in heritage but all-American, made in the Hudson Valley of New York State with the finest organic golden semolina* and three specialty grains from North American farms: einkorn, hemp, and rye.

The current lineup of beautiful pasta shapes is below.

Sfoglini works with local flour mills to source organic, non-GMO, whole-grain flour.

If you love pasta enough to want the best, take a look at Sfoglini† (sfo-LEE-nee), a line made in the Hudson Valley of New York State.

Like the finest artisan pastas from Italy, the flour is mixed into a dough. The dough is then extruded through bronze dies and slow-dried. Watch pasta being extruded in the video below.

  • Traditional bronze dies provide a beautiful, rough texture (it’s very subtle) that gives the sauce more texture to cling to.
  • The pasta is slow-dry at a low temperature, which preserves both flavor and nutrients.
  • As a comparison, mass-produced pasta uses Teflon® dies, which make a smooth-surface pasta.
  •  
    The result, per Sfoglini (and we agree):

  • Sauceability: The sauce readily adheres to the pasta.
  • Forkability: The shape is easy to spear and it stays on your fork.
  • Toothsinkability: It is satisfying to sink your teeth into each piece.
  •  
    Everything is done to enhance the overall eating experience. Sfoglini says that “it’s quality you can taste from the field to the bowl.”

    We agree. Try some for yourself, and give them as gifts.

    While an individual box of this exciting-looking pasta is a nice little gift, there’s a Pasta of The Month Club that gives the joy of great pasta every month.

    > Check out all of the Sfoglini shapes in the next section.

    > Get your Sfoglini pasta.

    > The history of pasta.

    > The different types of pasta: a glossary.
     
     
    SFOGLINI SHAPES

    Sfoglini specializes in short-cut pasta or short shapes, as opposed to the long form, ribbon, or strand pasta that includes everything you can twirl around your fork—from the most narrow, angel hair to the widest, pappardelle (plus lasagna sheets).

    Sfoglini shapes are works of art. Not your basic elbows and butterflies.

    Check up this lineup, which lets you make creative and interesting pasta dishes, and visit the website to see each shape.

    Organic Wheat Pasta

  • Cavatelli
  • Cuttlefish Ink Spaccatelli
  • Saffron Malloreddus
  • Small Shells
  • Radiators
  • Reginetti
  • Sun-Dried Tomato Ziti
  • Tumeric Reginetti
  • Rigatoni
  • Trumpets
  •  
    Whole Grain Organic Wheat Pasta

  • Whole-Grain Wheat
  • Whole Grain Radiators
  • Whole Grain Reginetti
  • Whole Grain Trumpets
  •  
    Organic Einkorn Pasta

  • Macaroni
  •  
    Organic Hemp Pasta

  • Hemp Radiators
  •  
    Organic Rye Flour Pasta

  • Trumpets
  •  
    Sfoglini pasta is a premium product and is priced higher than mass-produced supermarket brands.

    However, if you appreciate fine food, the quality and taste are well worth the cost.
     
     
    GET YOUR SFOGLINI PASTA

    The line is carried at specialty food stores, gourmet food markets, and online.

    For the full line, head to the Sfoglini website.

    Scroll down to watch pasta being extruded.

    Note #1: The video shows different shapes of pasta. While it may appear that one bronze plate makes all of the shapes, this is a composite video: Each is made with its own specially-shaped bronze die.

    Note #2: The video has a lively soundtrack, so turn it down in advance if you wish.

     

    A Box Of Foglini Cascatelli Pasta
    [1] Cascatelli pasta. flat strip and a pair of ruffles parallel to each other. The name derives from the Italian cascate, which means waterfall (photos #1, #2, and #3 © Farm To People).

    A Box Of Foglini Cavatelli Pasta
    [2] Cavatelli pasta. The name means corkscrew.

    A Box Of Sfoglini Reginetti Pasta, a short rectangular piece with frilly edges.
    [3] Reginetti pasta is also called mafaldine pasta. The name means “little queens” in Italian. It was named in honor of Princess Mafalda of Savoy, who met a tragic end‡ in World War II.

    A Plate Of Zucca Pasta With a Spicy Sauce (with chili flakes)
    [4] Zucca, meaning pumpkin in Italian, are pumpkin-shape hollow pasta with openings at the top and bottom for sauce to nestle (photo © Sfoglini).

    A plate of Sfoglini cascatelli pasta.
    [5] A plate of cascatelli pasta, a short pasta shape with a flat strip and a ruffle on each side. The name comes from Italian cascate meaning waterfalls. Cascatelle means little waterfalls (photo © Quinciple).

     
     

     
     
    ________________

    *Semolina is the coarsely ground and granular endosperm of durum wheat. These round golden kernels are the base of most American, and all Italian, dry pasta. Semolina is granular like sugar, not powdery like most other flours. Homemade fresh pasta is generally not made from semolina, but from general-purpose flour that is lower in gluten. Preparing semolina dough requires industrial mixers or several hours of kneading the granular mass. As a result, homemade pasta cooks much more quickly, often in half the time, and can overcook easily if the pot is not watched. In general, properly cooked, top-quality commercial artisan pasta is as good or better than what most people can make at home.

    †A sfoglina (feminine form, plural sfogline) or sfoglino (masculine form, plural sfoglini) is someone who makes sfoglia, sheets of fresh pasta. A sfoglina is historically seen as a middle-aged woman who rolls and stretches out the dough with a rolling pin (mattarello) on a large wooden pastry board (taglieri). Here’s more about it. At Sfoglini, two men, the sfoglini, carry on the tradition: Sfoglini chef Steve Gonzalez and creative director Scott Ketchum.
     
    ‡Princess Mafalda of Savoy, a daughter of King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy, married Prince Philipp of Hesse, a grandson of German Emperor Frederick III. Prince Philipp was a member the Nazi Party. In 1935 she was present at an informal diplomatic dinner given by Adolf Hitler in the Reich President’s House in Berlin (she sat next to Britain’s Prime Minister Anthony Eden). Hitler disliked her, and during World War II, Hitler chose to believe that was working against the war effort. She was arrested and transported to Buchenwald concentration camp where she died. Here’s more about it.

    ‡‡The cascatelli shape was developed by Dan Pashman, who switched the “e” at the end the word for waterfalls, cascatelle, to “i” to conform with the endings of other pasta shapes. Here’s more about it.
     

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    Food Fun: A Chocolate Milkshake Recipe For Halloween

    Halloween Ice Cream Sundae With A Witch's Hat Cookie
    [1] A fun milkshake for Halloween (photo © Half & Half Magazine).

    Pint Of Talenti Vanilla Gelato
    [2] Use your favorite vanilla ice cream (photo © Talenti Gelato).

    A Carton Of Chocolate Milk
    [3] Add your favorite chocolate milk (photo © Fairlife).


    [4] If you haven’t had stroopwafels, thin Dutch cookies with a caramel filling, here’s more about them (photo © 3 Bros Cookies).

     

    We received this fun Halloween milkshake from Kemps Dairy, which in turn received it from Half & Half magazine, a publication of Dairy Farmers of America), the nation’s leading milk marketing cooperative.

    While the recipe uses vanilla ice cream and chocolate milk, you can adapt the flavors to your favorites: coffee, mint, strawberry, what you will.

    > More milkshake recipes.

    > The history of Halloween.

    > The history of the milkshake.

    > Also below is the difference between a milkshake, float, malt, and thick shake.

     
     
    RECIPE: HALLOWEEN CHOCOLATE MILKSHAKE WITH A WITCH’S HAT

    You can save time by purchasing a witch’s hat sugar cookie, but it won’t look as cool as the one you can bake.

    You can also use chocolate ice cream for a deeper chocolate flavor.
     
    Ingredients For A Large Shake

    For The Chocolate Milkshake

  • 1 pint vanilla ice cream
  • ¼ cup chocolate milk
  • 3 tablespoons chocolate syrup plus more in a squeeze bottle for drizzling
  •  
    For The Whipped Cream

  • ¼ cup heavy cream, cold
  • 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
  •  
    For The Witch’s Hat

  • 3 ounces chocolate
  • 1 ice cream sugar cone
  • 1 round stroopwafel or thin cookie
  • Black sanding sugar
  • Purple ribbon
  •  
    Preparation

    1. MAKE the witch’s hat. Place the chocolate in a shallow bowl, and heat in the microwave in 20-second intervals until fully melted.

    2. CUT the tip off the sugar cone and dip in the melted chocolate. Place the tip back on the cone at an angle. Freeze for a few minutes until set.

    3. DIP the bottom of the sugar cone in the chocolate and place it in the center of the round stroopwafel or thin cookie. Freeze for a few minutes until set.

    4. SPREAD an even layer of chocolate on the hat and immediately sprinkle the black sanding sugar all over it. Freeze again for a few minutes until set.

    5. TIE a purple ribbon around the hat and set the hat aside until you’re ready to assemble the milkshake.

    6. MAKE the whipped cream. In a medium bowl with an electric mixer, whisk the heavy cream and sugar until soft peaks form. Set aside momentarily.

    7. MAKE the milkshake. Combine the ice cream, chocolate milk and chocolate syrup in a blender until smooth.

    8. DRIZZLE the chocolate syrup on the inside of a milkshake glass, then pour the chocolate milkshake into the glass.

    9. TOP with homemade whipped cream and the witch’s hat. Enjoy!

     

     
     

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    Fall Fun: Pumpkin Cheesecake Brownies Recipe

    Are you looking for a new recipe for the fall season? How about a Pumpkin Cheesecake Brownies recipe? We just finished baking it as our weekend baking project.

    Even if there’s no room for the other desserts on your Halloween or Thanksgiving table, these freeze beautifully for snacking and dessert when the Thanksgiving leftovers are gone.

    We love fusion food (here, cheesecake x brownies). A layer of pumpkin swirl cheesecake sits atop a brownie.

    Thanks to Bea and Marco from El Mundo Eats for the recipe.

    “Our secret is we add lots of pumpkin purée in both the brownie and cheesecake layer for the optimum delicious pumpkin flavor,” say Bea and Marco.

    Check the El Mundo Eats website for more wonderful recipes.

    > The history of pumpkin.

    > The history of cheesecake.

    > The history of brownies.
     
     
    RECIPE: PUMPKIN CHEESECAKE BROWNIES 
     
    Ingredients For 12 Servings

    For The Pumpkin Cheesecake Layer

  • 1 package cream cheese, softened
  • 1 container (8 ounces) mascarpone cheese
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup canned pumpkin
  • 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 2 large egg yolks
  •  
    Ingredients For The Brownies

  • 1/2 cup (1 stick) butter, cubed and melted
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup baking cocoa
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 cup semisweet chocolate chips
  •  
    Preparation

    1. MAKE the pumpkin cheesecake layer. Beat the cream cheese, mascarpone, and sugar in a large bowl until smooth. Beat in the pumpkin, flour, vanilla, cinnamon, salt, ginger, and nutmeg. Add the egg yolks, beating just until combined. Set aside.

    2. HEAT the oven to 325°F. Line a greased 9-inch square baking dish with parchment paper; grease the paper.

    3. CREAM the butter, sugar, and vanilla in a large bowl until light and fluffy. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating each until well combined.

    4. COMBINE the flour, cocoa, salt, and baking powder in another bowl. Gradually add to the butter mixture, beating each addition until combined. Fold in the chocolate chips.

    5. SPREAD half of the brownie batter in the pan. Drop spoonfuls of reserved cheesecake mixture over top. Spoon the remaining brownie batter into four lines over the top of the cheesecake layer; swirl the batter with a toothpick or knife.

    6. BAKE for 43-47 minutes or until the top is just set and a toothpick inserted near the center comes out clean. (Do not overbake.) Cool completely on a wire rack.

     

    Pumpkin Cheesecake Brownies Recipe
    [1] A layer of pumpkin swirl cheesecake sits atop a layer of brownie. What could be better (photos #1 and #2 © El Mundo Eats).

    A Plate Of Pumpkin Cheesecake Brownies
    [2] A close-up on seasonal deliciousness.

    Canned Pumpkin Puree Can & Bowl
    [3] Make the pumpkin cheesecake with pumpkin purée and cream cheese (photo © Jessica Gavin—check out her latest recipes).

    Package Of Philadelphia Cream Cheese
    [4] Cream cheese, the key to yummy cheesecake (photo © F.A. Martin | Wikipedia).

     

     
     

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    Ready Your Forks: There Are 200 Dessert Holidays! Part 2

    Slice Of Lemon Meringue Pie
    [1] National Lemon Meringue Pie Day is August 15th (photo © American Egg Board).

    An individual round of Spumoni made up of 4 flavors of ice cream.
    [2] National Spumoni Day is August 21st (photo © Lezza).

    A dish of flaming Cherries Jubilee.
    [3] National Cherries Jubilee Day is September 24th. Here’s a recipe (photo © Claire Justine).

    Angel Food Cake made in a tube pan.
    [4] National Angel Food Cake Day is October 10th (photo © Bhofack2 | Dreamstime).

    M&M Cookie Pie with M&Ms pressed into the top.
    [5] National M&M Day is October 13th. Garnish a cake, ice cream, or make this M&M Cookie Pie or order it online (photo © Little Red Kitchen Bake Shop).

    Pumpkin Cheesecake
    [6] National Pumpkin Cheesecake Day is October 21st (photo © Chef Marisa Churchill).

    A Dish Of Indian Pudding With Vanilla Ice Cream
    [7] Indian pudding with vanilla ice cream (photo © Food On The Food).

    A whole Sacher Torte with a slice removed.
    [8] Sacher torte, with a filling of apricot marmalade. Here’s a recipe (photo © Jerne J Kitchen).

    October 14th was National Dessert Day, and we celebrated with a Top 10 dessert party. We also began a list of all the dessert holidays.

    Part 1 listed the holidays from January through July.

    August through December dessert holidays follow.

    Forks ready! Spoons ready! Go!
     
     
    DESSERT HOLIDAYS – PART 2

    How many dessert holidays are there? In American cuisine alone, almost 200 (112 on this page alone, January through July), not counting baklava, cannoli, and other international favorites.

    The list of holidays is so long that we’ve divided it. The other half, August through December will appear tomorrow.

    Note that some of these holidays may not seem like “dessert.” Our thought was, for example:

  • If it’s a jelly bean holiday, use them to garnish a cake or cupcakes.
  • If it’s a waffle holiday, serve them a la mode with dessert sauce.
  • Et cetera.
  •  
    > The history of dessert.

    > Dessert holidays Part 1: January through August.
     
     
    August Dessert Holidays

  • August 1st: National Raspberry Cream Pie Day
  • August 2nd: Braham Pie Day [U.K.]1
  • August 2nd: National Ice Cream Sandwich Day
  • August 4th: National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day
  • August 6th: National Root Beer Float Day
  • August 8th: National Frozen Custard Day
  • August 9th: National Rice Pudding Day
  • August 10th: National S’mores Day
  • August 11th: National Bakewell Tart Day [U.K.]2
  • August 11th: National Raspberry Bombe Day
  • August 12th: National Gooey Butter Cake Day
  • August 15th: National Lemon Meringue Pie Day
  • August 18th: National Ice Cream Pie Day
  • August 19th: National Soft Ice Cream Day
  • August 20th: National Chocolate Pecan Pie Day
  • August 21st: National Spumoni Day
  • August 22nd: National Pecan Torte Day
  • August 23rd: National Sponge Cake Day
  • August 24th: National Peach Pie Day
  • August 24th: National Waffle Day
  • August 27th: National Pots De Crème Day
  • August 28th: National Cherry Turnover Day
  • August 30th: National Toasted Marshmallow Day
  •  
    Beyond dessert: all the August food holidays.
     
     
    September Dessert Holidays

  • September 1st: National Cherry Popover Day
  • September 2nd: National Blueberry Popsicle Day
  • September 4th: Eat an Extra Dessert Day
  • September 6th: National Coffee Ice Cream Day
  • September 13th: International Chocolate Day
  • September 15th: Butterscotch Cinnamon Pie Day
  • September 19th: National Butterscotch Pudding Day
  • September 24th: National Cherries Jubilee Day
  • September 26th: National Key Lime Pie Day
  • September 28th: National Strawberry Cream Pie
  •  
    Beyond dessert: all the September food holidays.
     
     
    October Dessert Holidays

  • October: National Caramel Month
  • October: National Dessert Month
  • October: National Baking Week [U.K.]
  • October 1st: National Homemade Cookies Day
  • October 1st: National Pumpkin Spice Day
  • October 10th: National Angel Food Cake Day
  • October 10th: National Cake Decorating Day
  • October 13th: National M&M Day
  • October 14th: National Dessert Day
  • October 15th: National Lemon Bar Day
  • October 20th: National Brandied Fruit Day
  • October 21st: National Pumpkin Cheesecake Day
  •  
    Beyond dessert: all the October food holidays.
     
     
    November Dessert Holidays

  • November: Banana Pudding Lovers Month
  • November, last Sunday: Stir-Up Sunday3
  • November 8th: National Cappuccino Day
  • November 9th: British Pudding Day4
  • November 10th: National Vanilla Cupcake Day
  • November 13th: National Bread Pudding Day
  • November 13th: National Indian Pudding Day
  • November 15th: National Bundt Day
  • November 17th: National Baklava Day
  • November 25th: National Parfait Day
  • November 27th: National Bavarian Cream Pie Day
  • November 30th: National Mousse Day
  •  
    Beyond dessert: all the November food holidays.
     
     
    December Dessert Holidays

  • December: National Fruit Cake Month
  • December 1st: National Peppermint Bark Day
  • December 1st: National Pie Day
  • December 3rd: National Apple Pie Day
  • December 4th: National Cookie Day
  • December 5th: Sacher Torte Day
  • December 8th: National Chocolate Brownie Day
  • December 9th: National Pastry Day
  • December 12th: National Ambrosia Day
  • December 12th: National Gingerbread Day
  • December 13th: National Cream Cheese Frosting Day
  • December 13th: National Ice Cream & Violins Day
  • December 15th: National Cupcake Day
  • December 15th: National Gingerbread Latte Day
  • December 16th: National Chocolate Covered Anything Day
  • December 17th: National Maple Syrup Day
  • December 22nd: National Date Nut Bread Day
  • December 23rd: National Pfeffernüsse Day
  • December 24th: National Egg Nog Day
  • December 25th: National Pumpkin Pie Day
  • December 26th: National Candy Cane Day
  • December 27th: National Fruit Cake Day
  • December 28th: National Chocolate Candy Day
  •  
    Beyond dessert: all the December food holidays.

     
    ________________
     
    1Braham, Minnesota has an annual Pie Day, held on the first Friday in August. The city’s fame for pie began in the 1930s when people from the Twin Cities would drive to their lake homes, taking the “shortcut to Duluth through Braham.” They would stop at the Park Café for pie and coffee. Braham began a celebratory pie and ice cream social in 1990, the same year that the city was named the “Homemade Pie Capital of Minnesota” by Governor Rudy Perpich [source].

    2Bakewell tarts are a 20th-century variant of Bakewell pudding, which originated in Bakewell, Derbyshire, England in the 1800s. It was created following a mishap by the cook at a local inn, who misunderstood the recipe for a strawberry tart and ended up topping her creation with a soft-set almond custard. The tart’s base is made from sweet shortcrust pastry, which is then layered with seedless strawberry jam and finished with a pale, fluffy frangipane sponge filling of eggs, almonds, and sugar. The Bakewell Tart is traditionally finished with a layer of white fondant icing and half a glace cherry, but other varieties are also produced. Here’s more about it.

    3Stir-up Sunday is the last Sunday before Advent, the day when families traditionally gather to prepare the Christmas pudding. The tradition dates back to Victorian times when the family would gather five weeks before Christmas to stir the Christmas pudding. There is a myriad of recipes for Christmas pudding, but the traditional version would contain 13 ingredients to represent Jesus and his disciples.

    4In the U.K. today, “pudding” is the name for what Americans call steamed cakes and other desserts. Pudding originally referred to encased meats similar to sausages that were steamed or boiled. By the latter half of the 18th century, traditional English puddings no longer included meat. They were still boiled, but the finished product was cake-like (like plum pudding). Our creamy, modern puddings descend from this tradition of steaming sweet ingredients. Here’s more about it.
     
     

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    A Fun Halloween Gift: An Edible Haunted Gingerbread House

    This high-quality gingerbread house is “haunted” for Halloween.

    Designed exclusively for Mackenzie Ltd., purveyors of fine gourmet foods, this spooky house is 100% edible.

    Handmade with quality gingerbread, creepy (and tasty) characters decorate the house, along with candy corn, gumdrops, and other treats.

    Delightful and delicious for kids and adults alike, the gingerbread house gets five-star reviews from givers and recipients alike.

    The recipients will like it so much, it may become your annual Halloween gift!

    Get yours here.
     
     
    > The history of the gingerbread house.

    > The history of Halloween.

    > The history of the Jack o’Lantern.

    > The history of Trick or Treat.
     
     
     
     

    CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING ON OUR HOME PAGE, THENIBBLE.COM.

     

    Halloween Gingerbread House
    [1] Nibble, nibble, little mouse. Who’s that nibbling at my house? (photos © Mackenzie Ltd.).

    Haunted Gingerbread House For Halloween
    [2] Up-close and personal with yummy ghouls.

     

      

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