Barilla Tortellini Foodbuzz “Cinque Colore” Feast

By , 5 June, 2011,

Barilla tortelliniWhen Foodbuzz threw down the challenge to create an epic meal around Barilla tortellini, my mind reeled with ideas from the absurd (strung like Christmas tree popcorn?) to the delicious. It’s nearly summer and in the San Francisco Bay Area that means an abbondanza of produce–the perfect playground for creative tortellini dishes. The answer?  Center a dinner around tortellini, from start to finish. Days have passed and my “interactive” Barilla tortellini party remains a highlight of Spring!

The dinner theme: Quick, healthy, rustic small plates that a busy home chef could make during the week and for parties, most requiring less than 10 minutes prep time. I used simple, fresh ingredients accessible everywhere. A nice discovery was how versatile pre-cooked tortellini can be to quickly make seemingly elaborate dishes.my tortellini frittata experiment

Barilla tortellini’s composition of dough and cheese (and sometimes spinach) makes the perfect base for dishes needing those ingredients such as savory pies or casseroles. And as can see at the right, I even tried it for breakfast in a bacon-wrapped tortellini frittata.

Grazie to Barilla and Foodbuzz for this opportunity.

The Big Event

I spent days planning the recipes then invited over my foodie friends to help pull it off, my first experience as a “top chef.”  There’s nothing like good food, pressure to perform, and the spirit of invention to spice up a dinner party: A race against time to photograph the dishes before sunset. Orchestrating multiple dishes to serve at once. No kitchen nightmares here! The tortellini worked perfectly in each plate—and surprised us that even after four courses we were fighting over the dessert. All in all, perfect practice for an even more fun dinner in Italy!

Here’s a quick preview of the dinner, with recipes below:

Appetizer:

The Green Course: Zucchini a la Tortellini Barilla

Barilla tortellini stuffed zucchini

Entree of Small Plates

:
The Brown Course: Mushroom Pizza a la Barilla Tortellini

Barilla Tortellini mushroom pizza

The Red Course: Barilla Tortellini-Stuffed Red Peppers

The Purple Course: Barilla Tortellini-Eggplant Parmesan
Barilla Tortellini eggplant parmesan

Dessert

The Caramel Course: Caramelized Barilla Tortellini


Appetizer

Zucchini Rounds a la Barilla Tortellini

The Green Course
This recipe puts a twist on tortellini “a la zucchini” to become a healthy, fun appetizer. Barilla Three Cheese Tortellini fills rounds of large zucchini slices topped with marinara and cheese. If you don’t have access to wide zucchini, you can cut a thinner zucchini lengthwise, core the filling, and lay the uncooked tortellini on the zucchini.

Serves 4.

1 2-to-3 inch diameter zucchini, cored and cut in 4 pieces
1 cup uncooked Barilla Three Cheese Tortellini
2 cups Barilla marinara sauce mixed with 1 cup water
1/2 cup grated parmesan cheese
salt and pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 350 degrees with oven rack in the middle of the oven.

coring zucchiniTo core the zucchini:
Cut each end off the zucchini then cut it in half. Using a thin knife, place the knife in the zucchini center then spin the knife to make a coring motion, keep coring to make the zucchini as hollow as possible without cutting through the shell. Needless to say this is not for children!

Slice the zucchini into 2” wide pieces. The number of slices will depend on the length of the zucchini.

Layer 1 cup of marinara across the bottom of an 8” square or round ceramic or glass baking pan (which you can use for serving).

Place the zucchini slices in the marinara then fill each with dry tortellini.
Top each slice with the remaining marinara sauce. It will absorb water from the mixture to cook. Sprinkle parmesan cheese on each slice.Barilla tortellini a la zucchini centers

Bake 45 minutes or until a fork easily penetrates the zucchini.

For another meal: Save the zucchini centers to saute in olive oil with salt and pepper. Toss in cooked Barilla tortellini to warm. Serve in a bowl topped with parmesan cheese, salt and pepper. A refreshing light 5-minute meal!

Barilla tortellini stuffed zucchini

cored zucchini

Barilla tortellini stuffed zucchini

Barilla tortellini stuffed zucchini

Barilla tortellini stuffed zucchini

Entree: Small Plates

Mushroom Pizza a la Barilla Tortellini

The Brown Course
Serves 2, or cut each in 4 to share.

These pizzas are literally on large portobello mushrooms topped with Barilla tortellini – a fun, quick weekday meal as the tortellini can be cooked ahead of time or leftover tortellini from another meal can be used.

PREP: Pre-cook the tortellini.

2 large fresh portobello mushrooms
1 cup cooked Barilla Cheese and Spinach Tortellini
1/2 cup Barilla marinara sauce
2 slices provolone or other cheese
1/4 c olive tapenade
1/4 c olive oil
1/4 c red or white wine, optional
1 clove garlic

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

portabello mushrooms stuffed with Barilla tortelliniToss tortellini in olive tapenade (or pesto if you prefer!)

Peel and cut garlic glove in half, and rub on the smooth side of the mushroom. With medium heat, pour oil and wine in frying pan. Add mushrooms and cook until softened, flipping over to cook both sides, about 5 minutes.

Grease a metal or glass baking pan with olive oil. Place the mushrooms smooth side down. Arrange tortellini on mushroom to cover as a flat layer. Spoon marinara over the tortellini. Lay one slice of cheese (or sprinkle shredded cheese if you prefer) over each mushroom.

Cook until cheese is melted and slightly browned.

Enjoy!

Barilla tortellini stuffed mushrooms

Barilla Tortellini-Stuffed Red Peppers

The Red Course
Serves 4 as a side dish. As a main dish, double the recipe.

2 large red bell peppers
1.5 cups cooked Barilla Three Cheese Tortelli
1 cup Barilla marinara sauce
(optional) zucchini, cubed in small pieces
4 pieces sliced Provolone cheese, cut into 1/4″ wide pieces (or substitute shredded Parmesan cheese)

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

With a sharp knife cut the top of each pepper off at the widest point, to create a lid. Pull any veins and seeds out of the pepper by hand.

Mix tortellini with zucchini pieces. Spoon the mixture into each pepper, then top with marinara. Lay or sprinkle cheese on top.

fill peppers with saucepeppers ready to cook
red peppersGrease a 9×12 glass or metal baking pan with olive oil. Place peppers in the pan, with the “lids” alongside the peppers to allow the cheese to brown.

Bake 30 minutes on the middle rack until cheese is browned. Pepper will be crispy, which is a nice contrast to the soft tortellini.

Barilla Tortellini-Stuffed Red Peppers

Barilla Tortellini-Stuffed Red Peppers

Barilla Tortellini-Eggplant Parmesan

The Purple Course
What’s better than layers of eggplant, tomato sauce, and cheese? A layer of Barilla tortellini to add a nice chewy component.

Serves 4.

1 large eggplant, sliced into 1/2” pieces
2 cups cooked Barilla Three Cheese Tortellini
2 cups Barilla marinara sauce
1 cup Parmesan cheese
1/2 c olive oil
salt and pepper to taste

PREP: Pre-cook the tortellini.

Barilla Tortellini eggplant parmesanPreheat oven to 400 degrees.

In a 9×12” pan greased with olive oil, place a thin layer of marinade. Layer 2 large pieces of sliced eggplant, as the base. Drizzle olive oil on the eggplant then spread a layer of marinara then a layer of tortellini. Sprinkle cheese. Add another eggplant layer and repeat, finishing the lasagne with a layer of marinara with cheese sprinkled on top.

Cover with foil and cook for 30 minutes. Remove foil and cook 10 minutes longer to brown.

Eggplant parmesan a la Barilla Tortellini

Barilla Tortellini Eggplant Parmesan

Dessert

a fun Barilla Tortellini partyCaramelized Barilla Tortellini

The Caramel Course
By the time dessert rolled around, could we eat The Caramel Course? Several more guests arrived just in time for dessert. They literally fought over the dish, marveling at how the Three Cheese Tortellini’s slightly tart filling married so well with the caramelized coating.

PREP: Pre-cook 2 cups of Barilla Three Cheese tortellini without adding any salt to the water.

Serves 4.

Your guests will be surprised at how delicious the caramelized Barilla Three Cheese Tortellini was. The cheese offsets the decadent caramel with a slightly tart and savory flavor. Topped with whipped cream, it makes the perfect easy dessert.

Heat

2 cups cooked Barilla Three Cheese Tortellini
1/4 cup sugar
3-to-4 tablespoons cream

Sprinkle sugar in a 9″ saute pan at medium-high heat.  Let caramelize.  Make sure it gets evenly cooked, stirring with a wooden spoon if necessary.  When the sugar starts to smoke, start pouring in cream, whisking to make sure sugar is melting into the cream and not sticking to pan.  Bring to boil and toss in tortellini. Bring back to boil, then turn down to simmer as you “saute” the tortellini.  Make sure they are completely coated as they cook in the caramel and take on a golden hue.

Serve in bowl either over vanilla ice cream or topped with creme fraiche or lightly sweetened whipped cream. Optionally top with sliced strawberries.

In Winter, try serving with grated nutmeg and no fruit. The nutmeg accents the cheese-filled tortellini well.

Caramelized Barilla Tortellini

Caramelized Barilla Tortellini

Getting In the Spirit on the “Set” of the Barilla Tortellini Dinner Fest

Cooking cooking show style

Raising Money for a Farm or Food Business

By , 27 May, 2011,

Elizabeth Ü whose Capital Cookbook helps food entrepreneurs get the money to start and run new food businesses – restaurants, food trucks, products – and farms made a lively and informative presentation at TedX Manhattan using examples from around the country. Nice to hear her kudos for Organic Valley’s co-op model as well!

A Tale of Two Marin Organic Farms

By , 19 May, 2011,

Two small California family farms I visited recently couldn’t be more different, yet the same in many ways. Both are north of San Francisco, are certified organic, and produce foods that end up in products. How did they get there and how do they thrive?

Powered by association membership

One, the Mattos Farm, is an organic 400 cow dairy farm and member of Organic Valley farmers co-op.

The other, Allstar Organics belongs to Marin Organic and has several acres of herbs and flowers which they turn into artisan food products sold at the Ferry Plaza Farmer’s Market and provide to other food producers as ingredients. Both get input and support from these memberships which helps them also reach new markets and take advantage of sales and product development opportunities.

Making the rural life work.

Janet Brown of Allstar Organics explained how she and her husband Marty the farm so they could “live where we work and work where we live,” with a homesteading ethic.

allstar organicsAllstar is able to take advantage of California’s law allowing farms of certain sizes to process their own food products. “A DPH FDB-approved kitchen used for processing cannot be in a residence or in an attached garage. It can be in a separate detached building on a farm or ranch that has adequate drainage and sewage/waste disposal, water supply, restroom, and otherwise meets “good manufacturing practices” (GMPs) per the Federal Code of Regulations as administered by DPH.” (more info – PDF from UC Davis)

While farming and growing is a lifestyle, an often difficult one with extremely small profit margins, it was clear these dairy farmers are made to milk. The Mattos’ have worked on the same land for generations. With a sky high mortgage, John converted to organic for economic reasons, realizing how much more he could get for his milk. Now he is a convert, seeing cows live to 15+ years with very few health problems. I was tempted to join the herd and spend my days grazing, if it weren’t for all the vultures.

Connecting to neighboring producers

Racks of strawberries dried in Allstar’s makeshift dehydration room. “My neighbor at the farmer’s market couldn’t find a place to dry his strawberries,” Janet explained. “I’ll do it! And keep some for myself.” Now the husband and wife team is planning a line of products involving dried strawberries. The market and association with Marin Organic also connect the farm to other local producers. An herb mix in one room sat ready for testing as a cheese coating. (Yes I’m being mysterious on purpose.)

In addition to distributing under Organic Valley, the Mattos farm supplies milk to Bay Area favorite St Benoit yogurt.
cow

Learning as they go

Mattos experiments on the farm to continually improve: “Every day I try to think of something new for the cows. I might take them on a different trail or make some small change to make the day interesting.” How would you like milk from cows that are treated like  children?

The cows also enjoy 19th century style treatments of natural essential oils and tinctures (how Marin) from vet “Dr. Paul.” kelp is a big part of the herd’s diet, which results in high levels of  anti-cancer CLAs – which get passed on into the milk. The kelp idea came from Tony Azevedo, the first organic dairy man in the Central Valley, who had seen iodine-deficient cows munching kelp while visiting Portugal as a boy.

Allstar Organics‘ farm started with the basics: tomatoes. Then basil. Then roses. The plan: Sell big antique-style rose bouquets. Well that didn’t last. Feedback from her first sales call “That’s too green, that’s too closed. That’s too thorny…” took the bloom off her rose.

Ye old synchronicity: A friend suggested they try making rose water instead. It just so happened at the time their greenhouse stood empty, a wizened elder taught them how to plant tuber roses. They hired an expert to build a still to make their floral hydrosols and essences, and planted a backyard farm thriving with rosemary, mint, roses, and other edibles.

And so the two farms thrive, driven by community, passion, innovation, and a commitment to good food.

Mattos Farm – fun in the sun

John Mattos breaks down the grass composition.

organic valley farm

Talk about local milk.

Allstar Organics – From field to farmer’s market:

v

Janet illuminates us on mint varieties.

Janet explains hydrosols

Allstar Organics lavender sugar

From plant to plate

Debut at 2 San Francisco Underground Markets

By , 12 May, 2011,

I’m in a major identity crisis – having named my food entrepreneurship project The Nutless Professor and having a blog with the domain Nutty Fig! While I mull over how to reconcile these possibly confusing things..for I do love all that Nutty Fig stands for (two naturally good simple things that magnify in deliciousness when combined much like partnership)…I wanted to tell the world about this exciting moment and hope you come see me:

Read more about The Nutless Professor, how it supports sustainable rice growing initiatives, and what you’ll find at the market. And thanks to so many people for your support as I’ve developed these products! All of my knowledge will be going into a book I’m writing.

My Fair Farmer’s Market Shopper

By , 11 May, 2011,

The image of Eliza Doolittle getting schooled by Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady comes to mind as I peruse the Chicago Tribune’s 10 things not to say at the farmer’s market. (My fave is “how come these carrots have dirt on them?”)

Not only that, it reminded me of the list Darya Pino (aka @summertomato) pulled together of Top 10 Mistakes Made by Farmers Market Noobz.

How come these carrots don't have dirt on them?

Who knew shopping could be so stressful?

My short list of how to shop at farmers markets is:

  1. Brace yourself for higher prices than you may be used to. However if you shop at mainstream supermarkets, honestly the prices could be very similar. Build into the price that you know where the produce came from; it was just picked; and it likely has many more nutrients than the older produce.
    If price is keeping you away, show up at the end of the market when you might be able to get produce cheaper. Many markets take “food stamps” cards too.
  2. Enjoy the market as if you took a trip. It’s a free way to connect to your community, good food, and the season.
  3. Ask questions. You’re meeting the growers, or people who work for the growers. This is your chance to learn about food and growing.

And enjoy!!

 

carrots by susiefoodie

Hey what's that green stuff on the carrots?