Saturday, May 18, 2024

Piedmonte's Stufffed Agniolotti

 Piedmonte has many delicious foods. There's polenta with a good tomato cacciatore, pescoi polenta stuffed into Savoy cabbage and of course that anchovy rich treat bagna calda. Yet there's also agniolotti , ravioli.Yes it's made through Italy but stuffed pasta reigns here along with the rest of Northern Italy.

  Former editor of Bon Appetit magazine Dawn Davis The new York Times Travel Sunday magazine wrote about it in tomorrow's paper. Agniolotti de Plin or stuffed ravioli. According to Ms Davis friend Karina Moyer-Nocchi . a professor at the University of Sienna theorizes that ravioli and other variations came about during the Middle Ages as an off shoot of torta  ,a meat pie stuffed with veggies and different meats. They liked to miniaturize food among other things and want a smaller- bite sized version of pie.ravioli itself comes from riavolgere or to wrap, it was first written about by a Thirteenth Century friar Salabiene de Adam wrote about them A lot of Piedmontese like to stuff their agniolotti with rabbit - a common meat there along with pork or chicken. Another staple of Piedmontese cooking, Savoy cabbage, a fragrant, chewy cabbage is shredded and added to the filling. Spinach is sometimes added as well.The name itself has many origin stories. Some believe that it was named for a chef called ANtonio while others believe that it comes from lamb -agnello.Other believe it;s named after the instrument ugliot in dialect to cut the dough.

Like so many upper class dishes agniolotti de plini made its' way  into the homes of the ordinary ,Some restaurants like Guido's in Costiglie d'Asti there's an almost religious reverence and way of serving the stuffed pasta.It's served two ways,  thanks to Chef Ugo Alciati, Guido' thirty-seven year old chef.one in a shallow bowl with a rich veal sauce topped with grated Parmesan.The other way is that they're made bite sized with a nutmeg filling, heaped on a large linen napkin - a local custom) which is a nod to the Eucharist and the Last Supper.Many Piedmontese connected to the dish during the economic boom of the 1960's as a way t  remember their distant past.Is it easy to make in today's kitchen .It is. It's just making the dough , rolling it out and cutting it into squares.It's then pinching the dough  hence the name plini. It's hard to get rabbit here but you could easily use lamb which was used or chicken , along with a combination of spinach and Savoy cabbage. A simple brown butter sauce works with this,

There will always be good food in Piedmonte. Agniolotti is one of these tasty ones, enjoyed the world over. These ravioli are stuffed with goodness and flavor.

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