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Italian Recipes
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Written by Henry Krauzyk
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Wednesday, 07 January 2009 10:00 |
 This is a recipe that I planned in my head today while doing other
things. You see the chourico and polenta recipe of a few days ago, got
me to thinking about the Italian dinner I had at Al Forno that I based
it on. So sometime around 8:00 AM I decided to do something similar. I
walked in the door at 6:15 PM and started preparing it.
It was
done by 7:30 and I photographed it. Then I sat down to eat it. It
worked out deliciously well so after dinner here I am writing it all
down for the blog which I will post right now!
Oh, you'll notice
I call for the "thick good" balsamic vinegar for this dish. Don't go
spending $100 or more on the vintage stuff. Get a few bottles of
inexpensive balsamic vinegar and boil them down until they are rich and
slightly syrupy. Yeah, food snobs will scoff, but it works great in
most recipes calling for the top shelf variety.
What do snobs know anyway?
Roasted Italian Sausages in Garden Sauce
6 links of Italian sausage 2 TBS olive oil 3/4 cup of celery (finely chopped) 3/4 cup of carrot (finely chopped) 1-1/2 cups of onion (finely chopped) 1 tsp fennel seeds (coarsely ground) 1 pinch of red pepper flakes (or more or less to taste) 1/2 tsp dried rosemary (coarsely ground) 3 cloves of garlic (sliced thin) 1 cup of dry white wine 2 large tomatoes chopped 1 cup tomato sauce 2 TBS tomato paste 1 TBS balsamic vinegar (read above) 1-1/2 tsp sea salt 3/4 tsp crushed black pepper 3/4 cup of grape tomatoes Pecorino-Romano cheese
Fill
a pan with water and place over high heat. Pierce the Italian sausages
with a fork. Place in the pan and bring to a boil. Lower to a simmer
until cooked through. Remove from heat.
Preheat your oven to 350°F
Place
a large sauce pan or dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add the olive
oil When the olive oil begins to shimmer, add the onions, carrots,
celery, fennel, red pepper flakes and rosemary. Sauté until the the
carrots and celery soften and the onions begin to brown.
Add the sliced garlic and stir in for 1-2 minutes. Be careful not to burn the garlic.
Add the wine and deglaze the pan. Allow the wine to reduce to a thick sauce.
Add the chopped tomatoes and continue cooking as they reduce and give up their moisture.
Add
the tomato sauce, tomato paste, sea salt, black pepper and the balsamic
vinegar. Bring the sauce to a low simmer and continue cooking. You want
the sauce a little thick, not to thick, not too loose. Check for
seasoning and adjust as necessary.
Get a large oven-proof
casserole dish or cast iron skillet. Pour the sauce into the casserole
dish or skillet and carefully place the Italian sausage in the sauce.
They should not be immersed, but half exposed. Then take the grape
tomatoes and distribute them around the sausages.
Place the
casserole/skillet in the oven and keep and eye on it. You don't want it
to thicken up to much. Cook like this in the oven until the sauce is
just thick. Then transfer to the broiler to caramelize the top of the
sausages, sauce and grape tomatoes. It's easy to burn things in the
broiler so keep a close eye on it.
When done, remove from the
broiler. Shave some pecorino-romano over it and then serve with bread,
over your favorite pasta or over polenta.
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