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Summer Wine Party: Crostini with Homemade Ricotta, Grilled Tomatoes, Caponata, Tapenade, and Prosciutto

“Man (and woman) cannot live by bread alone,” was always the truth. Even the very best of bread, which is some of the most wondrous and healthy food in the world, must have its topping, its gilding, its raison d’être–its reason to exist. Bread bakers, feel free to chime in disagreeing here.

Add wine, of course. How about other necessities like song and laughter? That would mean a party and the most memorable parts of the current season (the touch of hot summer sun lingering on glistening skin, a crash of sudden wild storms cracking open in the distance, the heady sniff of freshly cut grass, hot orange day lilies along the path, sleazy dog-eared paperbacks sporting just such language) all call out for such a gathering to occur at night and out of doors.

If you’re game, you can have just such a little piece of heaven in your own backyard one night with a summer wine party featuring all of the above–starry, starry night, friends, bottles of cold vino, crostini (grilled baguette slices), a couple of great Mediterranean vegetable toppers, freshly-made cheese, crunchy vegetables, and salty, chewy Prosciutto. Don’t wait too long. Summer is always over too soon.

 HERE’S THE MENU:

It might look something like this. Or better, I hope, as I put this out in about five minutes with a few dozen much-loved people talking and drinking around me. I  typically need a bit more quiet to accomplish things, as might you, but we don’t always get what we need! Plunge ahead.  (Hoping for better photos from someone who used a real camera at this party. Will share if available.)
           (Is it crostini or bruschetta? Find the answer here.)

How to do it all?  Here’s a game plan:

Below: caponata in process

You can run to the bakery, buy the bread, come home, slice and grill it. (No grill? Carefully –it burns too quickly– toast baguette slices brushed with olive oil and sprinkled with salt and pepper under the broiler on both sides.)  Let it cool on racks or sheet pans and throw it into a big clean garbage bag, all tied up tight until you need it.

continued below

…off our deck one happy night with friends

Recipes below, as needed.  Try this and enjoy summer at night…

Above: I use tapenade for many things (garnishing big bone-in pork chops is a favorite), but this salad from my book SOUPS & SIDES FOR EVERY SEASON is simple and filling: TAPENADE SALAD WITH GOAT CHEESE CROSTINI-  a mound of tapenade at the center, and next a ring of fresh greens topped by quickly sautéed cherry tomatoes with a bit of a kick–all circled with goat cheese crostini.

TAPENADE 

Makes 2 cups  or 32 tablespoons

Tapenade comes together very quickly and will keep for several days in your fridge, but you can also buy it at the olive bar in the grocery, in delis, or in jars at Costco. If you buy yours, bring it home and put it into a bowl; taste and re-season if necessary.

Mince olives, parsley, rosemary, anchovies, capers and garlic. Stir together with a  pinch of crushed red pepper, red wine vinegar and olive oil. Mix well, taste, and season with just a tiny pinch of salt and pepper. (You might need no salt at all as the olives are quite salty.) Or place all ingredients except salt and pepper in a food processor fitted with a steel blade and pulse carefully until a finely chopped paste forms–you don’t want this puréed. (Still quite edible if the food processor has its way and you have puréed tapenade!)   Refrigerate for several hours or overnight for best flavors.

 

{printable recipe for tapenade}

ABOUT THE RICOTTA:

Different cooks make ricotta different ways, but most of them are fairly similar and use a 2:1 or 3:1 ratio of whole milk to heavy cream. The amounts of acid (vinegar or lemon juice) and salt added are somewhat up to your own taste, but the cheese will not curdle (which means you won’t have cheese) without a certain amount of acid and it will be sweeter if you use less salt. As always, taste and adjust as the crux of taste is in the balance of acid and salt. Use organic milk if possible.

HOMEMADE RICOTTA CHEESE

Makes 2 cups. Doubles easily, which you’ll need done for a group of 20.

Read though recipe before beginning. While you can buy fresh ricotta at some stores, it’s dicey-pricey–perhaps $8-$10 a pint or more. Of course you can buy commercially-made ricotta in plastic containers, but that is not fresh ricotta. Fresh cheese just lasts a few days and the cheese in plastic containers is usually a lot older than that. Fine for your grandmother’s lasagna recipe, but not for appetizers or lathering on sweet, tender peaches, say. This is easy and there’s an hour downtime in the middle.  I double or triple this for larger parties, but make no larger than a double batch at a time.  

EQUIPMENT: You’ll need a non-reactive pot (stainless steel or enameled cast iron—not aluminum), cheesecloth–available at grocery or hardware stores or cheese-making suppliers, and a fine mesh sieve.

Stir together milk and cream in a heavy 2 or 3-quart pot. Heat over medium heat until just beginning to bubble around the edges, but not boiling (180 degrees F at altitude, 190 degrees F at sea level). Turn off heat and stir in vinegar or lemon juice.  Remove from stove, cover with a clean dishtowel, and let sit 45-60 minutes.

Pour slowly through a fine mesh sieve lined with 2-3 layers of cheesecloth set over a bowl so that it drains easily. Let drain an hour (or overnight in fridge for thicker cheese), turn out into another bowl and stir in a pinch or two of salt to taste. The watery liquid that’s left is called whey. (See Cook’s Note.) Discard cheesecloth. Use within an hour or two or refrigerate, tightly covered, up to 4 days.

Cook’s Note or YOUR WAY WITH WHEY: Now you’ll know what Little Miss Muffet did while sitting on her tuffet, eating her curds and whey. By the whey, cook potatoes or pasta in it or drink some yourself as it’s quite tasty. What else? Refrigerate overnight and use it in your smoothy or for pancakes.

Why might you want to make homemade ricotta?

{printable recipe for homemade ricotta cheese}

below:  cleaning Japanese eggplant, basil, and yellow zucchini in my sink

I don’t make caponata often enough to have created my own recipe and so use this one from Chef Anne Burrell. While the recipe was just about perfect, I’d caution you to read though it carefully. While it appears simple, and is, you’ll need to pay extra attention to seasoning the dish–especially if you’ve doubled or tripled it, as did I.  It truly needs overnight in the fridge for marrying of flavors and is then good for about 3 days. You can live on its leftovers while you recover from the party. Fill an omelet with caponata or use as a topping for fish, chicken, sliced pork, rice, or pasta. Best of all, eat it just like it is.

You might also read David Tanis’ (NYT) take on caponata and other eggplant dishes here.

Here’s my own ratatouille recipe, which is similar to caponata in many ways. Note a couple of significant differences:  there is no vinegar, nor any sweetness like sugar or raisins in ratatouille.

Alyce’s Ratatouille

Give yourself 1.5 – 2 hours.  While this cooks quickly, the chopping takes time. This makes 6-8 main course servings or about 16-18 appetizers portions. Double if necessary.

1/4 cup olive oil (divided)
3-4 Japanese eggplant (skinny long ones) or 2 medium eggplant, cut into 1″ cubes
1 teaspoon salt, divided
3 zucchini and 3 yellow squash, cut into 1″ cubes
1 each:  red bell pepper and green bell pepper (or yellow), cut into strips
2 large onions, chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
1 cup each:  chopped Italian (or curly) parsley and chopped fresh basil
1/4 cup chopped fresh dill (or 1T dried dill)
1 tablespoon dried oregano, optional
1 28 oz can Italian tomatoes, drained (reserve juice) or 1.5-2# fresh tomatoes, peeled and chopped*
1 6-ounce can tomato paste
Freshly ground black pepper, to taste
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper, optional (or to taste; be careful)

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.  Place chopped eggplant on a baking tray, sprinkle lightly with salt and let sit while the oven preheats.  When the oven is hot, blot the eggplant lightly on both sides with paper towels and drizzle lightly with olive oil.  Cover the tray with foil tightly and bake about 40 minutes or until the eggplant is tender.  Remove from oven, remove foil, and set aside.
  2. Meantime, in a large, deep skillet (or heavy soup pot), cook in the remaining oil the onions, peppers, and zucchini until they begin to soften, about 10 minutes.  Add garlic, herbs, tomatoes, and tomato paste.  Season with about 1/2 teaspoon of salt and 1/4 teaspoon of black pepper.  Stir well, heat through and taste.  Add crushed red pepper and taste again.  Adjust seasoning if necessary.
  3. Let simmer 15 -20 minutes over low heat.  Add eggplant and warm through.  Add some of the reserved tomato juice if the mixture becomes too thick and is sticking or if you’d like a looser consistency.
  4. Serve as is (hot, warm or cold) with crostini, with Parmesan, over pasta, beneath fish or chicken, or in an omelet.  (A big bowl of this and a hunk of bread folks can tear and dip into it is perfect August food.)
  5. Store tightly covered in frig 2-3 days or freeze for 3-6 months, well-wrapped.

*To peel fresh tomatoes, cut an X in the bottom and  top.  Plunge into boiling water for a minute or two.  Pull out, let cool briefly (til you can handle them without being burned) and peel off skins using a small sharp knife or your fingers.  Chop coarsely before adding to ratatouille.

{printable recipe for Alyce’s Ratatouille}

About the recipes: There are many recipes for bread with cheese and tomatoes. Check them out.  If memory serves, while living in St. Paul, I think I originally saw a FINE COOKING recipe for bruschetta with fresh tomatoes and mozzarella that I tried instead with ricotta, as that’s what I had. We served them to dear friends Kim and Dan Craig, who were crazy about that super summer offering. (Dan did the illustrations for my book, you might remember.) We later grilled (or sautéed?) tomatoes (chopping them afterward) and even later still grilled small tomatoes on skewers for that same app–  liking each new version better.  Sometime afterward I saw the the famous and fine bloggers White on Rice Couple had written up a gorgeous post about Grilled Tomato Lollipops that are served with bread and ricotta–which feature marinated tomatoes. Other recipes indicate roasting or broiling tomatoes for crostini like this beauty from SAVEUR.  Do enjoy the linked recipes or search for even more; they’re all lovely when tomatoes are at their best. There’s nothing new under the sun! Thanks for reading and cooking.

Big thanks to my friend, Jill Robinson, for turning 50 and affording me the opportunity to make these wondrous things!  And thanks even more to her fab husband Drew for planning the whole shebang.

Below:  sweet friend Kara Sloan taking Jill and Drew’s photo on a wine trip we took to Walla Walla

Sing a new song; make like a party in a happy summer night,

Alyce

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