International Recipes
Italian Recipes
Panzerotti
These are Neapolitan fried ravioli, for want of a better name, and are an
indispensable part of Frienno e Magnanno, the classic
Neapolitan fritto misto. They'll also work quite nicely as antipasti, or as
a side dish, and you may find yourself making them as snack
food.
Dough:
2 1/2 cups (250 g) flour
Water
A walnut-size chunk of rendered lard or unsalted butter
Salt
Filling:
8 ounces (200 g) ricotta
2 ounces (50 g) smoked provolone (optional)
Abundant minced parsley
Freshly ground pepper to taste
1/4 pound (100 g) fresh mozzarella
1/4 pound prosciutto or Italian salami
1 cup freshly grated Parmigiano
1 or 2 eggs
Make the pasta, using just enough water to form the dough, and let it rest,
covered, for an hour.
Put the ricotta through a strainer, then combine it with the eggs and parsley,
grate some pepper into it, and beat well, until the mixture is creamy.
Dice the mozzarella and provolone, and finely dice the prosciutto. Combine
the ingredients with the ricotta mixture; the filling should be firm but creamy.
Roll the pasta out dime thin, keeping the sheet rectangular if possible.
Lay out a row of small walnut-size chunks of filling an inch from the straightest
edge of the sheet, separating them about 2 1/2 inches apart. Fold the sheet
over the blobs and tamp it down well all around them so it sticks, then use
the edge of a glass or a serrated pasta wheel to cut the panzerotti free in
the shape of a half moon. Put the completed panzerotti on a lightly floured
surface and repeat the operation; you can either reform the cuttings into a
ball and roll them out anew or twist them into fanciful shapes and fry them
too when you fry the panzerotti.
When you are done making the panzerotti heat the oil and fry them, a few
at a time, until golden brown. Drain them well on absorbent paper and serve
at once.
Serves 6.
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