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Coniglio alla sanremese [1] (Intemelio: conîo â sanremasca) [2] is an Italian recipe based on rabbit, cooked and served with a sauce enriched with olives, walnuts and herbs. It is a traditional dish of Ligurian cuisine , originating in the town of Sanremo ; variations of the recipe, under the name coniglio alla ligure , are spread all over ...
Cucina e vini della Liguria. Edizioni Mursia. Giuseppe Gavotti. Cucina e vini in Liguria. Editore Sabelli. Pierina Giauna Piagentini. Odore di focolare: i sapori della cucina tradizionale ligure: in 165 ricette della cucina tradizionale ligure in lingua italiana e dialetto ventimigliese. Pinerolo: Alzani. 2003. ISBN 8881701898. Paolo Lingua.
Farinata (Italian: [fariˈnaːta]), socca (Occitan:), farinata di ceci, torta di ceci, fainé, fainá, cecìna or cade is a type of thin, unleavened pancake or crêpe made from chickpea flour. Farinata is a typical preparation of the northwest Mediterranean coast; in Liguria it is named farinata, in Nice socca and in Toulon cade.
[2] [3] It later became a staple as Italian restaurants proliferated in San Francisco. The name is also said to derive from ciuppin (also spelled ciupin) which is the name of a classic soup from the Italian region Liguria, similar in flavor to cioppino but with less tomato and using Mediterranean seafood cooked to the point that it falls apart. [4]
Keep the chicken moving. Luke's advice: Shake the chicken so the butter browns but doesn't burn."This way you get the chicken crispier without burning the butter." Add the herbs at the end. Let ...
From simple, follow-along recipes to exciting collaborations, itsQCP creates high-energy cooking content, bringing the audience on a fantastic journey through bold flavors, humor, and a love for ...
Cappon magro (Italian: [kapˈpom ˈmaːɡro]; Ligurian: capon magro, Ligurian: [kaˌpuŋ ˈmaːɡru]) is an elaborate Genoese salad of seafood and vegetables over hardtack arranged into a decorative pyramid and dressed with a rich sauce.
Palourde, or carpet-shell clams (Italian: vongole veraci; pl.), are used, or the small, Mediterranean wedge shell (Donax trunculus, also known as the Tellina or "bean clam"). Both types are also called arselle in Liguria and Tuscany. [1] In the United States, small cherrystone clams may be substituted. [2] [need quotation to verify]