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Burrata di bufala with sliced tomatoes. Burrata (Italian:) is an Italian cow's milk (occasionally buffalo milk) cheese made from mozzarella and cream. [1] The outer casing is solid cheese, while the inside contains stracciatella and clotted cream, giving it an unusual, soft texture. It is a speciality of the Puglia region of southern Italy.
Draught water buffalo in the Foro Romano, 1900; on the left are the three columns of the Temple of Castor and Pollux. Cow in the Agro Pontino. There are conflicting hypotheses concerning the origins of the European water buffalo: one, based on fossil bones found in the valleys of the Elbe and the Rhine, is that it descends from the extinct European wild species Bubalus murrensis; others ...
Buffalo mozzarella is a €300m ($330m) per year industry in Italy, which produces around 33,000 tonnes of it every year, with 16 percent sold abroad (mostly in the European Union). France and Germany are the main importers, but sales to Japan and Russia are growing.
Burrata is a combination of creamy stracciatella and mozzarella. Splitting open the little pouch to see the creamy ooze pour out is the best part of the experience. The cook time:
In the South Western region of Italy, Puglia is where the Cow's Milk mozzarella is King and most notorious. This is where Burrata was invented and many other shapes and forms too. Burrata was born out of Cow's milk and subsequently made also with Buffalo Milk in the South Eastern region of Campania. Campania is where most Buffalo herds breed ...
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Mozzarella (English: / ˌ m ɒ t s ə ˈ r ɛ l ə /, Italian: [mottsaˈrɛlla]; Neapolitan: muzzarella, Neapolitan: [muttsaˈrɛllə]) is a semi-soft non-aged cheese prepared using the pasta filata ('stretched-curd') method with origins from southern Italy.