There are several Italian recipes that are pretty popular and available at restaurants all around the globe, even at non Italian places. Gnocchi is certainly one of them.
#cooking
Spanish Tortilla or Italian Frittata?
Within the context of the Mediterranean sea the cooking techniques and traditions are somehow similar, thus making it difficult sometimes to allocate a recipe to a specific Country rather than to another.
A recipe as easy as can be: Bruschetta!!!!
Don’t you also feel that simple pleasures are the best, sometimes? I do believe that cooking shouldn’t be complicated (maybe long, but not complicated) so I really like those recipes that do not involve special skills, knowledge and abilities because they are so pleasantly simple that anyone can do, anytime, anywhere.
Minestrone: the most iconic Italian Vegetable soup
Minestrone is mostly a “concept” rather than a recipe as ingredients vary a lot based on seasonality and geographical area. The final result changes quite a lot every time you make it as vegetable do not have standard sizes and your personal taste may like it with more of this and less of that, or you may include even legumes to make it more consistent and to increase its nutritional value.
Chocolate + Espresso. The “Bicerin” Cake
Bicerin is an official non alcoholic drink of Torino made of 3 ingredients only: dark chocolate, espresso coffee and whipped cream. Being such a huge success among the visitors I thought I could make a cake with the same ingredients and it turned out to be a very good idea: it’s as delicious as can be.
Anzac Biscuits my way. From Australia with love!!
Beside meat, Australia can offer quite a lot of good recipes for desserts, cakes and biscuits. The Anzac are eggless sweet biscuits associated to the ANZAC day (Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) that celebrates the participation of the Australian army to the campaign of Gallipoli, in Turkey, during world war 1
New York Bagels: a recipe for an intercontinental journey
Those who visited New York City and wanted to eat something local, bumped for sure into the Bagels. It’s a circular bakery product with a hole in the middle, cut horizontally and stuffed in several ways. Despite being sort of an “official” New York food, the Bagels appears to have been created in Europe.