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Corzetti

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I made a lovely visit up to Providence, Rhode Island a few weeks ago.  It’s a great small city with a lively old Italian neighborhood and lots of interesting people there doing great things with food.  I trekked up there for the fun of doing a local television show about “the diversity of Italian food” (an impossibly huge topic) with Alan Constantino--owner of the great Venda Ravioli shop--and Mary Ann Esposito, the legendary host of PBS’s Ciao Italia of the longest running cooking show in America.  It was great fun.  We began with the old question “Is there such a thing as Italian food?” Before we knew it the time was up.  I began to think I’d like to do a ten-hour documentary.  Then maybe we’d go beyond scratching the surface. 

Anyway, I wanted to bring Mary Ann a gift of something from Liguria of course.  So I made corzetti--these round circles of pasta, which are like large coins, imprinted with a design-- essentailly a culinary woodcut.  You need a special wooden carved stamp to make them.  Here they are drying on my porch.

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Corzetti are very typical of Liguria and also of Provence, France, which is not surprising as the two regions share a long culinary history

.  Crozetti also appear in the earliest know Italian cookbook--Il Liber Coquina, from Naples, and written in Latin--associated with the Angevin Court of the 13th century.  Now of course food history always acts as a detective’s tale.  One door leads to many more.  I could go on and on about this book Il Liber from Naples, with its French connections.  But I’ll stop right here and save that for another day.  Back to Genoese corzetti.... 

The Genoese have two versions.  One is from the Val Polcevera and is made in a figure 8 (yes, completely different shape and same name).  The other is the type made with the stamp, which, over history became designed with insignias and coats of arms for a given family. 

My friend Sergio Rossi--food historian in Genoa and ever my adviser in such matters--wrote me that corzetti also share a history with orichiette in the South of Italy.  And he has a very special way of proving it.

Sergio has spent time studying the ways of the Tabarchi Genoese on the small island of San Pietro off the coast of Sardinia.  This is an insular community descended from fishermen who left Liguria in the 16th century and settled on an island near Tunisia.  Because of their isolation, they kept extraordinary connections to their Ligurian cultural roots and still speak a variation of Genoese dialect (with other influences) and have kept many old recipes.  For a scholar of Genoese food (such as Sergio is), this is like finding a tiime capsule.  He is writing a book about these people and sent me a photo of their corzetti--ancient style--in a very old fashioned oblong, not round, shape and yes--clearly ressembling orecchiette.

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Please visit Sergio’s website which is written in italian.  But even if you don’t read the language, you’ll enjoy seeing his photos... http://www.civiltaforchetta.it/ (And visit here for his visit to the extraordinary Tabarchi culture.  http://www.civiltaforchetta.it/cucinatabarchina.htm)

As soon as you make corzetti, you realize that this is not every day food.  It is time consuming and impractical. You must stamp each, one by one.  First you cut out the circle with one side of the stamp.  Then you imprint each side.  The result, however is beautiful.

I made these with a simple pasta dough.  (For one pound of pasta:  2 cups flour, 1 egg, a little water, salt, and olive oil makes about a pound), but the recipes I’ve found often call for more egg yolk--this makes sense for a special rich dish. 

Of course the trick is to find a corzetti stamp.  Not so easy.  You can go to the medieval district in Genoa or to a guy named Franco Casoni in Chiavari (though each time I went the shop was closed.) Or you can order them online from Corti Brothers or or A.G. Ferrari Foods

But what a beautiful dish they are.  In Liguria, they are often served with a simple sauce of oil, marjoram, and pignoli.  But I have also had them there with a walnut sauce.  My oldest Genoese cookbooks (by Ratto father and son from the 19th century) recomms corzetti dressed with a sugo of veal or beef.  I may make them for Easter as a first course. 







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I’m sure the wooden stamps are lovely, but the prices? not so much.

Would a ceramic/terra cotta cookie stamp work similarly? (like the fairly inexpensive ones sold by Rycraft: http://www.rycraft.com/ )

I’m planning to give it a try, just for fun the next time I make my own pasta.

I’d suppose the depth and crispness of the images is crucial, but other than that?

Anna

    –  (April 07 2009 at 10:50)



Anna,

Thanks for writing.  Yes, they are way too pricey.  I absolutely LOVED the resource you posted and I don’t see why the cookie stamps wouldn’t work.  The only way to know is to try.  However, on these cookie stamps, I do not see a circular piece for cutting out the circle.  My corzetti stamp is about 2 inches in diameter, and 1/16th inch deep in the carvings (maybe less).  I think I would object to a very cookie-like design!  Or something very Pennsylvania Dutch.  But otherwise I think you should try it.

Your comment made me think of a beautiful book by William Woys Weaver--actually a companion book for an exhibit he did “America Eats,” in which he did some very compelling work on folk art and food and made a big deal of “funeral biscuit stamps” all of which were very much like the stamps you pointed to. 

Then I got thinking of all the “stamped” foods out there--butter stamps, pastry prints, and other molds in which the patterns make something beautiful of food.  Such an interesting topic.  Here’s a fun website showing artifacts http://www.cookieboard.com

Thanks again for writing and for reading Jellypress.

Laura

    –  (April 07 2009 at 11:03)



Just thought I’d check in again after my experiments with the cookie stamps.

It seems to work fine, just make sure your pasta is well floured on both sides.

Do I read from your description that corzetti should be stamped with the design on both sides?

I haven’t quite managed that, since pressing the design in one side tends to flatten out the other. The design is quite pretty, however. (Perhaps my dough’s too firm? maybe I’m pressing too hard?)

I used a round, biscuit-type cutter about the same size as the stamp to cut out the shapes. I did cut a few squares, and stamped the design right in the middle. That’s pretty too, and I don’t have to bother reworking dough scraps. 

Thanks again for helping me find an alternate use for my cookie stamps. I don’t use them much in the summer, so this makes me feel frugal.

    –  (May 03 2009 at 11:49)


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