Rome’s Restaurant Week coming in November

During Rome Restaurant Week, some of the city’s top restaurants will be offering three-course, gourmet meals from €25.00 per person (drinks not included).  The offering begins November 15th and continues through November 21st.

The restaurants have been chosen according to their reviews in the Gambero Rosso and Michelin Guides, the Slow Food Guide and L’Espresso magazine.  Restaurants with more than 75 points in the Gambero Rosso Guide will charge an extra €10.00 per person and those with Michelin stars will charge an extra €10.00 per star.

To find participating restaurants and book reservations, visit the Rome Restaurant Week website.  

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You say Béchamel, I say Balsamella

A culinary tradition that is shared by France and Italy is Sauce Béchamel – as it’s known in French, or Salsa Balsamella – as it’s known in Italian (also as Besciamella or Bechimella).  The sauce has been used in both countries for centuries and the respective recipes are virtually identical.

The sauce functions as a binding element in countless dishes from all over Italy:  most notably in lasagne and cannelloni — but also in various gratins of vegetables, as well as a pasticcio (a “mess” or scramble of cheese and vegetables, meat, or cooked pasta, sometimes with a pastry crust), and timballi (baked pasta, rice or potatoes with cheese, meat and/or potatoes).

Balsamella is ubiquitous in Italian cooking, so it should be mastered.  But not to worry; it’s simple.  Here’s how:

  • 2 cups milk
  • 4 tablespoons (½ stick) unsalted butter
  • 3 tablespoons unbleached all-purpose flour
  • ¼ teaspoon salt

  

  1. Heat the milk in a small saucepan on medium-low, bringing it just to the boiling point, when it begins to form small bubbles.
  2. While the milk is heating, melt the butter in a heavy-bottomed saucepan.  Blend in the flour and then stir constantly for about 2 minutes without allowing the mixture to color.  At this point you have what the French call roux.
  3. Remove from the heat and once the roux has stopped bubbling, add the hot milk, very slowly at first, allowing each small addition of milk to become incorporated before adding more.  Continue to add the milk while vigorously whisking until the mixture is smooth.
  4. Return the pan to the stove and warm the mixture over medium-low heat, whisking without interruption while adding the salt (the French add pepper, the Italians do not).
  5. Continue whisking until the sauce thickens to the recipe’s direction, usually to the consistency of heavy cream.

  

Tips for Success:

  • If possible, use a heavy-bottomed enameled, porcelain, Pyrex, stainless steel, or tin-lined copper saucepan.  A thin-bottomed pan can scorch the sauce and aluminum can discolor it.  Also, choose a shallow pan over a taller one: the sauce will perform better if it cooks quickly using more burner area.
  • Although many insist this sauce only be made using a double boiler, I’ve never had trouble making it directly on the stovetop.
  • The sauce is best used in dishes while it’s still warm.  You can make it a day in advance and refrigerate it in an airtight container.  Slowly re-warm the sauce using a double boiler until it takes on a spreadable consistency.
  • If a film forms on the top while you’re focused on the recipe of which this sauce is a component, whisk it briskly.
  • Never allow the flour to brown, as it will acquire a pungent and bitter burnt flavor.
  • Although Julia Child, in her book Mastering the Art of French Cooking, recommends pouring in the milk all at once, I have had better luck adding a little at a time, as described above, to prevent lumps.
  • Never stop whisking!
  • To make the sauce thicker, cook and whisk a little longer; for a thinner sauce, a little less.
  • If you get lumps, smash them out with a wooden spoon or whisk – or you can use an electric hand blender, or force it through a sieve.
  • If the sauce becomes too thick, thin it out with milk, added a little at a time.
  • If the sauce is too thin (even after cooking down), add equal parts butter and flour until you reach the desired consistentcy.
  • This recipe can be doubled or tripled, but if you’re going to make more than that, use two pans.

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Matteo Manassero Becomes the Youngest Golfer to Win a European Title

Matteo Manassero (photo courtesy Titleist)

Six months after turning pro, Italian golfer Matteo Manasse became the youngest-ever European Tour winner at the age of 17, after winning the Castelló Masters Costa Azahor in Spain on Sunday.  

“I’m not really thinking about [breaking records] at the moment, I’m still thinking about the European Tour win that I achieved, but I will probably think about the record in the future,” he told Sky Sports News.  “I want to win more events, a major or a Ryder Cup is obviously the biggest dream a golfer can get.”

Manassero admitted that, like so many youngsters on the continent, he was inspired by Steve Ballesteros as a boy.  “Seve Ballesteros has always been my idol.  His personality and what he has done for golf and the tournaments that he won and they way he won them was different to other golfers,” he said.

Manassero was born in Negrar, in the Province of Verona.  In 2009, at the age of 16, he became the youngest ever winner of the British Amateur Championship, defeating England’s Sam Hutsby in the final.  The win qualified him for the 2009 Open Championship, where, playing alongside Tom Watson and Sergio García in the first two rounds, he made the cut and won the silver medal as leading amateur.  He eventually finished tied for 13th place.

Manassero topped the World Amateur Golf Rankings on December 30, 2009  and remained number 1 for 18 weeks.

On April 9, of this year, Manassero beat Bobby Cole‘s record, which lasted since 1967, to become the youngest player ever to make the cut at the Masters Tournament, at 16 years and 11 months and 22 days.  Manassero was nearly two years younger than Cole was when he made the cut at the 1967 Masters.  Mannassero announced that he would turn professional shortly after the Masters and about two weeks after his 17th birthday.  He made his professional debut at the BMW Italian Open.  He officially turned pro on May 3, 2010.

Today it was announced that Mannassero has pulled out of this week’s Andalucia Masters at Valderrama to focus on getting a visa in time for next week’s HBSC World Championship in Shanghai.

He’s in Rome trying to get a visa to visit China for the $7 million tournament in Shanghai.  Manager Gorka Guillen says Manassero “has still not obtained the necessary letter of invitation from the sports ministry to get a visa, and that remains the key issue.”

But for now Matteo is more concerned about math, history and science.  “When I turned pro in May I was still studying at high school so I have had to do it online and via emails.  I have homework every week and will do the exams at a high school in Turin.  But next year I play my first full schedule so won’t have as much study.”