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  1. What Is Italian-American Cuisine? - Yahoo Recipe Search

    German-style Beet and Knodel Salad
    Yummly
    If you have some stale bread in your pantry, you may be much closer to a delicious meal than you imagined. Mixed with a few basic ingredients, dry bread cubes can become knodel — traditional German bread dumplings. Sometimes called 'semmelknodel,' these dumplings are quick and easy to make. They're an inventive way to transform old bread into a warming side dish, or the base of a hearty a main course. Dry bread cubes are simply moistened with milk and eggs, and flavored with minced onion, fresh parsley, and some black pepper. This mixture is formed into balls, and simmered until fluffy. Knodels are particularly popular in Bavaria. They're an ideal accompaniment to traditional dishes like jägerschnitzel or rouladen. They're also in popular in Austria, in the Tyrol region especially, but you'll also find them in the most elegant restaurants of Vienna. The northern Italians even have a version of knodel, also in the Tyrol region. These are classic winter comfort food. In Germany and elsewhere, they are both a childhood favorite and a sophisticated, satisfying staple. Although hearty and satisfying, the ideal knodel are also light and fluffy. These tasty Bavarian dumplings are not at all tricky to make. But a few simple tricks will ensure great results. ## Tips And Tricks For Easy Knodel Preparation And Perfect Results _Start with dry bread:_ Knodel originated as a clever way to use up dry bread rolls so stale bread is the best base for light knodel -- they'll soak up a mixture of milk and egg. If you don't have stale bread, you can do what German cooks do: cut the bread into small cubes and toast them in the oven on a low temperature, much like croutons. Be careful to not let the bread cubes get too dark, but lightly browned bread cubes can give your dumplings a nice toasty flavor. _Use your judgement:_ While this knodel recipe provides the quantity of bread, milk, and eggs you need to make it, knodel recipes are flexible and forgiving and because all bread types are different, you may need a little more or a little less bread. Some bread is very airy and absorbent and can soak up lots of liquid. Other bread may be denser and need less liquid. What you are looking for is a mixture that will hold together nicely and form a smooth ball. If your mixture is too wet, the bread dumplings will fall apart as they simmer. If it's too dry, the dumplings may turn out to be dense and heavy. If you aren't sure you have the right consistency, go ahead and cook a test dumpling. If it falls apart in the water, you need to add a little more bread to help the mixture hold together. If the fully cooked dumpling is too heavy, you can loosen up the mixture with some extra milk. _Use a light hand:_ The key to making feather-light dumplings is a light touch. You don't need any special equipment to make knodel - just a large bowl and your hands. Mix the dough only until it comes together. Some of the bread cubes will remain intact, giving the finished dumplings a little texture. _Get your hands wet:_ Knodel dough can stick to your hands. Before you begin to shape the dumplings, make sure your hands are completely free of any traces of dough. Then get your hands nice and wet. This makes forming the balls much easier. You may need to periodically rinse your hands as you make the dumplings. _Smooth surface:_ Knodel dough is delicate. You want the dumplings to hold together as they simmer, so make sure the surface of your dumplings is absolutely smooth. Be careful not to leave any cracks or openings for water to seep into the dumpling and break it apart. This also ensures that your dumplings look great on the plate. _Simmer, don't boil:_ Easy does it with knodel, every step of the way. Just as you mix the dough gently, and form the dumplings smoothly, you'll want to cook them gently, too. A full rolling boil may break the fragile knodel apart. Before you start to cook, let the water boil to make sure it's hot enough. But then lower the temperature and wait for the bubbles to subside. Slide your knodel into gently simmering water, not boiling water. _Give them room:_ Knodel expand as they cook. Use a large pot to give your dumplings room to swell up and to cook evenly. Fill the pot about three-fourths full. The water temperature will lower as you add the dumplings and deep water will keep its heat better. But you also want to leave enough room for the dumplings. ## Versatile Dumplings There are many knodel recipes to suit every occasion and every taste. And you can easily customize your favorite recipe. For example, although most dumpling recipes call for white bread, you can use whatever bread you like, or even a mixture of breads, to make your bread dumplings distinctive. Most classic German knodel are served as a neutral side dish flavored with some onion and fresh parsley and little else. Semmelknodel can also be added to your favorite chicken soup to give classic American chicken and dumplings a German twist. You can also add meat to them -- some Austrian knodel recipes call for bacon or sausage for a dish that needs little more that melted butter to make it delicious. These simple bread dumplings can also turn a salad into main course fare, like in this recipe for Beet and Knodel Salad that takes its inspiration from traditional German cuisine. In this sweet and tangy salad, the boiled beets are tossed in a light honey mustard sauce. The savory bread dumpings, made with gruyere cheese for added flavor and texture, make an ideal accompaniment. Serve this German-style Beet and Knodel Salad on its own, or pair it with grilled meat.
    Cavatelli with Bacon, Corn, Mushrooms, and Parmesan, a la the Red Hen
    Food52
    After a particularly good (i.e. busy/lucrative) weekend behind the bar, often I like to treat myself to a Sunday-evening dinner at the Red Hen (no, not *that* Red Hen), a low-key, Italian-influenced contemporary American restaurant in Washington, D.C.'s Bloomingdale neighborhood. With its excellent cocktails and well-curated wine list, super-knowledgeable bartenders, and--oh, yeah--the FOOD (Charred Beef Tongue with Root Vegetable Slaw, Mint & Tonnato Sauce WHAT), I've never had a bad meal there, ever. If I can, I like to snag the corner seat at the bar, nearest the open kitchen, adjacent to the pass. My face is familiar enough now that the chef de cuisine will occasionally send over a bonus dish or stop to chat in one of the exceedingly rare moments in which the kitchen isn't cranking. Although the restaurant is justly renowned in the area for its signature Mezze Rigatoni with Fennel-Sausage Ragu, but it's the summertime variation on the seasonally-rotating cavatelli dish that is the perennial object of my obsession, when corn comes in season. Last summer, I sat in my favorite seat and paid close attention as one of the cooks assembled the dish. I could identify every component except one, which was graciously clarified for me: corn brodo. The secret ingredient? A parmesan stock as its base. Blanks roughly filled in, I set out to recreate the dish at home. I amalgamated the parmesan broth from several source recipes, including the Cowgirl Creamery one posted here at Food52, which I love for the addition of dried mushrooms, which works particularly well here given the finished dish's mushroom component.
    The Best Baked Ziti
    Allrecipes
    I am half Italian, was raised eating the finest Italian-American cuisine, and have filmed almost 2000 recipe videos, so when you consider all of those facts, it seems incredible that I have never posted a video for baked ziti. Hopefully I make up for that long wait by posting what I think is the best version of it.