Dairy
Inside-Out Eggplant Parmigiana
In the waste-not mentality of Italian cucina povera, panfried patties made with eggs and bread crumbs are a great use for leftover eggplant parmigiana ingredients. In fact, the patties are so incredibly delicious that we made them the crisp showstoppers in this fun reconstruction.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Winter Minestrone
Patience is the key to this soul-satisfying soup chock-full of winter greens. Its depth of flavor comes from cooking the soffritto—a mixture of pancetta, onion, celery, carrots, and the ribs from the chard—for a good 45 minutes and from browning the tomato paste. The result is so savory that there's no need for broth; water, canned tomatoes, and a parmesan rind work beautifully. And because this soup must cook slowly, don't worry about prepping all your vegetables before you begin—you can simply chop as you go.
By Melissa Roberts and Maggie Ruggiero
Mozzarella in Carrozza with Anchovy Sauce
Miraglia Eriquez's Aunt Dottie loved this indulgent appetizer, which was served at her favorite Italian-American restaurants. A talented, ambitious home cook, Dottie tinkered in her kitchen until she came up with her own version. We're glad she did. The lemon and capers in the anchovy-butter sauce cut through the richness of soft, stretchy mozzarella in a pocket of crisp fried bread.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Pizza Bianca
By Lillian Chou
Cannoli Cheesecake
The airy ricotta filling—with chocolate chips and flecks of candied orange peel speckled throughout—makes for a perfect marriage of Italian and American.
By Larry Campbell
Mushroom Strudel
Gael Greene shared these recipes with Epicurious from her new book, Insatiable. To learn more about Greene, read our Q&A.
This is a recipe from my young bride days, before cholesterol was a health concern. But I believe holidays are the perfect excuse for excess. If you serve sixteen with this recipe, you'll feel half as guilty. I did four of these for Craig Claiborne's riotous sixty-seventh birthday party, where so many great chefs cooked that few guests even noticed my effort.
By Gael Greene
Pea and Bacon Risotto
No need to open a bottle of white wine for the few tablespoons you'd require: Lemon brightens up this easy risotto.
By Ian Knauer
Baked Rigatoni alla Norma
By Lillian Chou
Sweet Ricotta Pastries
A tender, short crust is filled with a creamy orange-scented ricotta custard. Served with hot espresso, these little pastries are a wonderful way to end a big meal.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Shaved-Fennel Salad with Oranges and Pecorino
Jazz up your winter repertoire with a tangy, colorful pomegranate dressing that melds fennel and oranges with salty Pecorino
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Linguine with Pesto Trapanese
By Amy Bloom and Mama Ruggiero
Broccoli with Orecchiette
In this quick version of a common Puglian dish, pungent garlic and spicy red-pepper flakes turn frozen broccoli into a perfect partner for ear-shaped pasta.
By Ian Knauer
Butternut Squash and Radicchio Pappardelle
Sweet nibbles of butternut squash temper the bitter edge of radicchio in every bite of this healthful, satisfying pasta.
By Melissa Roberts
Sunday Ragù
This bottomless bowl of meat sauce is the stuff of dreams—the American Dream, in particular. In Italy, ragù would have been flavored with a small piece of pork, but because meat was so readily available in the United States, immigrants included beef braciole, meatballs, sweet and hot sausage, and pork shoulder and ribs. This dish requires hours on the stovetop to make the meat tender and juicy and the sauce thick and intense, but it's well worth waiting for.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Fennel, Frisée, and Escarole Salad
This refreshing salad serves as a palate cleanser before dessert. Oltranti updates a traditional Italian-style salad dressing with the modern flavors of California cuisine: Floral Meyer lemon amplifies the acidity of red-wine vinegar in a bright shallot vinaigrette.
By Tony Oltranti
Fried Mozzarella Balls
By Lillian Chou
Winter Caprese Salad
By Lillian Chou
Daredevil's Food Cake with Mocha Buttercream Icing
You can bake this cake as two layers, fill it with your favorite fruit preserves (try black cherry or raspberry), and frost it with the Mocha Buttercream Icing. Or bake it in a tube pan and top it with any icing or just a light sifting of cocoa or confectioners' sugar (like snow on mountaintops!).
By Susan G. Purdy
Fig and Onion Bruschetta
By Andrew Carmellini
Peanut Butter Cheesecake with Caramelized Banana Topping
By Dédé Wilson