Maria Samms wrote: Would you share your recipe for the stuffed Calamari?
Maria, I don't really have a recipe but I can tell you what I do.
I make a bread stuffing by soaking stale Italian bread and pulling off the crust, and squeezing the water out. I add about two good handfuls of chopped parsley (per 2 loaves of bread) four or five cloves of garlic, slivered up, black pepper and salt, and an egg or two. I have also used grated Reggiano, other times not, I really don't think it needs it. Mix that all up and stuff it into the cleaned calamari tubes. Don't overstuff them or they will burst open. Close and secure with toothpicks, or sew closed with a needle and thread.
I then heat some olive oil in a large sauce pan, and flavor it with chopped garlic and crushed red pepper. Carefully place the stuffed calamari into the hot oil - it will splatter so watch your hands. Let the flesh firm up a bit - turn them carefully and allow them to color a little bit all around. Then simply add a can or two of crushed tomatoes - enough to cover them. Season the sauce however you like, it really doesn't need much because it is going to taste of the fish.
I throw the tentacles in at this point, too. Then let it simmer, very low, and stir once in a while so it doesn't burn.
They need to cook at least two hours - my sign that they are ready is when one busts open - I always make extra because it always happens. Don't despair, the stuffing melding with the sauce will flavor and thicken it.
Then just remove them and keep warm - serve the sauce over pasta as a first course, and follow up with the calamari as a secondi.
Maria Samms wrote:Also, what is merluzza?
I believe it is aka whiting.
"I say: find cheap wines you like, and never underestimate their considerable charms." - David Rosengarten, "Taste"