Frank Deis wrote:There is actually a semi-famous recipe that is more or less a pasta cake. Remember the Timpano in Big Night? The concept is that you cook a whole lot of pasta in a big round pot and then unmold it and cut it like a cake. Naturally there are very many variations on the recipe and I think I read that when they made the film they made six or seven different ones and used them in different shots. Some of them were very loaded up with meats. My neighbor made one from a recipe and it turned out to be largely just pasta and red sauce, slightly bland and boring, but maybe a little more interesting to make and eat than your loaves?
Fred Sipe
Ultra geek
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Thu Jul 13, 2006 11:34 am
Sunless Rust-Belt NE Ohio
Mike Filigenzi
Known for his fashionable hair
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Mon Mar 20, 2006 4:43 pm
Sacramento, CA
Fred Sipe wrote:I have yet to make this but I've remembered it for years:
http://fxcuisine.com/Default.asp?language=2&Display=145&resolution=high
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
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Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Fred Sipe wrote:I have yet to make this but I've remembered it for years:
http://fxcuisine.com/Default.asp?language=2&Display=145&resolution=high
Frank Deis wrote:I think the Timpano is supposed to be from Emilia-Romagna, up north of Tuscany. But it looks like a very similar concept to the Sicilian dish.
According to this very interesting map, pasta is generally tubular and dressed with olive oil in Sicily but flat and dressed with butter in Emilia Romagna. So maybe the northerners borrowed the recipe from the southerners??
http://thelandofmaps.tumblr.com/post/63 ... s-of-pasta
Thomas wrote:Frank Deis wrote:I think the Timpano is supposed to be from Emilia-Romagna, up north of Tuscany. But it looks like a very similar concept to the Sicilian dish.
According to this very interesting map, pasta is generally tubular and dressed with olive oil in Sicily but flat and dressed with butter in Emilia Romagna. So maybe the northerners borrowed the recipe from the southerners??
http://thelandofmaps.tumblr.com/post/63 ... s-of-pasta
The word "timpano" is so melodic it makes me think simultaneously of music and food.
Frank Deis wrote:Thomas wrote:Frank Deis wrote:I think the Timpano is supposed to be from Emilia-Romagna, up north of Tuscany. But it looks like a very similar concept to the Sicilian dish.
According to this very interesting map, pasta is generally tubular and dressed with olive oil in Sicily but flat and dressed with butter in Emilia Romagna. So maybe the northerners borrowed the recipe from the southerners??
http://thelandofmaps.tumblr.com/post/63 ... s-of-pasta
The word "timpano" is so melodic it makes me think simultaneously of music and food.
Thomas, I think I know you well enough that I am sure you realize that the name is a reference to the "drum" shape of the finished dish.
I always loved the Italian name for kettledrums, "timpani" ...
We've been off and on the same Wine boards for many years.
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