Italian Recipes | RecipeTin Eats https://www.recipetineats.com/category/italian-recipes/ Fast Prep, Big Flavours Mon, 22 May 2023 08:13:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://www.recipetineats.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/cropped-favicon@2x.png?w=32 Italian Recipes | RecipeTin Eats https://www.recipetineats.com/category/italian-recipes/ 32 32 171556125 Spinach ricotta stuffed shells https://www.recipetineats.com/spinach-ricotta-stuffed-shells/ https://www.recipetineats.com/spinach-ricotta-stuffed-shells/#comments Mon, 20 Mar 2023 05:10:39 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=85880 Close up photo of Spinach ricotta stuffed shellsThere’s no need to pre-cook shells before you stuff them. Such a pain messing around with hot floppy shells! Just bake in loads of sauce and they’ll cook in the oven. These jumbo shells, called conchiglioni in Italian, are stuffed with spinach and ricotta. Serve with a Mega Italian Salad and garlic bread for the... Get the Recipe

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There’s no need to pre-cook shells before you stuff them. Such a pain messing around with hot floppy shells! Just bake in loads of sauce and they’ll cook in the oven. These jumbo shells, called conchiglioni in Italian, are stuffed with spinach and ricotta. Serve with a Mega Italian Salad and garlic bread for the perfect dinner.

Close up photo of Spinach ricotta stuffed shells

Stuffed shells

I don’t know if you’ve ever tried, but stuffing hot cooked pasta shells is a nightmare. Slipper suckers that they are, and they break so easily.

There’s no need to suffer through all that! It’s much easier to stuff raw, uncooked pasta shells and cook them in the oven simply by covering them in a LOT of sauce. It 100% works. It’s the way I’ve been cooking cannelloni/manicotti all my life.

The trick is simply to start with a large volume of watery sauce that the pasta shells cook in. Not dissimilar to cooking pasta in a pot of boiling water, actually. And by the end, that watery sauce reduces down into a lovely thick pasta sauce!

This method of cooking also deals with another pet-peeve of mine: dry pasta shells. No worries about that here, we end up with plenty of tomato sauce for serving!

Freshly baked Spinach ricotta stuffed shells

What you need for stuffed pasta shells

While there’s many stuffing options for pasta shells, the most popular is probably spinach and ricotta and that’s what I’ve gone with today. Sorry for being predictable? 🙂

Jumbo shells (conchiglioni)

Jumbo shells (conchiglioni is the proper Italian name) are more readily available these days in Australian grocery stores (Woolies, Coles, Harris Farms) and the primary reason I went on a stuffed shells bender.

They are a little more expensive than typical pasta shapes – around $5 for a 500g / 1 lb packet. But they go further. You’ll need 250g / 8 oz for this recipe which serves 5 generously, possibly 6. (Let me remind you, I have a rather robust appetite! My serving portions are not skimpy).


The spinach ricotta stuffing

Here’s what you need for the stuffing. Exactly the same combination I use for spinach ricotta cannelloni, spinach ricotta rolls and the fan-favourite spinach ricotta rotolo.

For a meat option, use the beef filling in Beef Cannelloni instead.

Spinach Ricotta Stuffed Shells ingredients
  • Spinach – use frozen for convenience (thaw, remove excess water before using), or fresh if you’ve got an abundance of it

  • Ricotta – be sure to use a food quality full fat, creamy one. Tip for Australians: avoid Perfect Italiano tub in the fridge aisle of major supermarkets. It’s quite powdery and unpleasant. My favourite is Paesanella which is sold at Harris Farms and over the deli counter at large supermarkets.

  • Shredded cheese – A flavoured one is best, like cheddar, tasty, gruyere. Save the mozzarella for the topping (which melts well but doesn’t have that much flavour).

  • Parmesan – don’t skip this! It adds extra savouriness and seasoning to the filling. Just store bought finely shredded or grated is fine, or grate your own.

  • Garlic – because it makes everything better

  • Egg – for binding.

  • Nutmeg – optional, but it’s a lovely touch. I use it in almost all my spinach ricotta fillings.

  • Salt and pepper


The sauce

I find this method of cooking stuffed shells from raw works best with a smooth pasta sauce rather than one with lumps of crushed or diced tomatoes. The shells cook more evenly and when it finishes baking, you’re left with a lovely smooth pasta sauce.

Ingredients in Spinach ricotta stuffed shells
  • Tomato passata – Pureed, strained plain tomatoes, sometimes labelled “tomato puree” in the US (here’s a photo of Mutti tomato passata sold at Walmart). Readily available in Australian supermarkets nowadays, alongside pasta sauces. Excellent for making smooth sauces rather than simmering for ages to breakdown crushed or diced tomato. More on tomato passata here.

    Substitutes – US Hunt’s tomato sauce is a perfect alternative. Otherwise, use crushed canned tomato then puree (like I do for cannelloni/,manicotti).

  • Eschalots –Also known as French onions, and called “shallots” in the US. They look like baby onions, but have purple-skinned flesh, are finer and sweeter. Not to be confused with what some people in Australia call “shallots” ie the long green onions.

    I like using eshalots rather than onions because they are finer so they almost disappear into the sauce so you get a lovely smooth sauce. However, you can substitute with a small onion.

  • Herbs and spices – Fresh garlic, bay leaf, dried thyme and dried oregano.

  • Tomato paste – To intensify the tomato flavour and thicken the sauce slightly.

  • White wine – Adds depth of flavour / complexity into the sauce in a way only wine can! It’s only 1/3 of a cup and we simmer to cook out the alcohol. Substitute with more stock, or just skip it.

  • Vegetable stock – We need a whole litre / quart (4 cups) because we’re making a LOT of VERY watery sauce here! Just watch the video and you’ll see how it all gets absorbed by the pasta shells, leaving behind a lovely thickened pasta sauce for serving.

  • Sugar – Just a smidge, to take the sour edge off the tomato paste we’re using (tomato paste is sour!).


How to make stuffed shells

It’s actually extremely straight forward and the recipe has a nice flow to it: make the sauce first, then while it’s simmering, stuff the shells. Then assemble and bake!

How to make sauce for stuffed shells

How to make Spinach ricotta stuffed shells
  1. Sauté aromatics – Cook the garlic and eschalots with the herbs in a large saucepan or small pot.

  2. Tomato paste and wine – Cook off the tomato paste for 1 minute (this takes the raw sour edge off and deepens the flavour) then add the wine and simmer rapidly on high heat until it’s mostly evaporated.

  3. Simmer 20 minutes – Add the remaining ingredients then simmer on low for 20 minutes with the lid off.

  4. Watery sauce! The sauce will be VERY watery and there will be loads. Have faith! You need it all – the shells absorb most of that liquid. Keep the sauce hot – we want to use it hot.

Stuffing & bake

How to make Spinach ricotta stuffed shells
  1. Stuffing – Mix the spinach ricotta stuffing ingredients together.

  2. Stuff the raw uncooked shells. I find it easiest to use a small offset spatula (like a butter knife with a bend in it, super useful kitchen tool). Else a knife, spoon – whatever you find makes it easiest for you.

  3. Assemble – Pour the hot sauce into a 23 x 33cm / 9 x 13″ baking dish. Then gently place the pasta shells in. They will be mostly submerged, some might semi-float. But you want most if not all of the pasta submerged under liquid so it cooks evenly (a bit poking above is fine as it will steam-cook).

  4. Bake 70 min covered – Cover the dish with a baking tray (or foil) and bake for 70 minutes. Yes, really, it will take that long!

    Why a baking tray? Easy way to cover the baking dish, no waste, no burning yourself, and it lets a little bit of steam escape to help the sauce reduce just the right amount.

  5. 15 min bake, cheesed – Remove the baking dish from the oven. Sprinkle with cheese then bake for a further 15 minutes until bubbly and golden.

  6. Serve! Scoop and serve. Marvel at how the shells are perfectly al dente and how there’s so much lovely sauce to serve it with!

Spinach ricotta stuffed shells fresh out of the oven

Bowl of Spinach ricotta stuffed shells

Serve with a quick rocket balsamic salad (that’s arugula, to those of you in the States!) or if you’re out to impress, a Mega Italian Salad (it lives up to its name). Add a side of garlic bread and tiramisu to finish, and that’s pretty much my idea of a perfect dinner. When am I coming over?? – Nagi x

Watch how to make it

Spinach ricotta stuffed shells close up photo
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Spinach Ricotta Stuffed Shells (Conchiglioni)

Recipe VIDEO above. There's no need to mess around stuffing hot floppy shells. Just stuff uncooked jumbo pasta shells and bake in loads of sauce! Bonus: The shells absorb the flavour of the sauce, and there's plenty of tasty sauce for serving. Because nobody likes dry pasta shells!
Course Mains
Cuisine American-Italian, Italian, Western
Keyword pasta shells, stuffed shells
Prep Time 25 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 45 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Servings 5 – 6 people
Calories 798cal
Author Nagi

Ingredients

Sauce (you need LOTS!):

  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 2 eschallots/shallots or 1 small onion , finely chopped (Note 1)
  • 4 garlic cloves , finely minced
  • 1 bay leaf , fresh (sub dried)
  • 1/2 tsp each dried thyme and oregano
  • 1/3 cup tomato paste
  • 700g / 25 oz tomato passata (US: tomato sauce) (Note 2)
  • 1/3 cup Chardonnay or other dry white wine (sub more stock)
  • 4 cups vegetable stock/broth , low sodium
  • 3/4 tsp salt
  • 1 1/2 tsp white sugar
  • 1/3 tsp black pepper

Filling:

  • 250g / 8 oz frozen chopped spinach , thawed (Note 3)
  • 500g / 1 lb ricotta , full fat please (Note 4)
  • 1/2 cup parmesan , finely shredded
  • 1 cup shredded cheese (Mozzarella, Colby, Cheddar, Tasty, Gruyere, Swiss, anything!)
  • 1 egg
  • 1 large garlic clove , minced
  • Grated fresh nutmeg (just a sprinkling) or 1/8 tsp nutmeg powder (optional)
  • 3/4 tsp cooking / kosher salt
  • 1/2 tsp black pepper

Stuffed shells

  • 250g / 8 oz jumbo pasta shells (conchiglioni) (Note 3)
  • 1 1/2 cups shredded mozzarella
  • 1/2 cup parmesan , shredded
  • Fresh basil and parmesan , for garnish (optional)

Instructions

Sauce:

  • Sauté – Heat oil in a small pot over medium high heat. Add garlic, onion, bay leaf, thyme and oregano. Cook for 3 – 4 minutes until the onion is translucent. Add tomato paste and cook for 1 minute.
  • Reduce wine – Add wine, increase heat to high and let it simmer rapidly until mostly evaporated (about 2 minutes).
  • Simmer – Add passata, stock, sugar, salt and pepper. Stir then simmer on low *(uncovered) for 20 minutes. Use while hot.

Filling:

  • Squeeze spinach – Grab handfuls of spinach and squeeze out excess water.
  • Mix filling – Place spinach in a bowl with remaining Filling ingredients. Mix well.

Assemble & Bake:

  • Preheat oven to 200°C/400°F (180°C fan).
  • Stuff – Stuff UNCOOKED shells with spinach ricotta filling. Stuff them full!
  • Assemble – Pour the hot tomato sauce in a 23 x 33 cm / 9 x 13" baking dish. Gently place the stuffed shells in – most will be submerged, some may poke above surface.
  • Bake – Cover with a baking tray (or foil) then bake for 70 minutes.
  • Cheese it! Check the shells – they should be al dente! (If not, return to oven, covered). Sprinkle with mozzarella then parmesan. Bake 15 minutes until melted.
  • Serve, garnished with extra parmesan and basil if desired!

Notes

1. Eschallots / shallots  – Also known as French onions, and called “shallots” in the US. They look like baby onions, but have purple-skinned flesh, are finer and sweeter. Not to be confused with what some people in Australia call “shallots” ie the long green onions.
2. Tomato passata – Pureed, strained plain tomatoes, sometimes labelled “tomato puree” in the US (here’s a photo of Mutti tomato passata sold at Walmart). Readily available in Australian supermarkets nowadays, alongside pasta sauces. Passata is excellent for making smooth sauces. More on tomato passata here.
Subs – US Hunt’s tomato sauce is a perfect sub. Can also used crushed canned tomato then puree (like I do for cannelloni/,manicotti).
3. Spinach – I use frozen spinach for the convenience and also because I’m a sucker for the whole “snap frozen” thing. To use fresh, use about 500g/1 lb sliced spinach leaves or baby spinach leaves, saute with a little oil to wilt down and remove excess liquid. Cool then proceed with recipe.
4. Ricotta – Low fat ricotta is harder and drier, so it’s more difficult to pipe into the tubes plus once baked, is not as juicy and moist. Avoid Perfect Italian brand in tubs (Australia, Woolies, Coles etc), has an unpleasant powderiness about it, I find. My favourite is Paesanella.
5. Giant shells (conchiglioni) – available at large grocery stores in Australia these days (Woolies, Coles), also Harris Farms (Syd/Bris) and Italian / delis etc. No need to pre-cook – makes it a nightmare to stuff, the slippery suckers that they are! Just need loads of thin pasta sauce.
I know 250g/8z doesn’t sound like much but it really does serve 5 if not 6 people (with normal appetites).
6. Leftovers – refrigerate up to 3 days or freeze, thaw, then reheat covered in microwave for best results.
Nutrition per serving, assuming 5 servings (quite generous). 

Nutrition

Serving: 407g | Calories: 798cal | Carbohydrates: 69g | Protein: 43g | Fat: 39g | Saturated Fat: 20g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 13g | Trans Fat: 0.004g | Cholesterol: 145mg | Sodium: 1716mg | Potassium: 1338mg | Fiber: 8g | Sugar: 14g | Vitamin A: 8080IU | Vitamin C: 23mg | Calcium: 792mg | Iron: 6mg

Life of Dozer

Wow. He really will eat anything.

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Saltimbocca https://www.recipetineats.com/saltimbocca/ https://www.recipetineats.com/saltimbocca/#comments Wed, 14 Sep 2022 06:00:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=72403 Saltimbocca sauce - a buttery white wine pan sauceSaltimbocca is a traditional Italian dish that’s super-quick and economical too! I adore the textural contrast of the crispy prosciutto, tender meat and the silky white wine butter sauce. Traditionally made with veal, saltimbocca is also excellent made with chicken, pork and beef. HOT TIP: Great dinner party / make-ahead recipe. Keep it prepped in... Get the Recipe

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Saltimbocca is a traditional Italian dish that’s super-quick and economical too! I adore the textural contrast of the crispy prosciutto, tender meat and the silky white wine butter sauce. Traditionally made with veal, saltimbocca is also excellent made with chicken, pork and beef.

HOT TIP: Great dinner party / make-ahead recipe. Keep it prepped in the fridge, then it’s just a 3 1/2-minute cook (including the sauce!).

Saltimbocca sauce - a buttery white wine pan sauce
Saltimbocca with the traditional white wine butter sauce made with (wait for it….) butter and white wine!

Saltimbocca

The literal translation of Saltimbocca is “to jump in your mouth” which is probably in reference to the flavour that hits your palate on first bite. But also, perhaps, about the speed at which it can be made. As in: So fast, it jumps in your mouth. You see what I did there??! 😂

A classic Italian dish originating from Rome, Saltimbocca is traditionally made with thin veal cutlets wrapped or topped with prosciutto, and a whole sage leaf often pressed or pinned on top with a toothpick. Pan-frying turns the prosciutto golden and the meat inside is so thin, it literally takes 2 1/2 minutes flat to cook. Then the buttery, silky white wine sauce is made in the same pan – this takes just another minute!

It’s simple, classic, rustic and fabulous. A cursory browse of internet recipes show some rather eyebrow-raising takes on Saltimbocca – rolled versions, skewered versions and versions smothered in cheese that look suspiciously like Parmigiana. Whereas actually true Saltimbocca is far simpler. After all, why mess with perfection?

Freshly made Saltimbocca in a pan ready to be served

Veal, beef, pork or chicken Saltimbocca

As mentioned earlier, Saltimbocca is traditionally made with veal. However it works just as well with chicken, pork or beef, which for many people is easier to get and cheaper.

Veal vs beef Saltimbocca – I’ve tried both and here are the differences. Veal is a more delicate, tender version of beef – with a lighter flavour and a more giving texture. Beef, once pounded into thin steaks suitable for saltimbocca, is still more tender than a thick-cut steak but not as soft as veal.

That’s not to say that veal tastes better than beef in my view. They are just different! And different again is using pork or chicken for saltimbocca. Both mighty delicious, I should add!

The chicken saltimbocca pictured below was lunch yesterday. I snapped a quick photo then hoovered it down still warm!

Eating Chicken Saltimbocca
Chicken Saltimbocca served with a leafy green salad tossed with Everyday Salad Dressing.

Ingredients in Saltimbocca

Here’s what you need to make traditional Italian Saltimbocca:

Saltimbocca ingredients

Saltimbocca is unexpectedly economical, calling for just 80g / 2.5 oz protein and 2 small slices of prosciutto per serve.

  • Veal (or chicken or beef) – Whatever your protein of choice, it needs to be in a thin piece of meat! It’s handy if you can buy them as already thinly sliced steaks (sometimes sold as “sizzle steaks”, “scallopini” or “schnitzel” here in Australia) so they only require a light pounding out. Otherwise, you can slice meat yourself and then flatten the steaks out. Here in Australia, veal steaks in particular are always sold thin, rather than thick-cut like beef steaks.

    If you’re preparing your own Saltimbocca meat, just make sure you are using a cut of meat that is suitable for quick-cooking like steaks. Tougher cuts that require slow cooking to make them tender such as chuck, ribs, belly and shoulder (ie cuts you use for stews and casseroles) are not suitable.

    Chicken – Use a whole breast, sliced into steaks and pounded out. See step photos below for more guidance (I promise it’s easy, and it doesn’t need to be perfect, just cook-able).

  • Prosciutto – This is what makes Saltimbocca, well, Saltimbocca rather than a plain ol’ pan-fried piece of meat! Prosciutto is also provides the main seasoning for this dish. We only add the tiniest pinch of salt in the sauce, and none on the veal!

    How much prosciutto you need – 4 small pieces or 2 very large slices. Enough to cover one side of the veal when folded over itself as a double layer of prosciutto. The underside is not covered in prosciutto (it can be made wrapped all around but I prefer not).

  • Fresh sage – The essential herb in Saltimbocca, sage pairs beautifully with the prosciutto and meat. It also brings a pop of colour. I love how it crisps up as it fries!

  • White wine – A splash of wine is the secret to make a really tasty pan sauce without fussing with lots of ingredients. The wine is reduced to evaporate most of the alcohol, leaving behind just flavour. So it doesn’t taste winey at all.

    Wine type – Pinot grigio, being a wine variety popular in Italy, is fitting. However I personally also like chardonnay for the assertive flavours this wine brings to food.

    Actually any white wine will work fine here, and even a sparkling wine/champagne. Marsala is a fortified wine that is sometimes also traditionally used in Saltimbocca in Italy, but note it is quite sweet and strongly flavoured – so use less.

    Non-alcoholic sub: I think non-alcoholic white wine would be the best alternative here, followed low-sodium chicken stock/broth (be sure to use low-salt else the dish may end up a tad too salty).

  • COLD butter – Butter is how you transform a watery liquid into a silky, lightly viscous sauce without using any thickening agent like flour or cornflour/cornstarch, properly called “mounting a sauce” in classical cookery. The butter must be cold in order for it to work properly, cut into cubes so it melts evenly and slowly into the sauce. Watch the sauce magic happen in the recipe video below.

Saltimbocca sauce
Cold butter is the secret to thicken watery white wine into a silky buttery sauce!
  • Flour – This is used to dust the non-prosciutto side of the veal. Once cooked, it creates a thin crust that gives the sauce something to cling to. Without it, the sauce just slips off the surface of the meat like Teflon. It also helps make the veal or other protein get a little colour on it in the very short cook time.

  • Pepper only – No salt required! The salt from the prosciutto is all we need on the veal. Although I do like to add a pinch into the sauce, it barely needs it.

  • Olive oil – For pan-frying the veal.


How to make Saltimbocca

As I re-read this post, it dawned on me that I included a fair amount of step photos for a recipe that I assured you is so fast and easy! It’s really not hard, I promise. I just thought perhaps assembling the Saltimbocca might be new to some readers so I wanted to show it step by step.

If you’re an old hand at Saltimbocca however, you can bypass this whole section. Here’s all you need to know right here:

How to make Saltimbocca: A shorthand recipe for pros!

  1. Assemble: Secure folded prosciutto and sage onto 3 mm pounded veal. Dust underside with flour.

  2. Cook: Prosciutto side 90 seconds, flip, 60 seconds on the other.

  3. Deglaze: Remove veal, discard excess oil. Deglaze pan with wine, turn off stove, drop in butter and swirl to melt. Serve!

1. Assemble the saltimbocca

You can make short work of the prep if you purchase ready-to-cook thin slices of veal, which is how they are typically sold here in Australia. Chicken and beef are also often sold in thinly-sliced form here.

How to make Saltimbocca
  1. Pound until thin – Pound the veal to a 3mm thickness, then cut each piece to form 4 pieces of veal. It doesn’t matter what size or shape the pieces are, more important is the thickness.

    Best way to pound meat: Place the veal between 2 freezer bags, baking paper (parchment paper) or purpose-made plastic sheets called “Go-Between*” (pictured, see below) to protect the meat. Then use a meat mallet or rolling pin to pound the veal gently and evenly so it flattens uniformly.

    I use the toothed face of the meat mallet for red meat (veal and beef), and the smooth face for chicken, which is more delicate.

    Cutting chicken for saltimbocca – see info box below for detailed steps.

  2. Prosciutto – Sprinkle the veal with pepper (no salt, we get enough from the prosciutto). Fold the prosciutto in half then place on top of the veal. Note it’s does not wrap the meat, it is only covering the top surface.

  3. Secure with toothpick – Place a nice big leaf of sage on top of the prosciutto, then secure both the prosciutto and sage in place with a toothpick. Pierce the meat from the underside, weave through the prosciutto and sage, then back out the underside. This way they sit flatter against the meat and cook more evenly.

  4. Dust underside with flour – Press the side of the veal without prosciutto on it into the flour, shaking off the excess.

* Go-Between is a plastic sheet that comes in rolls, which you tear off to size like cling wrap. It’s used to protect delicate meats when pounding, and also to put between layers of things to stop them from sticking (hence the name!) It’s especially useful for freezing things.

How to cut chicken for Saltimbocca

Chicken breast is easiest to handle for Saltimbocca. You will only need one large 220 – 250g / 7 – 8oz breast. Option 1: Slice in half horizontally to form 2 thin steaks, pound to 0.5cm / 1/5″ thickness (using the flat side) then cut each piece in half so you have 4 pieces in total. Option 2: Slice whole breast on a steep angle to make 4 steaks (steps pictured) then pound each one out. Note that I make chicken steaks slightly thicker than veal as chicken flesh is more delicate and is prone to tearing if too thin.

Boneless thighs are another option if you prefer. Use 2 small thighs. Cut open and spread (butterfly) the thicker end to even out the thickness, then pound.

2. Cooking Saltimbocca

How to make Saltimbocca
The golden stuff stuck in the pan in Step 4 is called “fond” and it’s free flavour for the Saltimbocca sauce!
  1. Sear – Cook the prosciutto side of the veal first until golden, around 1 1/2 minutes.

  2. Flip and cook the flour dusted side for 60 more seconds.

  3. Remove the veal straight on to a serving plate (or individual plates) to rest while we make the sauce.

  4. Discard excess oil in the pan. Tip it out, but don’t scrape the pan clean. All that golden stuff you see stuck to the pan is called fond. Fond is packed with umami and concentrated flavour, and is the secret to an incredible tasting pan sauce made with just wine and butter!

3. Saltimbocca sauce

The pan sauce takes 1 minute flat to make: 30 seconds to reduce the wine then 30 seconds to swirl cold butter cubes in until they melt to create a silky sauce.

How to make Saltimbocca
  1. Wine – Return the pan to the stove then add the wine.

  2. Reduce wine by half – The wine will simmer rapidly because we only use a small amount (1/4 cup / 60 ml) in a large, hot pan. Reduce by half, around 20 to 30 seconds.

  3. Add cold butter – Turn the stove off, scatter in the butter cubes and swirl the pan until the butter melts (or just use a wooden spoon). Melting cold butter slowly on a turned off stove is the trick to making an opaque, thickened sauce like the Saltimbocca white wine sauce. High heat means the butter melts faster and becomes more transparent, and you’ll find the sauce won’t thicken as effectively. But, it’s still tasty!

  4. Thickened sauce – And here it is! Look how creamy and glossy that sauce looks. That’s what happens when you slowly melt cold butter into a sauce!

    Note on sauce colour: The final colour of your sauce will be affected by the amount of fond in the pan. More fond = browner or more orange-coloured sauce (like in the video). Less fond = more butter-yellow sauce, like in the photos in this post.

And with that, we’re done! Super fast, see? It HAS to be, or else you’ll overcook the veal. Time to plate up: put the Saltimbocca on serving plates then spoon over that dreamy sauce.

Saltimbocca on a plate, ready to be eaten

Eating Saltimbocca

What to serve with Saltimbocca

Starchy vehicle – I always serve Saltimbocca over a starchy base suitable for maximising enjoyment of the sauce. Which means creamy mashed potato on normal days, cauliflower mash on “I’m trying to be good!” days, polenta on “I’m really going for a proper Italian vibe here!” days, and bread for plate-mopping on “I can’t even handle making mash today!” days.

Side salad – Try a side of Sautéed Garlic Green Beans, my favourite Tomato Salad. Or if speed is of the essence, a quick Italian Rocket/Arugula Salad. For something a little special and different, like if you’re serving Saltimbocca for a dinner party, this Bitterleaf Orange Salad or a big Panzanella are options that will turn heads!

More ideas in my vegetable sides section – you can browse by vegetable type which my friends tell me they find quite handy.

I’d love to know what you serve Saltimbocca with if you give this a go, let me know! – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

Freshly made Saltimbocca in a pan ready to be served
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Saltimbocca

Recipe video above. This rustic Italian classic is fabulously quick to make thanks to thin slices of veal that cook in 2 1/2 minutes flat. Traditionally made with veal, Saltimbocca is also excellent with chicken or beef.
The trick to a great Saltimbocca sauce is to slowly melt in cubes of cold butter by swirling the pan off the heat. This thickens the sauce and makes it luxuriously silky. It's a stunner! Serve with mashed potato, cauliflower mash or mop your plate clean with bread.
Course Main
Cuisine Italian
Keyword chicken saltimbocca, saltimbocca, veal saltimbocca
Prep Time 7 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Servings 2
Calories 492cal
Author Nagi

Ingredients

  • 2 x 80g / 3 oz thin veal steaks or boneless cutlets (sizzle steaks, schnitzel, scallopini) OR thinly cut beef steaks, pork or a chicken breast (Note 1)
  • 1/4 tsp black pepper
  • 4 large sage leaves
  • 4 prosciutto slices (finely sliced, Note 2)
  • 2 tbsp flour (plain/all-purpose)
  • 2 tbsp olive oil

Saltimbocca Sauce:

  • 50 g / 3 tbsp COLD unsalted butter , cut into 1cm / 1/3″ cubes (Note 3)
  • 1/4 cup white wine , pinot grigio or chardonnay (Note 4)
  • Small pinch of salt

Instructions

Prepare saltimbocca:

  • Pound: Place the veal between sheets of cling wrap or paper. Pound to an even 3mm thickness using a meat mallet (Note 5 for tips!) Cut each piece in half so you have 4 pieces in total, and sprinkle both sides with pepper.
  • Prosciutto and sage: Fold a slice of prosciutto in half then place on one piece of veal (trim if needed so it's not hanging off the sides too much). Place a sage leaf on top then secure with a toothpick, piercing from the underside (see step photos or video). Do the same with the other piece of veal.
  • Dust: Spread flour on a plate. Press the non-prosciutto side of the veal into the flour, shaking off excess (do not flour the prosciutto side).

Cook:

  • First side 1 1/2 minutes: Heat oil in a large fry pan over medium-high heat. Place veal slices in the pan, prosciutto-side down, and cook for 90 seconds until prosciutto is beautifully golden.
  • Other side 1 min:Turn veal and cook the other side for 1 minute. Remove to a warm plate.
  • Tip out excess oil (do not scrape pan clean however). Return skillet to stove, with heat still on.

Sauce:

  • Reduce wine: Pour in wine (careful, it will be steamy!) plus pinch of salt. Bring to a simmer then let it cook for 20 to 30 seconds, stirring to scrape up the brown fond from the base of the pan, until wine is reduced by half.
  • Swirl butter: Keep the pan on the stove but turn the stove OFF. Scatter the butter in the pan then swirl (or stir) until it melts. The clear liquid will thicken magically into a luscious butter sauce!

Serve:

  • Divide veal between plates. Spoon over sauce. Devour! (Careful of the toothpick!)

Notes

1. Veal is typically sold in thin steaks which is ideal, as it requires less pounding out. Thin beef steaks and pork also work. Use quick-cooking cuts suitable for cooking like steak (loin, topside, rump). Tougher cuts used for stews and casseroles are not suitable.
Chicken breast – Use one breast around 220 – 250g / 6 – 7oz. Slice in half horizontally to form 2 thing steaks, gently pound to 0.5cm / 1/5″ thickness then cut each in half (so you have 4 pieces in total). Alternatively cut the breast on a steep angle into 4 pieces then pound out each of those. Cook 90 seconds on each side.
2. Prosciutto – You need enough so you can fold each piece of prosciutto in half over itself, and cover most of the top surface of each piece of veal. It’s not an exact science, no need to get too hung up on size!
3. Butter needs to be cold so it melts slowly into the sauce in order for it to thicken and become silky. Warm butter will melt too quickly and become foamy, like normal melted butter. But, it’s still tasty so don’t fret! It’s just not “creamy” as pictured, which is the way Saltimbocca sauce should be.
4. Wine – Pinot grigio, being an Italian favourite, is a good pick. Chardonnay is also excellent for flavour. However any other white wine is fine, as long as it’s not too sweet.
Non alcoholic option – non-alcoholic white wine is best, followed by low-sodium chicken stock/broth.
5. Pounding – if you don’t have a meat mallet, then a rolling pin, an unopened can or anything of similar shape/heaviness will work just fine. It’s very satisfying work! Use cling wrap, baking/parchment paper, “Go-Between” (a purpose-made plastic food sheet) or freezer bags to protect the meat as you pound it.
6. Leftovers – Saltimbocca is best served freshly-made, but leftovers will keep in the fridge for 3 days. Not suitable for freezing.
7. Nutrition per serving, assuming 1 tablespoon of cooking oil is discarded after pan searing the veal.

Nutrition

Calories: 492cal | Carbohydrates: 7g | Protein: 21g | Fat: 40g | Saturated Fat: 18g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g | Monounsaturated Fat: 16g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 133mg | Sodium: 220mg | Potassium: 382mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 635IU | Calcium: 16mg | Iron: 1mg

Life of Dozer

Rugs are for humans to enjoy looking at and walk on with bare feet.

Kleenex’s are to wipe eye-snot and unidentifiable goop coming out of one’s nose.

One and the same to him.

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Baked Creamy Feta Risoni https://www.recipetineats.com/baked-creamy-feta-risoni/ https://www.recipetineats.com/baked-creamy-feta-risoni/#respond Wed, 22 Dec 2021 06:23:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=72909 Baked Creamy Feta Risoni from RecipeTin Eats "Dinner" cookbook by Nagi MaehashiThink risotto, but with pasta, all baked in one dish! Don’t skip the feta – some of it melts to make a creamy sauce and some remains as smeary little salty nuggets.

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Think risotto, but with pasta, all baked in one dish! Don’t skip the feta – some of it melts to make a creamy sauce and some remains as smeary little salty nuggets.

This is a cookbook exclusive recipe!

This recipe is exclusive to my debut cookbook Dinner which includes a how-to video for every recipe. Just scan the QR code!


Just to explain….

I know, it’s confusing! You’re so used to getting recipes on my website – there’s over 1,200 of them, after all. And here you are looking at a tasty recipe video and I haven’t provided the recipe. 🙀

I’m not just doing this to torture you, I promise.

This page exists to display the how-to video for this recipe which I exclusively created for my debut cookbook, Dinner. Every recipe in the cookbook has a tutorial video. To watch it, you simply scan the QR code with your phone or tablet and it will take you straight to the recipe video like the one shown above!

Curious about my cookbook?

Dinner cookbook by Nagi Maehashi from RecipeTin Eats

Stay tuned for more on this page! Some cookbook exclusive recipes will have extra information added as well as extra tips. I am also looking at enabling comments for selected recipes so I can answer reader questions about cookbook recipes. I’m just a little snowed under during this launch period – book tours, getting 131 recipe videos out, launching the book overseas. Please bear with me! – Nagi x (10 October 2022)


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Zuppa Toscana https://www.recipetineats.com/zuppa-toscana/ https://www.recipetineats.com/zuppa-toscana/#respond Sun, 12 Dec 2021 00:41:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=73059 Zuppa toscana from RecipeTin Eats "Dinner" cookbook by Nagi MaehashiThis hearty soup is a copycat of a popular dish at the Italian–American chain Olive Garden. I find myself making it regularly because it’s so quick to make yet tastes so good, especially with the sausage!

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This hearty soup is a copycat of a popular dish at the Italian–American chain Olive Garden. I find myself making it regularly because it’s so quick to make yet tastes so good, especially with the sausage!

This is a cookbook exclusive recipe!

This recipe is exclusive to my debut cookbook Dinner which includes a how-to video for every recipe. Just scan the QR code!


Just to explain….

I know, it’s confusing! You’re so used to getting recipes on my website – there’s over 1,200 of them, after all. And here you are looking at a tasty recipe video and I haven’t provided the recipe. 🙀

I’m not just doing this to torture you, I promise.

This page exists to display the how-to video for this recipe which I exclusively created for my debut cookbook, Dinner. Every recipe in the cookbook has a tutorial video. To watch it, you simply scan the QR code with your phone or tablet and it will take you straight to the recipe video like the one shown above!

Curious about my cookbook?

Dinner cookbook by Nagi Maehashi from RecipeTin Eats

Stay tuned for more on this page! Some cookbook exclusive recipes will have extra information added as well as extra tips. I am also looking at enabling comments for selected recipes so I can answer reader questions about cookbook recipes. I’m just a little snowed under during this launch period – book tours, getting 131 recipe videos out, launching the book overseas. Please bear with me! – Nagi x (10 October 2022)


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