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Cassola (Ricotta Souffle – Pudding from Rome)

 

May 25th 2011

Contributed by: Alessandra Rovati

 

 

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Recipe

Cassola (Ricotta Souffle – Pudding from Rome)

Times

  • Ready Time : 0 min

Servings

Ingredients

  • 1 pound ricotta cheese (made from whole milk, without emulsifiers)
  • 4 eggs
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • zest of one lemon or orange or 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
  • pinch of salt
  • 1 tablespoon mild olive oil

Directions

Preheat the oven to 350º F.

With an electric mixer or a whisk, beat the eggs with the sugar until creamy. Add the ricotta, salt, and lemon zest or cinnamon.

There are a few ways to cook this: For the original, older version, grease an ovenproof pan or skillet (it should be 9’ to 9 ½ “ in diameter) with a little olive oil, and heat it on the stovetop. When the olive oil is warm, pour the mixture in and cook on medium heat for about 15-20 minutes. Then move it into the 350F oven for 15 minutes, or under the broiler for 5 (it’s like cooking a frittata).

You can also bake it like a cake: in this case, grease a baking pan with little olive oil, dust with flour, matzah meal or breadcrumbs, pour the mixture in, and bake for 40 minutes at 350-375 F. It should be soft and moist inside. Cassola can be eaten warm and I like to serve it with an orange sauce made by diluting some warm orange marmalade.

It can also be made as a souffle in individual ramekins by separating the eggs and folding the whites in at the end after beating them till they are stiff.

Cassola (Ricotta Souffle - Pudding from Rome), 10.0 out of 10 based on 1 rating

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Alessandra Rovati was born and raised in Venice, Italy, and has had a passion for food since a very young age (she is said to have feasted on garlic and chili-marinated herring at 15 months). Alessandra writes about Kosher and Jewish Italian food and teaches cooking; she also posts free recipes and how-to’s, offering a glimpse of Jewish Italian culinary history, on her website, Dinner in Venice

 

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One Response to Cassola (Ricotta Souffle – Pudding from Rome)

  1. avatar Ahuva Staum says:

    a simple and authentic souffle

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