Skip to main content

Crema di Ricotta

Recipe information

  • Yield

    serves 4 to 6 as a fine pasto, an end to the meal

Ingredients

3 ounces mild, creamy goat’s milk cheese such as banon, montrachet, or boucheron from France, caprini from Italy, or any one of the American-made beauties from Napa Valley, Sonoma County, Wisconsin, Maine, New York, or Vermont
6 ounces very fresh, whole-milk ricotta
6 ounces mascarpone
Dark honey (buckwheat, chestnut, etc.)
OR
Marmellata di limone (page 99)

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Whip the 3 cheeses together to a light, smooth cream in the work bowl of a food processor fitted with a steel blade. Turn the blended cheese out into a crock or a serving bowl, cover it tightly with plastic wrap, and hold it in the refrigerator until 1 hour before presentation.

    Step 2

    Permit the cheese to warm to room temperature and serve it with a pitcher of warmed honey or the marmellata di limone and a basket of oven-toasted bread. One mantles the warm, crunchy bread with the cheese, threading it with the honey or dragging it through a tiny plot of the marmellata on his plate, wondering why one might end a civilized supper with any other thing.

A Taste of Southern Italy
Read More
We’ve got baked cheddar and leek pasta, maple-mustard sheet-pan salmon, and a strawberry shortcake roll.
The golden, crunchy corners are worth fighting over.
Keep this easy frittata recipe on hand for quick breakfasts, impressive brunches, and fridge clean-out meals.
Turn humble onions into this thrifty yet luxe pasta dinner.
Like spicy carrot rigatoni and weeknight-fancy ravioli with peas.
A veg-forward main or gets-along-with-everyone side.
Thinly sliced and cooked hot and fast, pork tenderloin is the juicy, cook-quicking weeknight champion of this vegetable-heavy stir-fry.
Not stuffed shells. But not not stuffed shells either.