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Tuesday, 25 August 2015

Get Floured Up!

The weekend is a kingdom of possibility. Free time is precious, as is family time, and we want you to bring both together this week, along with a little food! We’ve been focussing on the family this month at Oregano and we thought it was high time you spent a little quality time with the kids.

For Italians, the only thing more important than food is family, and we want you to bring both together this weekend by making your own pizzas! They’re easy, they’re quick, they’re tasty, and they’re great fun to make!



Let’s start off with…

The Dough

Ingredients
  • 300g strong bread flour
  • 1 sachet quick action yeast
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 200ml water
  • 1 tbsp olive oil


Method
  1. Put all your dry ingredients in a bowl. OR – if you’re really brave – on a counter or kitchen surface.
  2. Make a well in the centre of your flour, salt, and yeast, and pour in your water. (Yeh, a bowl is probably wiser if you have littlies about!)
  3. Add your olive oil and mix together until you have a soft, wet dough.
  4. This is the fun bit! Tip the dough out onto a floured surface and knead it! (This is a perfect way to get out any tension for the week, and calm the stress of cooking with the children…)
  5. Pre-heat your oven to 240◦c.
  6. Pop the dough back in the bowl and cover with oiled cling-film then leave to rise for 10-15mins. (This is a bit the kids will love. Gather round the bowl and watch the dough do its thing!)
  7. Once risen, roll your dough out to your preferred size – Teeny-weeny pizzette or one big family-sized pizza to share, it’s up to you – but make sure it’s very thin.
  8. Place on a floured baking tray and it’s ready to top and then bake!



The Toppings

Ingredients
This is up to you really! Whatever floats your family boat! As a base you could have:
  • Tomato Sauce
  • White Sauce (Such as cream cheese with lemon and garlic)
  • BBQ Sauce (If you want to get a bit Tex-Mex) 



And you could top it with any or all of these:
  • Ham/Bacon/Prosciutto/Pepperoni/Chorizo (Meat from your country of choice!)
  • Mushrooms
  • Spinach
  • Onions
  • An egg! (find some inspiration for Egg Pizzas HERE)
  • Pineapple (If you’re feeling Hawaiian)
  • Peppers
  • Cherry tomatoes
  • Any number of herbs or spices




Basically any animal, vegetable, or mineral which you and your kids love (ok, perhaps not so much the minerals…) chuck it on there then cover it with your cheese of choice – which should, really, be mozzarella, and pop it in the oven! Your oven should have been pre-heated to 240◦c, bake it for 8-10 minutes until perfectly crisp.


This is the most delicious way to have fun with the family – make sure everyone gets involved, one person chopping, one person mixing, add your toppings with care and love and, if you aren’t all covered in flour by the end of it, you’re not doing it right! And if it all goes horribly wrong, just pootle on over to Pizzeria Oregano and we’ll give you the finished product for afabulous family price


Friday, 14 August 2015

Family Fettucine Fun


Whether it be for a grand-scale family Sunday lunch or a quick weekday dinner, this delicious pasta dish is always a family favourite. Simple, quick, and tasty – it’s bound to be popular with big and little kids alike.



Ingredients
Per person
  • 125g - Porcini Mushrooms (OR to make it a bit more exciting, have a mix of lots of different mushrooms)
  • 150g  - Fettucine
  • Mint
  • Parsley
  • 10ml - Single Cream
  • Garlic
  • Salt and Pepper




Method
  • Slice all your mushrooms roughly – you don’t want them to be too small or too even.
  • Thinly slice your garlic then fry in olive oil until it turns golden-brown.
  • Add your mushrooms to the pan along with finely-chopped parsley and mint.
  • Fry until the mushrooms have softened.
  • Bring a pan of water to the boil, add salt and your pasta. Cook according to packet instructions until pasta is al dente.
  • While your pasta is boiling, add double cream, more garlic, salt and pepper (to taste) to your mushrooms and leave to simmer gently.
  • Drain the pasta and add to the pan with the mushrooms.
  • Take off the heat and stir until mixed, then serve.





Are you a fan of our fettucine? Get in touch on Facebook or Twitter and let us know! And if you don’t fancy cooking, assemble the family and head on over to Oregano and we shall feed youall handsomely ourselves… 


Friday, 7 August 2015

The Perfect Family Sunday - Italian-Style.


Family is “the only Italian institution” – Father Lydio Tomasi (Founder of the Center for Migration Studies)



This month, at Pizzeria Oregano, we are focussing on what matters the most - family. Until the beginning of September, we want you to assemble your favourite people and head over to Oregano where we will feed you handsomely for just £10 each

But we also want to encourage you to embrace Italian family life at home, so this week we are giving you all that you need to plan the perfect Italian Sunday family meal.


At the heart of Italian culture is family, and at the heart of the Italian family is the “gioie della tavola” or “the joys of the table”. Apparently, only 5% of Italians choose to eat out on a Sunday, so we can’t think of a better day to set your traditional Roast aside in favour of a more Mediterranean Sabbath. The key to a perfect Italian Sunday is food prepared with love and care, lots of people and lively conversation.

First step: assemble the relatives! If you live too far away, or simply do not have an arsenal of aunts and grandparents and cousins at your disposal, invite your neighbours, and your friends, and their kids and Bob’s your uncle!



The typical meal structure for a special Italian festa is something like this: aperitivo, antipasto, primo, secondo and contorno, dolce, caffe, digestivo. The primo is usually pasta or risotto, or something similar, and the secondo tends to be the meat or fish course. In any case – there’s a lot of courses there so we suggest assigning a course to each of your favourite guests, and just taking care of the secondo yourself.



Now, let’s get started. While everyone arrives, share an aperitivo – we suggest a glass of Prosecco and some olives. Then – a tavola! – Get yourselves seated, as many people as you can fit in your house. If you need a special table for the bambini, you know you’re doing it right.


The menu should be simple but delicious, using as much locally-sourced produce as possible.

1) Antipasto – Bruschetta (Grilled sourdough bread, rubbed with garlic, then topped with roasted veg, cannellini beans, and fresh tomatoes)

2) Primo – Fettucine ai Funghi Porcini (A delicious pasta dish which is both rich and fresh, as well as incredibly simple – nothing but mushrooms, parsley, mint, and garlic is needed)

3) Secondo – Stinco di agnello (Lamb shank, we suggest giving it a good roasting with red wine and herbs)

4) Contorno – Insalata Caprese (The famous red, white, and green salad with fresh tomatoes, fragrant basil, and delicious Mozarella di bufala)

5) Dolce – Tiramisu (Can’t beat it really, the Italian trifle equivalent, make a trough of it so people can come back for more)


Send the kids out to run amok, while you crack out the coffee (espresso – hot, strong, and in very small cups!) Round things up with a limoncello digestivo as you sit back and loosen your belt.



If you’re serious about doing things the Italian way, you’ll be taking this SLOW, enjoying every morsel of conversation as well as every morsel of food. Things should eventually wrap up around 8pm. And there you have it – the perfect Sunday, Italian-style. Get in touch on Facebook or Twitter and let us know how you got on!



Feed the Family for £40!


Feed the Family for £10 each!


2 large pizzas + 2 small pizzas
+ 1 bottle house wine
+ 2 soft drinks

just £40!



OR add another £15 and get 4 large pizzas and 2 bottles of house wine, if you're dining with bigger kids...
Book Now!
The Avellino

"Tomato, Mozzarella, Provola, Rocket and Cherry Tomatoes"

To trick the little 'uns into eating veg.
The Emilia

"Tomato, Mozzarella, Parma Ham and Rocket Salad"

For the Teenager with refined tastes.
Pizza, wine, family time - key ingredients for a great day out.

*Terms and Conditions - Please mention offer to your server. Subject to availability. Offer valid until 05/09/2015. Not valid in conjunction with any other offer. Service not included.  
The Umbria

 "Tomato and Mozzarella, Ham, and Mushrooms"

Because Mums need a little decadence too.
The Sardegna 

"Tomato sauce with a selection of cheeses."

A cheesy pizza to match cheesy Dad jokes.

Thursday, 23 July 2015

Pasta Recipes for Dinner Parties and Duvet Days


Only a week and a half left of our fabulous pasta offer – where you can get 5 of our most classic pasta dishes for just £5 each! These 5 represent some of the best-known pasta dishes Italy has produced, but this week we thought we would share a couple which are a little less famous.


We’ve chosen a creamy-but-hot, endlessly comforting Roman dish – Cacio e Pepe – and a dinner party showstopper for the keen chefs among you with spicy Squid-Ink Pasta with Prawns.


Let us start off easy…

Cacio e Pepe
Ingredients
400g Spaghetti
160g Pecorino Romano cheese
Loads and loads of freshly-ground black pepper
Pinch of salt

Cooking time: 15mins

Method
  1. Boil water and add a pinch of salt before popping in your spaghetti.
  2. You'll want your pasta to be al dente so check the packet for cooking time. It's usually about 6-10 mins.
  3. 1-2 minutes before the pasta is done, get yourself a deep bowl, that is wider than the pan you are using, and place it on top of the pan to warm it. This is a surprisingly important step, since the temperature of the pasta is what will determine the creaminess of your sauce.
  4. Grate your cheese.
  5. When your pasta is done, remove it from the pan and pop it in the bowl. Warning: DO NOT THROW AWAY YOUR PASTA WATER. This step is also key! Firstly, the heat of the pasta water will help to melt the cheese slightly, and secondly the starch, which the pasta has released into the water, will help to bind the cheese and the pepper to the spaghetti.
  6. Add two ladles worth of the pasta water to the bowl of pasta, then add your cheese.
  7. Stir together, adding more water if the mix is too dry, and more cheese if it is too watery.
  8. Add as much pepper as you would like.
  9. Stir until the cheese and pepper have formed a creamy sauce which clings to the pasta.





And now for something a little more complex…

Squid Ink Pasta with Prawns, Chilli and Herbs
Ingredients
3 tbsp of flat-leaf parsley
2 thinly-sliced spring onions
1 tbsp of mint leaves
1 tbsp of basil
1 tbsp of rinsed capers
3 rinsed tinned anchovies
2 tbsp of olive oil
250g of squid ink pasta
14 prawns; cooked, peeled and shells removed.
1 small, deseeded, thinly sliced fresh chilli
A squeeze of lemon juice
Salt and pepper, to taste

Method
  1. Bring a large pot of water to the boil.
  2. Set 1bsp of flat-leafed parsley and 2 tbsp of the sliced green parts of the spring onion to one side for later.
  3. 2. Place the remaining parsley and spring onion in a food processor. Add the mint, basil, capers and anchovies; blending until the mixture is well combined and finely chopped.
  4. Slowly add olive oil to give the sauce consistency. Add seasoning if needed.
  5. 3. Once the water begins to boil, add the pasta and a pinch of salt; cook until the pasta is al dente (see the packet for cooking time).
  6. Return the pasta to the pan and add the herb sauce, chilli, prawns and lemon juice to taste.
  7. Toss well and serve.
  8. Garnish with the parsley and spring onion you set aside, sprinkling generously with salt and pepper.



Pasta perfection - which one will you choose? Will you stun with Squid ink or chill with Cacio e Pepe? Get in touch on Facebook or Twitter and let us know! 


Thursday, 16 July 2015

Quiz: How well do you know Pasta?

We're still doing 5 classic pastas for £5 here at Pizzeria Oregano, but which one should you go for? Well take our Pasta Shapes Quiz and find out!

Wednesday, 8 July 2015

Pasta: The Facts


“Everything you see I owe to spaghetti.” ― Sophia Loren


Well, if it’s good enough for Sophia, it’s certainly good enough for us - and we’re not stopping at spaghetti, oh no! This month is all about that most glorious Italian dish: pasta.

Ahhh, pasta. We can barely imagine a world without it, but there was a time when it didn’t exist. So this week we’re starting at that time and then moving forwards to share all our favourite pasta facts!



1) The first mention to pasta can be found in Sicily in 1154 – that’s over 850 years ago!

2) But it wasn’t referred to in English until 720 years later in 1874.

3) The word “Pasta” comes from Latin and means “dough, pastry cake.”


4) Pasta is flavoured and paired with all sorts of ingredients, but traditionally it is all made from durum wheat and water.

5) There are over 300 different shapes of pasta, with over 1300 different names (the pasta most-commonly known as “cavatelli”, for example, has 28 different names depending on region and town)!




6) Pasta is divided by two main classifications, pasta fresca (fresh) and pasta secca (dried).

7) Pasta secca is only considered real pasta if it is made the proper Italian way. This means slow-drying it for more than 50 hours in a copper mould and then in the open air. (The rest of the world usually dries pasta in steel moulds at extremely high temperatures for short periods of time, resulting in an inferior product.)

8) Unlike here in the UK, in Italy, pasta is traditionally served as a first course, in small, simple portions.

9) There are three different types of pasta dish:
a) Pastasciutta = cooked pasta served with a sauce. (e.g. Spaghetti Bolognese)
b) Pasta in brodo = pasta as part of a soup dish. (“Brodo” means “broth”.)
c) Pasta al forno = pasta as part of a dish which is baked. (e.g. Lasagne)




10) You can’t just slop any old sauce on any old pasta! Pair your pasta carefully with your sauce. Take these examples:
a) Pesto = goes with long, thin strands of pasta that it can stick to.
b) Tomato sauce = better with thicker pasta.
c) Chunky sauces = better with tubular or twisted pastas so it can sit in the holes etc.

11) Get your proportions right! You should never have too much sauce – you’ve got to be able to taste the pasta too!

12) It is estimated that Italians eat over 60lbs (27kg) of pasta per person per year. That’s 3 times as much as they eat in the US!

13) In fact, Italians eat so much pasta that the country can’t produce enough wheat to keep up, which has led to Italy actually importing wheat from other countries to make its pasta!




And there you have it, all you need to know about pasta. And if you want to see how it’s done the real Italian way, head on over to Pizzeria Oregano now and try one of our 5 classic pasta dishes for just £5!

Orecchiette Broccoli e Salsiccia
Tortelloni Ricotta e Spinaci
Spaghetti alla Carbonara
Penne all’Amatriciana
Tagliatelle alla Bolognese

Find more HERE.